Rogers v. McCune
This text of 19 Mo. 557 (Rogers v. McCune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This being a case in which there is a verdict, our task is limited to the examination of the instructions given and refused,- and to the points of evidence raised on the trial. Although the rules by which we are governed restrain us from inquiring into [567]*567the correctness of the verdict on the mere facts, yet we.,cannot suppress the opinion that there is ample evidence in the record to sustain the finding of the jury.
Upon the whole case, the custom in regard to signals by bells was made, by the instructions given for the defence, to assume a greater importance than it merited. Although there was evidence which warranted the hypothesis contained in the defendant’s instructions, in relation to the custom of giving signals by bells, yet the weight of the testimony, if credited by the jury, was sufficient to show that the custom had no great deal to do with the case. The rules, as adopted by the association of pilots of the Upper Mississippi, where this collision occurred, and as explained, tend to support this view.
The defendant, in his brief, remarks upon this instruction, “ that the court was here asked to say, without reference to custom, that if the Archer did neglect to observe an ordinary and proper means of safety, that would constitute a prima facie case of neglect at least.”
If the instruction, numbered 7-J-, had, as was supposed, merely asked a declaration from the court, that the giving of signals by bells was a proper precautionary measure to avoid collisions, whatever might have been said of it in other respects, it would have avoided the objection that it submitted a [568]*568question of law to tbe jury. Tbe instruction is not as it was conceived to be. It does not refer to the court the question, whether the giving of signals by bells was a proper measure of precaution to avoid collisions, but it is asked to be put to the jury ; and in this consists the error of this instruction. What is a proper precautionary measure in itself, uninfluenced by rule, usage, or custom, to avoid collisions, is a question of law. Chancellor Kent says : “ There are settled nautical rules by which, in most cases, the want of skill or care or duty may be ascertained.” B, 280. But, as a matter of law, the instruction was wrong. For no signals by bells could be an ordinary and proper measure of precaution for avoiding steamboat collisions, without regard to usage or custom. Such a thing would be impossible. How could a court tell a jury that there should be one, two or four taps of a bell given by this or that boat, without there was a usage? How could it say what one, two or four taps indicated, unless the thing had been previously regulated by rule or custom. Indeed, if the instruction contemplated that signals by bells was an ordinary and proper precaution for avoiding collisions, without regard to the rule or custom, it had no foundation in the facts of the case. As a means of avoiding collisions, signals by bells were never used until 1847, after the adoption of rules by the association of pilots of the Upper Mississippi, by which they were introduced.
As instructions numbered 11 and 13 had been given for the defendant, there was no error in refusing that numbered 9. Instructions numbered 14 and 15 had been previously given, in substance.
The instruction given for the plaintiff, numbered 8, standing alone, would have been open to objections., but when considered along with those given for the defendant, it cannot be regarded as erroneous, especially as the jury was directed to take all the instructions together, as forming the law of the case.
The witness, Meline, was examined as to the value of the steamboat Archer. Surely there was nothing in his deposition that could prejudice the defendant with an intelligent jury. They would only give it such weight as it was entitled to, from the manner in which he spoke. .If it was open to comment, it might have been made to the jury. There was other evidence on this point.
the judgment is affirmed.
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19 Mo. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-mccune-mo-1854.