Court Opinion

ID: 7057298
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 07:07:54.604016+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:12:02.103002
License: Public Domain

Spencer, C. J.
1. This is an appeal from a judgment recovered by appellee on account of personal injuries sustained in a collision between one of appellant’s interurban cars and an automobile in which he was riding. All the questions presented for our determination arise out of the action of the circuit court in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial; and the first contention is that appellant’s requested instruction No. 9 was improperly refused.. This instruction embodies the idea that if the accident and injury complained of were caused by the combined, concurrent negligence of appellant and appellee, the jury would not be warranted in comparing their separate negligent acts, in order to determine which was the more negligent, but must find for appellant. The doctrine of comparative negligence is not recognized by the law of this state and was not commented on in any of the instructions given, but the jury was repeatedly directed to return a verdict for the defendant if any contributing negligence on the part of the plaintiff should be established. We need not determine, therefore, whether the requested instruction was, in any sense, applicable to the issues, for it is not error to refuse an instruction which is covered, in its legal effect, by proper instructions given. Kingan & Co. v. King (1912), 179 Ind. 285, 291, 100 N. E. 1044.
*932. *92With one exception, the remaining grounds of the mo*93tion for a new trial, in so far as they are presented for review, relate to certain of the court’s instructions given to the jury. The objections urged, however, are so technical and superficial as not to merit consideration in detail. Some of these objections touch only the phraseology of the instruction in question, while in other instances the attack is directed against incomplete and isolated phrases which are clearly correct when considered in the light of the context. Such objections can avail nothing. Louisville, etc., Traction Co. v. Montgomery (1917), — Ind. App. —, 115 N. E. 673, 675; Wellington v. Reynolds (1911), 177 Ind. 49, 54, 97 N. E. 155.
In general, appellant’s lack of good faith is well illustrated in its objections to the court’s instructions Nos. 7 and 11. Those instructions are in the identical language of appellant’s requested instructions Nos. 13 and 3, respectively, which instructions were adopted by the trial judge without change or modification, and given as a part of his charge to the jury.
3. 4. Finally, and in the face of an affirmative showing that appellant’s statement of the record omits a narrative recital of about thirty pages of evidence, on the ground that it is “confined to plaintiff’s injuries,” we are asked to consider the assignment that the damages assessed by the jury are excessive. The omission referred to is sufficient to operate as a waiver of the question suggested (Rule 22, cl. 5), but our review of the record reveals nothing to indicate that the verdict was influenced by prejudice, partiality or corruption. It must, therefore, be upheld.
Judgment affirmed.
Lairy, J., concurs in conclusion.
Note. — Reported in 118 N. E. 564.