Yergy v. Helena Light & Railway Co.

MR. JUSTICE SMITH

delivered the opinion of the court.

These are appeals from a judgment entered on the verdict of a jury, and from an order denying a new trial, in a case in which Mary Alice Yergy, as executrix, the plaintiff, was awarded damages in the sum of $40,000 on account of the alleged negligence of the defendants, the Helena Light and Railway Company and Stephen Peterson, its motorman, resulting in the death of plaintiff’s husband, George .0. Yergy, a lumber dealer in the city of Helena. The death occurred on December 1, 1906, and resulted from a collision between one of the defendant company’s street railway cars propelled by electricity, which was being operated by Peterson, and a buggy drawn by a single horse, in which buggy the deceased, Yergy, was attempting to cross the railway tracks at the intersection of Lyndale and Benton avenues. The com*223plaint alleges that Peterson “did not keep any lookout for persons or vehicles who were then approaching or crossing the tracks; nor did he have said car under sufficient, or any, control, so as to avoid injuring travelers passing over the railway tracks; nor did the defendant stop said car in time to avoid injuring Yergy, but, on the contrary, the said street-ear was then and there by the defendants run at a high, negligent and dangerous rate of speed, and far in excess of that allowed by law, - whereby the said car was propelled and driven with great violence at and against the vehicle in which Yergy then and there was, and the said vehicle was upset and thrown over, and the said Yergy was thrown thereout and east upon the ground, after which, and by reason of the careless and negligent management and operation of said car, said Yergy was drawn and dragged by the same over and along the ground, and over and along the railway tracks, for a great distance, and was drawn and dragged under the wheels of said car, and the same were then and there run and driven over him, whereby he was then and there crushed and killed.” Then follows an allegation that the defendants, in so running the car and causing the death of Yergy, “acted in a willfully and recklessly negligent manner, and without any regard to their duty in the premises, and without any regard to the safety, rights, and life of said Yergy.” The complaint also contains .the allegation that “deceased left no children or other heirs dependent upon him, save and except the' plaintiff. ’ ’ The defendants denied negligence on their part, and alleged (1) that the proximate cause of the death of Yergy was his own negligence; and (2) that he was guilty of contributory negligence.

The first complaint made by the appellants is this: That the court erred in allowing plaintiff’s witness, Samuel M. Boss, to testify as to the distances within which a street-car could be stopped, under certain circumstances, when going at different rates of speed. The witness had testified that he was inspector of railways for the State Bailway Commission, and had had eight years’ experience in the railroad business; that he had acted as *224a street-car conductor for about three months, but had never been a motorman; that he had taken a motorman’s place several times, and had stopped electric ears; that he had observed the speed of cars and the stopping of ears, and had some knowledge of the space in which ears running by electricity could be stopped. He said he had never stopped a car in an emergency, and had never seen the ear which caused the accident, but that “he was in a position to tell the court in what space a car could be stopped” under the circumstances narrated in the question propounded to him. We think there was no prejudicial error in the ruling complained of. The competency of the witness was a matter for the court to decide, and one in which its discretion could properly be exercised. We find no abuse of discretion, and in addition, other witnesses for the plaintiff testified to the same general import, and the testimony of Ross in effect was cumulative.

In order to properly illustrate the other propositions of law involved, it seems necessary to set forth a portion of the testimony. John Edgerton, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he was in a cab on Lyndale avenue, which is a street of average travel, on the evening in question; that at some distance east of the intersection of Lyndale and Benton avenues the cab passed a buggy, in which the deceased Yergy was riding. The cab was going at the rate of from six to seven miles an hour. As the cab passed the buggy, the horse attached to the buggy began to trot. There was an arc light at the intersection of the two avenues, and the street-ear could be seen approaching for many hundred feet south of the intersection of the two streets. The cab had reached a point approximately one hundred feet west of the railroad track, when the witness looked out to see if the approaching car would stop at Lyndale avenue. At that time the car was running at the rate of about twenty-two miles an hour. Witness first saw the car approaching when it was at a point about four hundred feet south of the intersection of the two streets. He heard the gong of the street-car sounding. When the car was at a point from fifty to one hundred feet *225south of the intersection of the railroad track and the roadway of Lyndale avenue, there was a succession of strokes on the gong. Witness and the driver of the cab, learning that a collision had taken place, returned to the point on Benton avenue where the car was stopped. Mr. Yergy at that time was lying across the track, with his head on the rail between the two west wheels of the forward truck of the car. He appeared to be dead. The ear stopped at a point about eighty-seven feet north of the intersection of the two avenues. The car was illuminated, and was easily visible. There was introduced in evidence an ordinance of the city of Helena, prescribing that the rate of speed for street-ears at the point in question should not exceed twelve miles per hour.

