The case as represented by the record, although a close one upon the evidence, presented questions of fact for the jury, The motion for nonsuit was properly denied.
The defendant’s counsel requested the court to charge the jury “ that it was the duty of the defendant to give notice of the approach of its engines to travellers on the public streets approaching its tracks.” The court in declining to so charge remarked that it was a very proper thing for the company to do. Exception was taken, and the court was also requested to charge that if the plaintiff should be held entitled to recover the jury must not allow her any damages for or on account of any inability to labor in the past or present, although such inability may have been caused by the injuries in question. This the court declined to charge, and the defendant excepted.
The last request was founded on the fact, which had appeared, that the plaintiff was a married woman. To obviate those exceptions the jury, by the request and consent of the plaintiff’s counsel, were, soon after their retirement, for consultation, recalled into court by the justice presiding and charged, and both of such propositions were submitted to them as the defendant’s counsel had requested. The counsel of the parties were then present; and it was legitimately within the power of the court to recall the jury and
In the present case the correction sought to be made was not of the charge, but was in the refusal to submit to the jury certain propositions, and when they were charged fully in compliance with the requests of the defendant’s counsel it must be assumed that the instructions embraced in them were received by the jury as effectually as if the court had not previously declined to so charge them. It is not seen that the effect of the charge, as made in those respects, may have been qualified by the consent of the plaintiff’s counsel to the correction.
Assuming, therefore, that there was error in the refusal, it was cured by the subsequent compliance with the requests. The court was requested and declined to charge “ that if the proximate cause of the injury of the plaintiff was the breaking of a defective rein, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover; ” and exception was taken by the defendant’s counsel. It may be assumed that the plaintiff would have escaped injury if the rein had not broken. Yo evidence appears that it was defective unless the inference may have arisen from the fact that it did break. The witnesses differed materially in their evidence of the circumstances attending the passage of the horse and wagon from the tracks of the railroad through the east gate.
There Avas, however, evidence on the part of the plaintiff that at that particular time the gate was being lowered; and that it came in collision with the horse in his passage under it. These questions Avere submitted to the jury Avithout exception. And the court charged the jury to the effect that unless it did collide Avith or hit the horse the plaintiff was
It is difficult to disconnect the breaking of one of the lines used to control the horse from the situation which, in view of the facts specially found, caused the unusual strain upon them for the management of the animal, and without the application of those facts there was in the view of the court nothing to charge the defendant with negligence and liability. If, however, the breaking of the rein, whether defective or not, was the sole proximate cause of the injury,
Ho question is raised by any exception to the charge as made. And in view of the facts specially found by the jury, no other question requires .consideration.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.