Miller moved for a new trial on the ground of misdirection. He
cited Proctor v. Harris
57
, as shewing that a plaintiff cannot
recover for damage caused by negligence where the injury has
been partly occasioned by negligence of his own; and he
contended that the plaintiff here committed such fault by
attempting to bring his horse out of the mews, if the passage
was at all dangerous; and that, instead of incurring danger even
if it had been slight, he should have kept his horse in the
stable, and brought an action, if necessary, for the
obstruction. [LORD DENMAN, C.J. I thought the plaintiff might
be justified in incurring a moderate danger, and that the facts
proved as to the first coming out shewed it to be no more.] ...
57
.
4 C. & P. 337.
228
[COLERIDGE, J. If a man is lying drunk on the road, another is
not negligently to drive over him.
58
If that happened, the
drunkenness would have made the man liable to the injury, but
would not have occasioned the injury.] Here the plaintiff had
an obvious danger before him, and was not justified in
encountering it to avoid a delay. For that he might have had a
legal remedy: if he chose rather to incur a danger, he might do
so, but not at the cost of the defendants. If an extraordinary
emergency had arisen, as a fire, the case might have been
different. [PATTESON, J. Suppose the horse had been coming home;
must he have been kept out of the stable till the entrance was
pronounced safe?] He might have placed the horse at livery and
brought an action for the keep....
COLERIDGE, J. The question is, not only whether the defendants
did an improper act, but also whether the injury to the
plaintiff may legally be deemed the consequence of it. The
defendants say that injury was the result of his own
wrongheadedness in attempting to pass when he was told that it
could not be done without risk to his horse and to the men
below. Then, was the question on this point properly left to the
jury? I understand the Lord Chief Justice to have expressed
himself strongly against the view taken by the defendants'
counsel, but to have put the question in the manner which
appears correct, by asking, namely, whether the plaintiff acted
58
.
[EDITOR'S NOTE. Contrast Button v. Hudson R.R. Co. (18 N.Y. 349), where a drunken man
was thus run over; but, from the darkness, without negligence.]
229
as a man of ordinary prudence would have done, or rashly and in
defiance of warning. The plaintiff was not bound to abstain from
pursuing his livelihood because there was some danger. It was
necessary for the defendants to shew a clear danger and a
precise warning. Whether these facts existed or not, was for the
consideration of the jury; and, if the jury disbelieved them,
the plaintiff was entitled to the verdict.
[Concurring judgments were delivered by LORD DENMAN, C.J.,
PATTESON, J., and WIGHTMAN, J.]
Rule discharged.
[EDITOR'S NOTE. This case was followed by the Supreme Court of
the United States, in Mosheuvel v. Columbia, (191 U.S. 247).
Sometimes one of the two evils between which the plaintiff has
had to make his choice may be an evil threatening not himself
but a third person.
Thus in Langendorff v. Pennsylvania Ry. Co. (48 Ohio 316) a
judgment against a railway company was upheld in a case where a
little child had been (through the company's negligence in
having no watchman at a level crossing) imperilled by a passing
train, and the plaintiff bravely sprang to the child's rescue
but was struck by the engine. The company urged that the
plaintiff had voluntarily taken on himself a risk of an
obviously hazardous character, and one which he was under no
230
legal obligation to accept. But the court held that, though it
was thus true that if he had chosen to stand by and permit the
train to kill the child, he would have violated no rule of law,
civil or criminal, yet that was not a conclusive test of the
company's liability. "To entitle a plaintiff to relief for the
consequences of another's negligence it is by no means necessary
that the party injured should have been at the time in the
discharge of a duty; his rights are perfect if he is in the
performance of any lawful act. The act of the present plaintiff
was not only lawful, but highly commendable; nor was he, in any
legal sense, responsible for the emergency that called for such
prompt decision. The negligence of the railroad company, in
having no watchman, and in the unlawful rate of speed at which
the train was running, were the causes of the danger. There was
but the fraction of a minute in which to resolve and act; to
require that a man so situated should stop and weigh the danger
to himself, and compare it with that overhanging the person to
be rescued, would be to deny the right of rescue altogether when
the danger is imminent. The alarm, the excitement, and
confusion; the uncertainty as to the proper move to be made; and
the promptness required: all suggest that much latitude of
judgment should be allowed to those who are thus forced by the
strongest dictates of humanity to decide and act in sudden
emergencies. a man is not necessarily chargeable with
Contributory Negligence because he adopted a course of action
that imperilled his life." Cf. Brandon v. Osborne, L.R. [1924]
1 K.B. 548.]
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