Nathan Godfrey, an insurance agent, testified that his company would charge for an annuity of $5,000 per annum, for a man forty-nine years of age, for the balance of his life, the sum of $71,800.

Ben. Hay, the cab driver, testified that, when the car stopped, the front wheel of the forward truck was off the track; that Mr. Yergy did not look around when the cab passed his buggy, and paid no attention at all to the cab as it passed.

Amos Shelladay, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he was a former employee of the defendant company; that he knew the car in question; that for a couple of hundred feet south of the intersection of Lyndale and Benton avenues the street car track was practically level; that under the conditions existing on the night in question the car could have been stopped in the space of twenty feet, going at the rate of eight miles an hour; that at the rate of twelve miles an hour it ought to be stopped in practically the same distance, and, going at the rate of eighteen or twenty miles an hour, the car could be stopped in fifty feet. J. W. Ludwick substantially corroborated Shelladay.

J. B. Sanford testified that he had known deceased for twenty years; that he was in the planing-mill and lumber-yard business, and witness at one time conducted a similar business for a •period of thirty-five years; that he had a great deal of business *226with Mr. Yergy, and “could tell his capacity as a business man was first-class, particularly as to the kind of business he was conducting. In my judgment his earning capacity prior to his death was worth $5,000 a year. He was a very good mechanic, and understood the running of a planing-mill and keeping machinery in order. He was his own bookkeeper, and thoroughly acquainted with lumber, and the buying and selling of it, and he was a working man besides. It is pretty hard to find a man with all the qualifications that he had. Very seldom will you find a man that could do it, and that is the reason I say his time would be worth that for a man doing that kind of business. ’ ’

Thomas E. Goodwin, an expert accountant, testified that he had examined the books of Mr. Yergy, and that these books disclosed the fact that for several years prior to his death the profits of Mr. Yergy’s business averaged about $8,700 per annum. This testimony was not objected to at the time it was given. At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendants interposed a motion for a nonsuit, for two reasons: (1) That no evidence had been introduced to support the allegations of the complaint that the acts of the defendants were willful; and (2) that “the evidence shows only the happening of the accident and its results, and does not show the circumstances immediately accompanying it, so that the only inference which can be drawn from the facts testified to is that the deceased got upon the track of the defendant company, in full view of the rapidly moving ear, which said car was lighted, so that it could be readily seen, and with the gong ringing so that it could be readily heard; and the evidence fails to show that the deceased was at that time in the exercise of ordinary care, and also fails to show that the accident' was proximately caused by the negligence of the defendant. ’ ’ This motion was denied, whereupon the defendant moved to strike from the record the testimony of Mr. Goodwin as to the showing made by the books of the Yergy estate, “for the reason that the same is incompetent and immaterial, and that earnings of business are speculative in character, and do not form the proper measure of damages.” The court overruled the motion, and the defendants saved an .exception.

