1. When instructions are asked in the aggregate and there is
anything exceptionable in either of them, the court may properly
reject the whole.
2. It is the settled law in this Court that if the charge given
by the court below covers the entire case and submits it properly
to the jury, such court may refuse to give further
instructions.
3. In an action against a railroad company for injuries received
by a passenger upon its road, it is not error for the court to
instruct the jury, "that a person taking a cattle train is entitled
to demand the highest possible degree of care and diligence,
regardless of the kind of train he takes."
4. The rule of law that the standard of duty on the part of a
carrier of passengers should be according to the consequences that
may ensue from carelessness, applies as well to freight trains as
to passenger trains. It is founded deep in public policy, and is
approved by experience and sanctioned by the plainest principles of
reason and justice.
5. A plaintiff is bound to state his case, but not the evidence
by which he intends to prove it.
6. Where the evidence on the part of the plaintiff did not tend
to establish contributory negligence on his part, and the court
charged that the burden of proving it rested on the defendant and
that it must be established by a preponderance of evidence,
held that the charge was not erroneous.
7. The construction given in
Nudd v. Burrows,
91 U. S. 426, to
the Act of June 1, 1872, 17 Stat. 197, reaffirmed.
8. A motion for a new trial is not a mere matter of proceeding
or practice in the district and circuit courts. It is therefore not
within the Act of June 1, 1872, and cannot be affected by any state
law upon the subject.
This was an action by the defendant in error against the
Indianapolis & St. Louis Railroad Company for injuries received
while traveling on a cattle train, and resulted in a verdict
against the company for $8,000, whereupon it brought the case here.
The facts are stated and the assignment of errors referred to in
the opinion of the Court.
Page 93 U. S. 293
MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error was injured while traveling on the road
of the plaintiff in error, and brought this suit to recover
damages. To set in their proper light the propositions of law
relied upon by the plaintiff in error for the reversal of the
judgment, a brief statement of the facts of the case is
necessary.
The plaintiff was a farmer residing in Pennsylvania. He had been
engaged in the cattle trade since 1862, and had
Page 93 U. S. 294
shipped annually, over the Western railroads to the Eastern
markets, about a thousand head of cattle. The cause of action
occurred on the 4th of August, 1870. He had shipped on the
defendant's road the day before five carloads of cattle, to be
conveyed to Pittsburg, and was on the train at the time of the
injury. He arrived at Mattoon, in Illinois, about midnight. He and
two other drovers were asleep in a caboose attached to the hinder
end of the train. They were aroused by the conductor, who commanded
them to get out of the caboose and to get on top of the train. He
said he should detach the caboose, and that, at some distance
further up the road, he would attach another. The train was then at
rest. The plaintiff went forward with his prod to look after his
cattle, and returned on the roof of the cars to where his fellow
drovers were standing awaiting the movement of the train. He stood
there, with his carpet sack in one hand and the prod in the other.
He used the latter to support himself. The train ran a half or
three quarters of a mile to pass on to a switch, and take on the
other caboose. A brakeman on the hindmost car had a lantern in his
hand. The light so dazzled or blinded the plaintiff that he thought
he was on the same car with the brakeman, though he was in fact
near the end of the car next before it. The train, in backing on
the switch, stopped before it reached the caboose which was to be
attached to it. It was thereupon suddenly drawn forward, "to take
up the slack," and then suddenly backed, producing a quick and
powerful concussion which precipitated the plaintiff between the
car on which he was standing and the hindmost car. "The shock of
the concussion," one of the witnesses says, "was about as hard a
shock as I ever felt not to knock a train off the track. It seemed
as if it was tearing everything to pieces." The plaintiff fell on
the coupling and received the injury complained of. No warning was
given that these sudden and violent movements were likely to occur,
and none was given that any precautions were necessary. No light
was furnished to the plaintiff and his fellow passengers, and no
directions were given for their guidance and safety. All the
evidence in the case is set out at length in the bill of
exceptions. It was given by the plaintiff. The defendant gave none.
The entire charge of the court, and
Page 93 U. S. 295
the instructions asked for on both sides, are also fully set
out. The defendant asked for twenty instructions. The court refused
to give any of them. The plaintiff asked for six, which were all
given. To both the refusal and the giving the defendant excepted.
The plaintiff's prayers were excepted to severally.
When instructions are asked in the aggregate, as were those of
the defendant, and there is anything exceptionable in either of
them, the whole may be properly rejected by the court.
