Stager v. Troy Laundry Co.

68 P. 405, 41 Or. 141, 1902 Ore. LEXIS 65
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 68 P. 405 (Stager v. Troy Laundry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stager v. Troy Laundry Co., 68 P. 405, 41 Or. 141, 1902 Ore. LEXIS 65 (Or. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolverton

delivered the opinion.

This is an appeal from a second judgment against defendant in this cause, and the principal error relied upon for a reversal is the court’s refusal to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, after both parties had rested. There was a motion for a nonsuit at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, which was overruled, and error is also assigned as to that. We will dispose of the two questions thus raised in the inverse order of their statement.

1. It is practically conceded by counsel for both parties that [142]*142the evidence adduced at the trial, up to the time of the interposition of the motion for a nonsuit, is, in all material respects, the same as that adduced up to the time of making a like motion at the former trial. We have, therefore, the identical question presented on this appeal that was contested and disposed of on the former: Stager v. Troy Laundry Co. 38 Or. 480 (63 Pac. 645, 53 L. R. A. 459). We then concluded, after a careful inspection of the evidence, that the nonsuit was properly denied by the trial court. That view of the question has become the law of the case, and it is not subject to review on a second appeal. The rule has long been established, and is uniformly adhered to, that an appellate court will not revise or reverse its former decisions made in the same cause, and upon the same state of facts, and this for two reasons: (1) They stand as precedents and authority, as if made in any other case upon a like state of facts; and (2) as adjudications between the same parties. The policy of the law and the practical administration of justice require that there should be an end of litigation, and the rule has grown up to meet this requirement. If parties were permitted to present the same issues in the same case as often as they feel aggrieved by the result, litigation would descend into a contest of perseverance and persistence, rather than of legal rights, and it could not be brought to a determination so long as human ingenuity could prevent it. The rule has repeatedly received the sanction of this court (Powell v. Dayton, S. & G. R. R. Co. 14 Or. 22, 12 Pac. 83; Applegate v. Dowell, 17 Or. 299, 20 Pac. 429; Portland Trust Co. v. Coulter, 23 Or. 131, 31 Pac. 280), and disposes of the contention for a nonsuit.

2. Now as to the motion for a direction to the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff having made a case in the first instance sufficient to go to the jury, it will not be taken away from them later, or at the close of the case on a motion to direct a verdict, where the evidence is merely contradictory or conflicting, as the jury are the judges of the weight of the evidence and must declare as to the preponderance thereof; and the question as to whether the evidence is [143]*143legally sufficient to be submitted to them remains the same as if it was raised by a motion for a nonsuit, either at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony or of the case. Like a motion for a nonsuit, or a demurrer to the evidence, it admits everything to be true that the testimony legally tends to prove, ascribing to every statement of fact in evidence absolute credence; so that if there is testimony in the case from which the jury can, by application of intelligent and reasonable deduction, fairly and legitimately infer the fact in issue, the jury are to determine the matter, notwithstanding other evidence may have been adduced in direct conflict therewith. This question is fully discussed, and the authorities touching it examined, in Huber v. Miller, 41 Or.--(54 Cent. Law Jour. 429, 68 Pac. 400), with the result here stated. It is unnecessary, therefore, to examine the matter upon authority at this time.

The pivotal question of fact in the case was whether defendant had been negligent in the adjustment of the guard plate or rail intended for the protection of the operator in feeding fabrics to the mangle. It was its duty, as was said in the former opinion, to see that this guard plate was properly adjusted, because it was incumbent upon the company to furnish its servants and employes with a reasonably safe place to work in, and reasonably safe machinery, tools, and appliances to work with; and its liability depends upon whether it exercised reasonable care and precaution to guard against the danger of accident. The want of such care and precaution would be an act of negligence, and the question in the case at bar is resolved to the issue whether the defendant was remiss; that is, negligent in the pxmper adjustment of the plate. As thexrn was evidence adduced by plaintiff sufficient upon which to carry the case to the jury, it devolved upon the defendant to show by competent testimony that it was not negligent in the particular complained of, and, if it had succeeded in this, it should have been exonerated. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that this guard plate was adjusted an inch and a half above the table used in connection with the mangle, and that this was an im- ■ proper and dangerous adjustment, and contributed to the in[144]*144jury whieh plaintiff sustained. To overcome this testimony, defendant produced evidence showing that it purchased the mangle and had it set in place on the 2d or 3d of May, prior to the accident, which occurred on the 14th, that the manufacturer sent, with the machinery, at the special request of the defendant, a man skilled in its mechanism and workings, who set it up and adjusted it in every particular, and thoroughly instructed the managers of the defendant respecting the handling, adjusting, and management thereof, so that they were fully competent and qualified to have charge of and supervise its operation. It further gave evidence tending to show that the plate was adjusted by an agent at a height of three fourths of an inch above the table; that it was once removed by one of the managers at the request of some of the operators, but by the direction of another of the managers was carefully readjusted at the same place and in the same manner as placed by the agent of the company from whieh it purchased. Mr. Sherman, who did the adjusting, says it was put back in ‘ ‘ exactly the same place. ’ ’ Mr. Ta.it, another of the managers, says it was put in “ a similar position, in the same place. ’ ’

Now counsel insist that, having availed itself of a skilled and competent machinist and expert to adjust the machinery, and having shown that the adjustment was in the same condition as placed by the expert when the accident occurred, it had exercised due care and precaution in the premises, and that the court should have held, as a matter of law, that it was not liable. If it be conceded that the procuring of the adjustment of the guard plate by a person properly skilled in the mechanism and operation of the machine, and the maintenance of the adjustment in the same place, was the exercise of reasonable care and precaution sufficient to exonerate the defendant from liability, the defendant is not yet extricated or absolved from the difficulty. The testimony adduced by the defendant was effective only to produce a conflict in the evidence as to the height of the rail at the time of the accident, and its own instrumentality in such adjustment. The evidence of the defendant was not such as the jury were bound to credit abso[145]*145lutely, as against other testimony producing conviction in their minds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 P. 405, 41 Or. 141, 1902 Ore. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stager-v-troy-laundry-co-or-1902.