*227On the part of the defendants testimony was then introduced which tended to show that the ear could not be stopped within the distances testified to by plaintiff’s witnesses. Stephen Peterson testified: “I am the motorman who is one of the defendants in this case. I got no signal to stop for Lyndale avenue, and I kept going right along on down to about forty feet away from Lyndale avenue. A horse stepped in on the crosswalk, and as soon as I saw the horse stepping on the crosswalk, I set on the brake, and saw that he wasn’t stopping, and I reversed the ear as fast as I could, and he never paid any attention to me until I got—the horse didn’t pay any attention. Before he got on the track, kind of stopped. The man never paid any attention to me at all, and the horse got on the track and got scared of the headlight, and he made a jump, and when he made that jump he stopped again and I got the man. I first saw the horse coming in on the street when I was about forty feet away from Lyndale avenue. I was ringing the gong loud; I sounded it four or five times. When I first saw the horse, he just stepped on to the cross-walk that runs across Lyndale avenue. I rang the bell at that time—the horse made a jump, and the buggy was just in the middle of the track. The man, when I first saw him, was sitting with his head down at that time. I think he was about thirty feet away from me. He was going just about five miles an hour. The horse was trotting along. I was going about eight miles an hour. I reversed the ear and set the brakes, and tried to stop the car. The car responded readily to my movement. I had not struck the buggy when I got the power reversed. I was then about ten feet from Lyndale avenue. I had not seen the man at any time before the horse stepped on the crosswalk. I kept looking along the street ahead.” On cross-examination he said: “I had no power at all. I was just going down the grade with the momentum of the ear. I was looking right in the street out of the corners of my eyes. My gaze was directed on the street ahead. I did not look east on Lyndale avenue—east of Benton avenue—to see if anybody was coming. I did not look *228that way, because if I look that way somebody might be coming from the other side. There was nothing to stop me from looking on Lyndale avenue east of Benton avenue. I would not be enabled to see anything at the point in question, except what was under the light. The only efforts that I made to keep the car under control before coming to Lyndale avenue, and before I saw the horse and buggy, was to take up a little slack out of the brake. That is all that was necessary. I had my hand on the brake. When I first saw Mr. Yergy, he had his head down, and was not paying any attention. I saw then that he was in a point of danger, and did not pay any attention to things. As soon as I saw that, I began to tighten up my brakes. I had to make three turns to tighten up my brakes. I was about forty feet from the man when I made these three turns in the brakes. It takes pretty nearly forty feet to get the brake on. As a matter of fact I did not have my brake on until I got up to the buggy; I could not get it on any quicker. It took me forty feet before I got the brake on. At the same time I reversed the power with one hand, and set the brake with the other. The power was reversed, and the wheels were going backward, when I reached the place where the buggy and horse were. The reversed power was on about four or five feet from the horse and buggy. It was three or four feet before the wheels began to go backward, and forty feet before the brakes were on. The car slid about fifty feet after I struck the buggy. After I got in collision with the buggy, I could not do anything else than just keep the power on and setting the brakes. I had the power reversed, and I had the brakes on all the time. When I saw Mr. Yergy, he just looked up a little about the time I came to him. He kind of turned his head up against me—I mean by that, looking at me. I was standing above him, on the platform. He just turned his head up, and looked a little bit. The horse was across the track when we hit the buggy, just about three or four feet. The front wheels of the buggy were just on the rail— two wheels on each rail, and we crashed right into the buggy between the two wheels. The body of the buggy was not under *229the car at all. It never got under the ear. After striking the buggy, Mr. Yergy’s body got under the car, just about forty-five or fifty feet. Mr. Yergy’s body did not get under the ear until we got past the north line of Lyndale avenue. Up to that distance we had been shoving the buggy and the man ahead of us.”

Ruth Bower, a girl of fifteen years of age, testified that she was at the crossing when Mr. Yergy passed. She said: “The car was coming pretty fast down the hill, and the gong was sounding, and I was waiting for the buggy to cross, and while I was standing there I heard the crash, and I turned around- and saw the smash-up. The man was driving at a slow trot. He was just sitting still in the buggy. He did not see me; he was looking straight ahead. I made an outcry. I said, ‘Look out! you will get hurt,’ and he did not pay any attention to that. Mr. Yergy did not seem to hear me when I called to him. I did not think he heard me at all.”

Walter Card testified that he was a passenger on the car in question; that his attention was attracted by the sounding of the gong; that he looked out, and saw the man in the buggy, who was apparently either absorbed in thought or sleeping. The witness continued: “He was sitting in a kind of a crouched position, looking down in the street ahead, neither to the right nor to the left. The gong had been sounding up until then. Until the car was right on to him you might say he didn’t appear to know who was in the way. He then attempted to gather up his lines, and to either get across the track or whip up the horse, but was hit before he could do so. The ear was going at the ordinary rate of speed. When I saw the buggy, I saw the motorman put on his brakes, trying to stop the ear. I could not say what effect it had on the ear, as to stopping it. • As soon as the extra loud sounding of the gong commenced, I looked out and saw the horse. The horse was then just off the crossing, and the buggy was still on the crossway. The horse extended the length of the horse into Benton avenue. I did not think there was any reason to apprehend danger when I saw this man *230and the buggy in that position. I saw him lift his head. He was close to the track then. The horse must have been just about over the track when he lifted his head. He looked as if he recognized the fact that he was in danger; that was apparently the first time that he recognized the fact that he' was in danger. The electric light was quite distinct. I had no trouble in seeing around there.”