Rogers v.
Marshal, 1 Wall. 644;
Harvey
v. Tyler, 2 Wall. 338;
Johnson v.
Jones, 1 Black 209.
There were several things of this character in those in
question. It is sufficient to refer to one of them. The court was
asked to charge that the defendant was bound to exercise only
ordinary care and diligence. This point will be considered
presently in another connection.
It is the settled law in this Court that if the charge given by
the court below covers the entire case and submits it properly to
the jury, such court may refuse to instruct further. It may use its
own language and present the case in its own way. If the results
mentioned are reached, the mode and manner are immaterial. The
court has then done all that it is bound to do, and may thus leave
the case to the consideration of the jury. Neither party has the
right to ask any thing more.
Labor v.
Cooper, 7 Wall. 565. We think the charge in this
case fulfills the requisites we have defined. The errors of
omission and commission alleged are not numerous. We might perhaps
properly content ourselves in this connection with vindicating the
charge as given. We shall, however, consider all the several
assignments of error which we deem material, both with respect to
the charge and otherwise, as we find them set forth in the printed
brief of the counsel for the company. The same points were fully
and ably argued by the same gentlemen orally at the bar.
"1. The court erred in instructing the jury that a person taking
a cattle train is entitled to demand the highest possible degree of
care and diligence, regardless of the kind of train he takes."
Such is the rule of care and diligence laid down by this Court
in three adjudications where the action was against a carrier of
persons. The first was the
Philadelphia & Reading
R.
Page 93 U. S. 296
Co. v. Derby, 14 How.
486. The plaintiff was traveling gratuitously on a passenger train.
It was said:
"Where carriers undertake to convey passengers by the powerful
and dangerous agency of steam, public policy and safety require
that they should be held to the greatest possible care and
diligence. . . . Any negligence in such case may well deserve the
epithet of gross."
The next was
Steamboat New World v.
King, 16 How. 469. That was the case of a free
passenger carried on a steamer and injured by the explosion of a
boiler. Referring to the rule laid down in the prior case, the
Court said, "We desire to reaffirm the doctrine not only as resting
on public policy, but on sound principles of law." The last case
was
New York Central R. Co. v.
Lock, 17 Wall. 357. That was a case, like this, of
a passenger accompanying his cattle on a freight train. It was
there said: "The highest degree of carefulness and diligence is
expressly exacted." This is conclusive as authority upon the
subject. But, upon principle, why should not the law be so in this
case? Life and limb are as valuable, and there is the same right to
safety in the caboose as in the palace car. The same formidable
power gives the traction in both cases. The rule is uniformly
applied to passenger trains. The same considerations apply to
freight trains: the same dangers are common to both. Such care and
diligence are as effectual and as important upon the latter as upon
the former, and not more difficult to exercise. There is no reason
in the nature of things why the passenger should not be as safe
upon one as the other. With proper vigilance on the part of the
carrier, he is so. The passenger has no authority upon either
except as to the personal care of himself. The conductor is the
animating and controlling spirit of the mechanism employed. The
public have no choice but to use it. The standard of duty should be
according to the consequences that may ensue from carelessness. The
rule of law has its foundation deep in public policy. It is
approved by experience and sanctioned by the plainest principles of
reason and justice. It is of great importance that courts of
justice should not relax it. The terms in question do not mean all
the care and diligence the human mind can conceive of, nor such as
will render the transportation free from any possible peril, nor
such as would
Page 93 U. S. 297
drive the carrier from his business. It does not, for instance,
require, with respect to either passenger or freight trains, steel
rails and iron or granite cross-ties because such ties are less
liable to decay, and hence safer than those of wood; nor upon
freight trains air brakes, bell pulls, and a brakeman upon every
car; but it does emphatically require everything necessary to the
security of the passenger upon either, and reasonably consistent
with the business of the carrier and the means of conveyance
employed. The language used cannot mislead. It well expresses the
rigorous requirement of the law, and ought not to be departed from.
The rule is beneficial to both parties. It tends to give protection
to the traveler and warns the carrier against the consequences of
delinquency. A lower degree of vigilance than that required would
have averted the catastrophe from which this litigation has arisen.
Dunn v. Grand Trunk R. Co., 58 Me. 157;
Tuller v.
Talbot, 23 Ill. 357;
Pittsburg & C. R. Co. v.
Thompson, 56 Ill. 138.
