Sullivan v. Market Street Railway Co.
Before: Van Dyke
Synopsis
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
VAN DYKE, J.
This is an appeal from an order granting a new trial. The order reads as follows: “In this action the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial herein having been argued and submitted, now, by the court, it is ordered that said motion be, and the same is, hereby granted for the reason only that the court erred in giving as modified defendant’s instruction relative to the presumption of negligence, being the instruction to which plaintiff’s exception No. 7 was reserved in the statement on motion for new trial herein.”
The modified instruction referred to reads: “In an action against a railroad company for an injury under the case and
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proofs as here made, no presumption of negligence arises against the defendant from the mere fact that an accident has. occurred.”
The plaintiff was a passenger on a Valencia-Street car, going west, and was sitting on the right-hand side of the dummy in the last seat towards the closed portion of the car. A dump-cart with two men in it was traveling along the road in the same direction as the car, partly on or near the track, and on the right-hand side thereof. The gripman saw the cart and sounded his gong, and at the same time slowed down while approaching the same. As the driver of the cart looked around and made a move towards turning out to the right, the gripman took the rope and the car again moved forward. In the dump-cart, lying lengthwise, there was a heavy shovel with a long handle protruding from the rear of the cart some four feet, and as the cart swung around to leave the track, and when the car forged ahead, this long-handled shovel struck the plaintiff, or, as one witness expressed it, “pinioned”' her almost instantaneously. It seems to have been conceded that there was no fault or negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and the real question was whether it was through the negligence of the driver of the cart or of the motorman on the car that the injury occurred; and the testimony seems, to have been substantially conflicting upon this point.
By the above instruction the judge, in effect, said to the jury that, in his opinion, there was not sufficient evidence to1 establish the charge of negligence against the defendant, and thus violated the provision of the constitution forbidding him to charge the jury “with respect to matters of fact.”' Upon his attention being called thereto, upon the motion for a new trial, he very properly set the verdict aside.
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