Frank J. Wise testified that he saw Mr. Yergy on the evening in question, just before the accident happened; that he was driving in a kind of a dogtrot. “He was sitting in the buggy kind of stooped down; he had a cloth coat and a fur collar. He did not notice us at all apparently; passed very close to us. I saw the car coming. I could see the light. The car was moving rapidly, just as it generally was. The gong was sounding, and the accident happened just at the same time. Mr. Yergy never looked up. I heard the gong sound, and my attention was called to him when that man came to a stop, and then it all happened in just a twinkling of an eye, in less time than it takes me to tell it. That is the only time I heard the gong sound. The motorman sounded the gong immediately before he hit the man. It was all in the twinkling of an eye, like a flash of lightning. The car did not seem to stop right at once; it went quite a little distance. It went on past the corner. It was not very light there. There was a dim light there. There was an electric light. It was just about light enough to see the wheels of the car, but you could not see whether they were revolving.”

Mrs. Frank J. Wise testified that she was with her husband. “Mr. Yergy was near the track when I heard the gong, driving along. He was dressed in an overcoat, and he had the collar up, and was kind of looking down. When he passed us, he was sitting in the buggy in the same position. He paid no attention to us at all; didn’t seem to notice us. I did not see him paying any attention to the sounding of the gong. It only took a few seconds to enact the whole thing. When I heard the gong sound, the car was about two or three hundred feet south of Lyndale avenue; that was what drew my attention to the car—the gong. *231It was two or three seconds between the sounding of the gong and the striking of the buggy. I think my husband is mistaken when he says that the sounding of the gong was so near to the hitting of the buggy that the whole happened in the twinkling of an eye. I think there was a more appreciable time. That is what drew my attention to it. When the car was two or three hundred feet away, the buggy was on the other side of the crossing; near the crossing—the foot crossing on Lyndale avenue. When the buggy and horse were crossing the footwalk on Lyndale avenue, the ear was two hundred feet away, as near as I can tell. ’ ’

Paul Bickel testified: “I was on the front part of the car. I saw the buggy before the car struck it. I should say the car, when I first noticed it, was about ninety feet from the crossing —maybe not that far—and at that time the' buggy was just across the sidewalk. The motorman’s bell was ringing at that time, and I heard it distinctly. He was applying the brakes all the time; at the same time he was ringing the bell. I should think that the motorman reversed the current; the jar would indicate that he did. The horse had just got by, and it hit the buggy, and it crushed right under the car, and the man went with it. I should say that the ear was running about eight or or nine miles an hour. I should think the car was about ninety feet from the crossing of Lyndale and Benton avenues when I heard the gong ring, and that was the time when I saw the buggy. It was brightly lighted around there so that I could see. There was no obstruction there. As far as I can remember, the horse was just across the middle of the street, trotting along about five miles an hour, about half as fast as the car was going.”

As we understand the complaint (and this understanding is based partially upon statements in the briefs of counsel for the respondent), the theory of the pleader was that the proximate cause of the death of Mr. Yergy was the negligence of the defendants after the collision took place. We think this is the only ground of negligence stated in the complaint. Error is assigned *232upon the action of the court in overruling defendants’ motion for a nonsuit. It is true, in our judgment, that no evidence of willful conduct was introduced,- but we do not regard the allegation of the complaint relating thereto as being of the gravamen of the pleading. It simply stands by itself, and no conclusion seems to be predicated upon it. (See Robinson v. Helena Light & Ry. Co., 38 Mont. 222, 99 Pac. 837.) The second ground of the motion was that the testimony of the plaintiff disclosed the fact that deceased was guilty of contributory negligence precluding a recovery. Bearing in mind that the negligence charged was founded upon the failure to exercise reasonable care after the collision; that there was no evidence as to the precise moment of time at which Mr. Yergy was killed, and no evidence as to what, if any, efforts were made to stop 'the car, we are not prepared to say that the action of the court in overruling the motion would not have been error had the defendants elected to rest their case upon it, and had they not supplemented the plaintiff’s case by their own testimony, followed by their decision not to object to instructions allowing the jury to predicate negligence upon the conduct of the motorman between the time he first observed Mr. Yergy and the moment of collision. But the testimony on the part of the plaintiff was very materially supplemented by that of the motorman himself, and also by that of Mr. Bickel and Mrs. "Wise. Under these circumstances we may not inquire whether the court erred in refusing to grant the motion for a nonsuit. Defendants’ .testimony cured the defects in that of plaintiff. (Alderson v. Marshall, 7 Mont. 288, 16 Pac. 576; T. C. Power & Bro. v. Stocking, 26 Mont. 478, 68 Pac. 857.)