"2. The court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that their
investigation as to the negligence of the defendant should be
confined to the charges alleged in the declaration."
The charge in both counts of the declaration was "carelessness
and negligence and improper conduct" of the defendant's servants in
connection with the injury. The plaintiff was bound to state his
case, but he was not bound to state the evidence by which he
intended to prove it. We have looked through the proofs as set out
in the bill of exceptions, and have found nothing in this
connection that did not support with more or less cogency the
plaintiff's averment.
"3. The court erred in permitting the plaintiff to prove the
manner of changing cabooses at Mattoon, after the injury, to show
the wrongfulness of defendant's conduct at the time of the
accident."
Detaching the caboose in the night and requiring the plaintiff
to ride so far upon top of the freight cars before reaching the
caboose that was to be attached involved a serious peril, and was
the cause of the casualty complained of. The evidence was competent
as tending to prove, if such proof were necessary, that the change
could as well have been made where the second caboose was, and that
making it when and where it
Page 93 U. S. 298
was made was a matter of choice, and in no wise of necessity.
The point is covered by
Toledo &c. R. Co. v. Owen, 43
Ind. 405. We think the decision there was correct.
"4. Although the plaintiff's evidence showed that the accident
resulted from the plaintiff's negligence, the court charged
that"
"The burden of proving contributory negligence rests on the
defendant, and it will not avail the defendant unless it has been
established by a preponderance of evidence."
We have said that riding on the top of a freight car in the
night involved peril. When commanded to go there, the plaintiff had
no choice but to obey or to leave his cattle to go forward without
anyone to accompany and take care of them. The command was wrong.
To give him no warning was an aggravation of the wrong. He,
however, rode safely to the switch, standing in one place. He had a
right to assume that the posture and place would continue to be
safe. He had no foreknowledge of the coming shock. The conductor
knew it, but gave him no word of caution or notice. He was unaware
of danger until the catastrophe was upon him. The behavior of the
conductor was inexcusable. If there was fault on the part of the
plaintiff, in what did it consist? We find nothing in the record
which affords any warrant for such an imputation. As the case went
to the jury, the opposite was established. There was no proof to
the contrary. Nevertheless, the court, out of abundant caution,
charged the jury upon the hypothesis that there might be some
testimony tending possibly to support the adverse view. The
instruction contained two elements:
1. That the burden of proof rested on the defendant.
This was correct.
Railroad Company v.
Gladden, 15 Wall. 401.
2. That "it," meaning contributory negligence, could "not avail
the defendant unless established by a preponderance of
evidence."
This also was correct. The court did not say that if such
negligence were established by the plaintiff's evidence, the
defendant could have no benefit from it, nor that the fact could
only be made effectual by a preponderance of evidence, coming
exclusively from the party on whom rested the burden of
Page 93 U. S. 299
proof. It is not improbable that the charge was so given by the
court from an apprehension that the jury might without it be misled
to believe that it was incumbent on the plaintiff to show
affirmatively the absence of such negligence on his part, and that
if there was no proof, or insufficient proof, on the subject, there
was a fatal defect in his case. It was therefore eminently proper
to say upon whom the burden of proof rested, and this was done
without in any wise neutralizing the effect of the testimony the
plaintiff had given, if there were any, bearing on the point
adversely to him. We think the instruction was properly expressed.
If there was any ambiguity unfavorable to the defendant, it was the
duty of his counsel to bring it to the attention of the court and
ask its correction.
Lock v. United States, 2 Cliff. 574.
This was not done, perhaps because it was deemed unnecessary. If
the defendant had, in the first instance, required any charge upon
the subject, it should have been refused. It is not the duty of the
court to instruct where the instruction demanded assumes a theory
of fact which is unsupported or contradicted by the evidence. On
the contrary, it is error to do so, and the jury should be
distinctly told that the requisite evidence is wanting. Such
instructions cannot aid the jury, and may confuse and mislead them.
Michigan Bank v.
Eldred, 9 Wall. 544;
Ward v.
United States, 14 Wall. 28.
"5. The court refused the motion of the defendant to instruct
the jury to find specially upon particular questions of fact
involved in the issues, in the event they should find a general
verdict."