We shall assume, for the purposes of this decision, that Mr. Yergy was negligent in placing himself in a situation of peril. It is not a violent inference that he was asleep in his buggy up to a moment just prior to the collision. The testimony of the motorman, however, is to the effect that he saw deceased, and appreciated his peril, when the ear was forty feet south of Lyndale avenue. He then sounded the gong. Edgerton testified *233that the ear was fifty to one hundred feet from the crossing when the gong first sounded; while Bickel testified that he heard the sound when the car was ninety feet south of the crossing, and Mrs. Wise said she heard it when the car was two or three hundred feet from the point of collision. Peterson testified that the speed of the car was eight miles per hour, and plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that, going at that rate of speed, the car eould have been stopped in the space of twenty feet. This testimony, which it was the right of the jury to believe, furnished ample basis for the application of the doctrine of last clear chance before the moment of collision.

The court instructed the jury, without objection, as follows: “ (6) The jury are instructed that it is the duty of the motorman running a street-car to keep a constant lookout for persons approaching the track; and, on the approach of a person or vehicle near the track with the apparent purpose of crossing, to use every means in his power, consistent with the safety of his passengers, to stop the car and avoid a collision; and, if the jury believe from the evidence in this case that the injury and death of George 0. Yergy were caused by the failure of the motorman to keep such constant loookout, or to use the means within his power to stop the car and avoid the collision, the. defendants are liable for the injury and death of the said George 0. Yergy.

“(7) The court instructs the jury that it is the duty of a street railway company to so regulate the movement of its cars at the intersection of streets as not to unnecessarily expose drivers of vehicles to the dangers of collision. It is consequently the duty of the street-car company to have its car under control, and to operate the same with reasonable care at street intersections ; and, if it fails in the duty, then it is liable for such damages as may happen to a person injured because of such failure.

“ (8) You are further instructed that, if a person be seen approaching the tracks of the defendant electric street railway, who is apparently capable of taking care of himself, the motorman may assume that such person will not attempt to cross the *234track if danger is imminent, or that he will leave the track before the car reaches him; and this presumption may be indulged in so long as the danger of injuring him does not appear imminent, and it is not necessary for a motorman to slacken the speed of a car upon seeing a person approaching the crossing of the street railway until such danger does (not) appear to him imminent.

“(9) The court further instructs the jury that the duty of a street railway company, and its motorman in charge of a car, to control the same at street intersections, in order to avoid collision, does not arise solely when a person is on the track, but also obtains if his danger was apparent while he was approaching the track.”

The following instruction was also given: “(11) If the jury believe from the evidence that the deceased, George 0. Yergy, got upon the track of the street-ear, or was in the act of approaching the track in such a way as to indicate to the motorman, or apprise the motorman in charge of the ear, that he was in the act of getting upon the track, far enough ahead of the ear that the motorman, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have seen that fact in time, and either by stopping the car or arresting its motion, and thus avoided injuring Yergy, and you believe from the evidence that the motorman failed to do this, then the law is for the plaintiff, although you may believe that Yergy himself was negligent.” The record discloses no objection to this instruction, but does show that the defendants excepted to the same “upon the ground that there was no evidence in the case to support the instruction based upon the divisibility of the accident.” This exception, even though we could consider it in the absence of a prior objection, was not well taken, for the reason, as we have heretofore pointed out, that there was testimony in the record to warrant it, provided the complaint was so framed as to cover that ground of negligence. The latter question, however, was not raised by the exception. It is apparent, therefore, that the cause was tried on the theory,— in which defendants participated,—that negligence could prop*235erly be predicated, not only upon the failure of Peterson to exercise reasonable care after the collision, but also, after Yergy was discovered in a situation of peril, before that event.

But it is contended by the appellants, quoting from the opinion of the court in Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Young, 153 Ala. 232, 45 South. 238, 16 L. R. A., n. s., 301, that “the negligence to liability consists in a' failure to perform the duty declared, and not in the ultimate effect produced.” Assuming this to be a correct statement of the law, the jury in this case, in the’light of Peterson’s testimony, and the fact that the car ran more than eighty-seven feet after the collision, may have believed that he made no reasonable effort to stop, after (as he said) “I saw that he was in a point of danger, and did not pay any attention to things.”

Defendants requested the court to charge the jury as follows: “(1) You are instructed that the basis of this action is negligence. Negligence may be defined to be the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided by those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or the doing of something which a prudent and reasonable man would not do under the circumstances of a given case. Before you can find for the plaintiff, therefore, you must find the defendants to have been guilty of negligence as alleged in the complaint; and, if the deceased was himself guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the injury complained of, he cannot recover.” The court modified this instruction by adding thereto, “except under the condition and the law as defined to you hereinafter.” The record discloses no objection to the modified instruction, but does show that the defendants excepted thereto, for” the reason that the instruction as given “destroyed the right of the defendants to a verdict in the event that the negligence of the deceased was the proximate cause of the injury.” But we shall consider this instruction in connection with others which involve the same question of law.

Defendants also requested this instruction: “(9) You are hereby instructed that, if you find from the evidence that the *236ear was running at a moderate or ordinary rate of speed, and that the bell or gong had been sounded, and that the plaintiff suddenly and without warning, and under circumstances which were not reasonably t.o be expected, drove upon or attempted to cross the track of the defendant company in close proximity to the car of the defendant company, and at a time when it was not prudent to do so, then and in that event deceased would not be exercising ordinary care or prudence, and your verdict must be foi the defendants.” The court made this addition thereto: “Unless you further find from the evidence that the defendants might have avoided the injury to the said George 0. Yergy by the exercise of ordinary care after the collision took place, as hereinafter stated. If the jury believe from the evidence that the death of George 0. Yergy was brought about by the want of ordinary care on the part of the motorman in charge of the car in running at a rate of speed in excess of that permitted b3r the ordinances of the city of Helena, or in failing to have tin-car under such control as that its speed might have been lessened, or the ear stopped, and if they further believe from the evidence that such want of ordinary care, if any, continued after the collision between the car and the vehicle driven by said George 0. Yergy, and after said Yergy was under said car, then whatever negligence that Yergy might have been guilty of in being upon the track at the moment of collision cannot be said to have been the proximate cause of his death, their verdict should be for the plaintiff.” With relation to this instruction, and the action of the court thereon, the record recites: “To the refusal of the court to give instruction No. 9, as requested by the defendants, and to the giving of said instruction No. 9 as modified as instruction No. 10, the defendants then and there objected, upon the ground that there was no evidence to warrant the giving of the modification, and that the modified instruction would permit the jury to find for the plaintiff, although the contributory negligence of the deceased was the proximate cause of the accident.” It is earnestly contended, in the reply brief of appellants, that the court erred in this connection, because *237the instruction as modified allowed the jury to predicate negligence for which recovery could be had upon a continuance of the same primary negligence which was offset by the contributory negligence of the deceased, and thus destroyed the defense of contributory negligence. Cases are-cited which seem to sustain the appellants’ position, but we cannot consider them or the alleged error. In so far as the instruction requested is concerned, what is hereafter said with reference to request No. 14 disposes of the same. It will be observed that, technically, no exception was saved to the action of the court in refusing to give the instruction requested. But we pass that. The fact that no exception was taken to the action of the court in overruling the objection to the modified instruction, makes it impossible for this court to consider the ruling of the court below. (See Robinson v. Helena Light & Ry. Co., supra.)

The defendants also requested this instruction: (12) You are instructed that it was the duty of the deceased, George 0. Yergy, before going on or across the track of the defendant company, to look and listen for approaching ears of said defendant company; and if you find from the evidence that the deceased, George 0. Yergy, failed so to do, and that by looking and listening he could have seen or heard the approaching car of the defendant company in time to have averted the injury to himself, then you must find your verdict for the defendant, unless you further find from the evidence that the employees of the defendant, engaged in the operation of its car, after they saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen, that deceased was in a position of peril, failed to use such care and caution in stopping said car to avoid injury to said deceased, George 0. Yergy, as a person of ordinary care and prudence would have exercised' under like and similar circumstances.” This instruction the court refused to give, and defendants excepted, upon the ground that the refusal did away with the defense of contributory negligence. The court, however, did charge the jury that if the injury to Yergy could have been avoided by the exercise of ordinary care, after he was discov*238ered in a place of peril, or after the collision, then the defense of contributory negligence was not available to the defendants. The court also, in instruction No. 1 (being defendants’ request No. 1 as modified, heretofore considered), told the jury that if the deceased was himself guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the injury complained of, plaintiff could not recover, “except under the condition and the law as defined to you hereafter.” The court also told the jury that' it was “the duty of a person approaching the crossing of a- street railway in a street to use his senses, his eyes and ears, to discover the proximity and passage of the cars of the railroad company, before proceeding across the track, and a failure to do so would constitute contributory negligence.” In instruction 15 the court defined contributory negligence as follows: “The court instructs the jury that one of the defenses interposed by the defendants in this action is contributory negligence on the part of George 0. Yergy. Contributory negligence may be defined as follows: One who through the mere negligence of another suffers an injury, to the bringing about of which the willfulness or want of ordinary care on the part of the injured person has so far proximately contributed as that, but for such concurring and cooperating fault, the injury would not have happened.” We are of opinion that all the instructions, taken together, left the jury free to consider the defense of contributory negligence, and that they must have understood from the instructions given that there could be no recovery unless the doctrine of last clear chance could, under the testimony, be successfully invoked by the plaintiff.