These questions of fact were submitted by the counsel for the
defendant. Upon looking into them, we find they were nine in
number. All of them related to the question of negligence on the
part of the plaintiff. It is insisted that they were within the Act
of Congress of June 1, 1872, 17 Stat. 197, sec. 5, and that hence
the court below erred in declining to require the jury to find in
answer to them in addition to the general verdict. We had occasion
to consider this statute in
Nudd v. Burrows, 91 U.
S. 441, and see no reason to depart from the views there
expressed. We said the section in question had its origin in the
code enactments of many of the
Page 93 U. S. 300
States, and was intended to relieve the legal profession from
the burden of studying and of practicing under the two distinct and
different systems of the law of procedure in the same locality, one
obtaining in the courts of the United States, the other in the
courts of the state, but that it was not intended to fetter the
judge in the personal discharge of his accustomed duties, or to
trench upon the common law powers with which in that respect he is
clothed. Whether Congress could do the latter was left open to
doubt. It was not then, and it is not now, necessary to decide that
question. The statute expressly recognizes the distinction between
proceedings in equity, in admiralty, and at common law. The
separate character of the two former is recognized by the
Constitution, and it protects them. The latter Congress can change
and regulate as it may see fit, within the limits of its
constitutional authority. Here the question is one of legislative
intent. The intention of the lawmaker constitutes the law: a thing
may be within the letter of a statute and not within its meaning,
and within its meaning though not within its terms. 9 Bouv.Bac.Ab.
title Stat., sec. 5, pp. 246, 247;
Burgett v. Burgett, 1
Ohio, 221;
Stater v. Cave, 3 Ohio St. 85;
United
States v. Babbit, 1 Black 61.
Where a state law, in force when the act was passed, has
abolished the different forms of action and the forms of pleading
appropriate to them and has substituted a simple petition or
complaint setting forth the facts, and prescribed the subsequent
proceedings of pleading or practice to raise the issues of law or
fact in the case, such law is undoubtedly obligatory upon the
courts of the United States in that locality. There may be other
things, not necessary now to be specified, with respect to which it
is also binding. But where it prescribes the manner in which the
judge shall discharge his duty in charging the jury, or the papers
which he shall permit to go to them in their retirement, as in
Nudd v. Burrows, or that he shall require the jury to
answer special interrogatories in addition to their general
verdict, as in this case, we hold that such provisions are not
within the intent and meaning of the act of Congress, and have no
application to the courts of the United States. These are all
matters relating merely to the mode of submitting the case to the
jury. The conformity is required
Page 93 U. S. 301
to be "as near as may be" -- not as near as may be possible, or
as near as may be practicable. This indefiniteness may have been
suggested by a purpose: it devolved upon the judges to be affected
the duty of construing and deciding, and gave them the power to
reject, as Congress doubtless expected they would do, any
subordinate provision in such state statutes which in their
judgment would unwisely encumber the administration of the law or
tend to defeat the ends of justice, in their tribunals.
While the act of Congress is to a large extent mandatory, it is
also to some extent only directory and advisory. The Constitution
of Indiana, art. 7, sec. 5, requires that
"The Supreme Court shall, upon the decision of every case, give
a statement of each question arising in the record of such case,
and the decision of the court thereon."
This was held to be directory, and not mandatory.
Willets v.
Ridgeway, 9 Ind. 367.
The Criminal Code of Practice of Arkansas provided that the
court should admonish the jury that it was their duty not to allow
any one to speak to them upon any subject connected with the trial,
nor to converse among themselves upon any such subject, until the
cause was finally submitted to them. It was held this provision was
only directory and cautionary, and that the omission to comply with
it was not error, and did not affect the validity of the verdict.
Thompson v. State, 26 Ark. 326.
See also Wood v.
Terry, 4 Lans. 86;
State v. Carney, 20 Ia. 82;
Bowers v. Sonoma, 32 Cal. 66;
Hill v. Boyland, 40
Miss. 618.
We think the learned judge below decided correctly in refusing
to submit the interrogatories to the jury.
"6. The motion for a new trial should have been granted in the
court below."
In the courts of the United States, such motions are addressed
to their discretion. The decision, whatever it may be, cannot be
reviewed here. This is a rule of law established by this Court, and
not a mere matter of proceeding or practice in the circuit and
district courts.
Henderson v.
Moore, 5 Cranch 11;
Boswell v.
De la Lanza, 20 How. 29;
Schuchardt
v. Allen, 1 Wall. 371. It is therefore not within
the Act of Congress of June 1, 1872, and cannot be affected by any
state law upon the subject.
Judgment affirmed.