The following instruction was also requested: “(14) If you believe from the evidence that said George 0. Yergy drove upon said railway track after he saw, or by the use of ordinary care and watchfulness could have seen for a distance of at least five hundred feet, the said ear of the Helena Light and Railway Company approaching the crossing at ordinary speed, when by stopping his horse before going upon the tracks a collision could have been avoided, your verdict should be for the defendants.” *239This instruction was properly refused, for the reason that it would have enabled the jury, had they followed it, to find for the defendants regardless of the question of defendants’ conduct after deceased was discovered in a place of peril; and other instructions were given properly dealing with this question.

Eequested instruction No. 17 reads as follows: “Even if you believe from the evidence that the defendants were negligent in the management of the said car at the time and place alleged, and that the said George 0. Yergy was in no respect negligent, unless you find that the defendant then and there managed said car in both a willful and recklessly,negligent manner, your verdict should be for the defendants.” This instruction was properly refused, for the reasons heretofore stated in relation to the same subject matter, and for the further reason that there was evidence in the case sufficient to warrant a verdict for the plaintiff, aside from any question of willful or reckless conduct on the part of the defendants.

The defendants also requested the following instruction: “ (19) You are instructed that, if you find from the evidence that the deceased and the defendant were both negligent, and that the negligence of both directly contributed to cause the injury complained of, then your verdict should be for the defendants.” This was properly refused, for the reasons applicable to request No. 14.

Instruction No. 12, which the court gave, reads as follows: “The court instructs the jury that street-cars propelled by electricity cannot be lawfully run at a rate of speed which is incompatible with the lawful and customary use of the street by others with reasonable safety. Nor can such cars be lawfully run at a rate of speed in excess of that allowed by ordinance. So in this case, if you find from the evidence that there is an ordinance of the city of Helena prohibiting electric ears, at the place where deceased George 0. Yergy came to his death, to run at a greater speed than twelve miles per hour, and that at the time and place of such death of said Yergy the defendant’s car was running at a greater speed than such twelve miles *240per hour, and the death of said Tergy was occasioned thereby, then the defendants were guilty of negligence, and are liable for the damages resulting therefrom.” Defendants contend that by this instruction “the jury was told that, if Tergy’s death was caused by a speed of more than twelve miles per hour, ‘defendants are liable for the damages resulting therefrom.’ ” The record recites that the following proceedings were had with reference to this instruction: “To the giving of which said instruction the defendants then and there excepted, upon the ground that there was no evidence in the case to support the instruction, and that it did away with the defense of contributory negligence.” There is ample evidence in the record to warrant the conclusion that the car was propelled at a rate of speed exceeding twelve miles per hour, and at an excessive rate of speed. But we are not permitted to consider the assignment of error, because the defendants either failed to object to the instruction, or to except to the ruling of the court (if the court ruled). (See Robinson v. Helena Light & Ry. Co., supra.) The law reads thus: “The court shall pass upon the objections to the instructions requested and also those proposed to be given by the court. * * * No motion for a new trial on the ground of errors in the instructions given shall be granted by the district court unless such errors are specifically pointed out and excepted to at the settlement of the instructions. * * * No cause shall he reversed by the supreme court for any error in instructions, which was not specifically pointed out and excepted to at the settlement of the instructions, * * * and such error and exception incorporated in and settled in the bill of exceptions or statement of the case. ” (Revised Codes, sec. 6746.) We are not disposed to be technical about the use of terms, but if the foregoing extract from the record discloses an objection to the instruction, then there was no exception to the ruling of the court, if the court did rule; and, if it be claimed that an exception was saved, then there was no prior objection and ruling to which the exception can apply. The trial court must be given an opportunity to rule, before it can be put in error. And the *241mandate of the statute applies as well to this court as to the court below; the language employed by the legislature being, “And no cause shall be reversed by the supreme court,” etc.

We find in the reply brief of the appellants some criticism of other instructions, but do not discover in the record any objection to these instructions, or any exception to the action of the court in giving them. If, as is suggested in the reply brief of appellants, there be any error in those instructions of the court, which engrafted the so-called “discovery doctrine” upon the doctrine of last clear chance, it may be said that the same proposition was incorporated in one of the instructions requested by appellants themselves, and the instructions given were not objected to.

The following instructions, relating to the measure of damages, were given to the jury: “(19) The jury are instructed that, if your verdict shall be for the plaintiff, such damages may be given by you to the plaintiff as under all the circumstances of the ease may be just, not exceeding the amount prayed for in the complaint. And in determining the amount of such damages you have the right to take into consideration the pecuniary loss, if any, suffered by the plaintiff in the death of said George 0. Yergy, by being deprived of his support.

“ (20) You are instructed that the measure of damages in this action is the present value of such a sum as you believe the deceased would probably have earned in his business during his natural lifetime, and left as his estate at the time of his death, considering his age, ability, disposition to work, habits of living, and expenditures, the capital he had at his command, and the risks incident to his business.”

Respondent’s counsel state in their brief that instruction 20 was given at appellants’ request; but, as the record does not show this, we may not act upon the information. It is now contended that the court erred in allowing the witnesses Sanford and Goodwin “to testify to the earning capacity of the deceased.” And it is said: “The jury were to find as the measure of damages the amount which the deceased would probably *242have earned and saved. The question which should have been propounded was the value to his business of the services which he rendered.” It is unnecessary to decide whether instructions 19 and 20 were erroneous, for the reason that there was no objection to them in the court below. Mr. Sanford’s testimony was well within the rule now contended for by the appellants, and we think he was sufficiently qualified to express an opinion. His answer seems to have been founded entirely upon his knowledge of Mr. Yergy’s personal capacity. But, assuming that the motion to strike Mr. Goodwin’s testimony should have been granted, still the action of the court resulted in no prejudice to the defendants. Mr. Sanford’s testimony was uncontradicted, as was also that of the insurance men, to the effect that an annuity of $5,000 would have cost Mr. Yergy the sum of over $70,000. The elements of passion and prejudice will not be presumed to have influenced the minds of jurors who return a verdict, based on competent testimony, in accordance with instructions, and easily to be arrived at by mathematical calculation. We find no error in the case justifying an unconditional reversal of the order or judgment.

But the plaintiff alleges that she is the sole dependent heir of the deceased. His estate inventoried $70,000, and there is an intimation in the record that its real value exceeded that sum. The size of this verdict is so great as to somewhat shock the mind, unless the amount be justified by the circumstances of the case. This court, and the district court, has the power to require that the plaintiff either remit a part of the amount awarded, by the jury, or submit to a new trial, in cases where the damages are clearly excessive. (Chicago T. & T. Co. v. O’Marr, 25 Mont. 242, 64 Pac. 506; Storm v. City of Butte, 35 Mont. 385, 89 Pac. 726; Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Bodkin (Kan.), 101 Pac. 652.) The law is that such damages may be given as under all the circumstances of the case may be just. (Revised Codes, sec. 6486.) In this •particular case we have felt justified, in view of the circumstances and the fact that the information we seek is contained in public records made by the plaintiff herself, and easily accessible, in pursuing an extrajudi*243cial inquiry. The records in the office of the clerk of the district court for Lewis and Clark county disclose, in substance, that the entire estate was left to Mrs. Yergy for life, with certain remainders over to three brothers, one sister, and one nephew of deceased, all of whom are nonresidents of Montana, none of whom, according to the allegations of the complaint, were dependent upon the deceased; and that the approved claims against the estate amount to less than $1,500. The course pursued by the court in making this inquiry is not to be construed as a precedent, for the reason that we have been actuated solely by the amount of the verdict in this particular action. The result of this litigation will be that the sum recovered by the plaintiff as executrix will simply be added to the fortune of which she will come into possession when the estate is finally settled, and at’her death will go to persons who were in no way dependent upon Mr. Yergy in his lifetime. We are not unmindful of the fact that plaintiff has been under expense for the services of counsel; but the amount to which we reduce the judgment will enable her to pay reasonable attorneys’ fees, and add a substantial sum to the assets of the estate.

The cause is remanded to the district court, with directions to grant a new trial, unless, within thirty days after the filing of the remittitur with the clerk of that court, the respondent shall file her consent in writing that the judgment may be modified by deducting from the amount thereof, as of the date of its rendition, the sum of $25,000, leaving the amount of said judgment the sum of $15,000. If such consent is given, then the judgment shall be modified accordingly, and in that event the judgment, as modified, and the order denying a new trial, will stand affirmed, the respondent to recover costs of appeal.

Mr. Justice Holloway concurs.