Affirming.
The appellee recovered a judgment in the sum of $6,500 for personal injuries sustained by her while a passenger on one of the busses of the appellant, Reo Bus Lines Company. Of this sum $5,000 was assessed against the bus company and $1,500 against Harry Herrick, its codefendant. The bus company alone appeals.
Late in the afternoon of August 29, 1925, the appellee boarded one of the busses of appellant at Frankfort, Ky., bound for Louisville, some 55 miles away. The day was very warm, and all the windows in the bus were open. She seated herself on the left-hand side of the rear seat of the bus, and was so seated at the time of the accident which resulted in her injury. Long Run is located in Jefferson county, Ky., about 18 miles from Louisville. The road from Frankfort crosses a stream at this point on a one-way bridge. The road on each side of this bridge comes down to it in a very sharp descent of a half mile or better. The accident out of which this litigation arose happened near the top of the descent on the Frankfort side of the bridge. The appellant's bus had just breasted the top of the hill, and was going down the *Page 309
descent towards the bridge when it met Herrick, driving a Ford coupe in the opposite direction. The left front tire of Herrick's Ford was flat. The front ends of the Ford and the bus passed each other safely, but the left front fender and wheel of the Ford and the back end of the bus collided. Whether appellee's left arm was then resting with its elbow on the window sill, but inside the bus, or was protruding or dangling down outside the window, is in dispute; there being evidence pro and con on this question in this record. At all events, the collision so mangled the appellee's arm that it had to be amputated just below the elbow. For the appellee there was evidence to show that the collision occurred by reason of the fact that neither the bus nor the Ford kept to their respective sides of the road, but, after passing each other, turned too abruptly back into the center of the road, thus sideswiping each other. Of course, the respective defendants each contended that he or it was on his or its right side of the road, and that he or it was run into by the negligence of the other. Although the evidence probably preponderated to the effect that the bus was on its right side of the road, and that it was the Ford which negligently ran into it, yet there was substantial evidence to show that this collision was caused by the fault of both the Ford and the bus. This being true, under the many decisions of this court it was for the jury to say whose fault caused this collision, and its finding that it was the fault of both of the defendants cannot be set aside by us. Mann v. Woodward,
For reversal the appellant bus company relies on the grounds: (1) That the appellee was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; (2) that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence; (3) that the damages are excessive; (4) newly discovered evidence; and (5) misconduct of the appellee's counsel in arguing her case to the jury.
The appellant's contention that the appellee was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law is bottomed on its theory that her arm was protruding or dangling outside the window. Conceding, without deciding, that if this had been so, she would have been guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, yet we find there was an abundance of evidence to support her contention that she had her arm inside of the bus, with just her elbow resting on the window sill. The court by instruction *Page 310 No. 3 practically told the jury that, if it believed the facts on this question to be as the appellant contended, then the appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. But certainly under the contrariety of evidence here appearing it was for the jury to say whether the facts were as appellant contended or as appellee contended. If they were as the appellee contended, it cannot be said that she was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. There is no merit in appellant's first contention.
Little need be said on grounds 2 and 3. There was substantial testimony to sustain the verdict and $6,500 is not an excessive amount for the pain and suffering sustained by appellee and the permanent impairment of power to earn money on her part due to the loss of her arm. Central Consumers' Co. v. Lamberg,
In support of its ground that it is entitled to a new trial by reason of newly discovered evidence, appellant presents the testimony which it is claimed four newly discovered witnesses will give. Considering these witnesses seriatim, we find that Royer was expected by the appellant to be a witness for it at the trial. Due to an accident to a bus he was driving on the morning of the trial he did not show up for the trial. Appellant, however, did not ask the court for a continuance on the grounds of his absence. Having elected to proceed with the trial without him, appellant cannot now ask a new trial in order that his testimony may be heard. Benge's Adm'r v. Marcum,
Appellant's most serious ground for reversal is that which is based on the misconduct of appellee's counsel in his closing argument to the jury. In the bill of exceptions the trial court certified that it did not remember the exact language used by the appellee's counsel which appellant claims constitutes the misconduct. Appellant, in the affidavits filed by it and made part of the 'bill of exceptions by the court, says that the appellee's counsel in arguing her case to the jury, said that the appellant was *Page 312 trying to shift the whole blame of this accident upon its codefendant, Herrick, because he was insolvent. The appellee in affidavits likewise incorporated in the bill of exceptions says that the appellant, in arguing this case to the jury, said that the appellee and Herrick were colluding to throw the blame of this accident on the appellant, giving as a basis for this assertion the fact that Herrick and the appellee had signed an agreed order prepared by appellee's counsel controverting of record the appellee's petition, and the further fact that Herrick showed up on the trial without a lawyer and testified in behalf of the appellee. Appellee then says that, to refute this charge of collusion, her counsel stated in his closing argument that the reason Herrick showed up without a lawyer was that he was perhaps insolvent. No matter which version of what transpired we assume to be the correct one, we cannot set our seal of approval on the argument of appellee's counsel. Herrick's insolvency, if he was insolvent, was, so far as this record is concerned, purely a matter of speculation. The statement of appellee's counsel was unsupported by the facts in evidence. If appellee's counsel did not by the statement he admits he made designedly seek to influence the jury in its fixing of the blame for this accident, he ought to have realized that the natural tendency of such a statement would be to do just that thing. Appellant was entitled to have the question of who was to blame for this accident determined independently of whether forsooth the one on whom the blame might be put was insolvent or not. The whole tendency of the admitted statement of appellee's counsel was to influence the jury to put the blame of the accident on a solvent defendant. Such argument cannot be commended. But, under the Code of Civil Practice, we cannot reverse a judgment for error, unless the error was prejudicial. Civil Code, section 134. In view of the verdict in this case, we cannot say that the improper argument of appellee's counsel, conceding it to have been as appellant contends, was prejudicial to appellant. The seventh instruction in this case was the standard instruction in cases of this sort. By it the court told the jury in substance that it could find a joint verdict against both defendants, or it could find against the defendants in separate amounts, or it could find for one defendant and against the other. Had the jury been improperly influenced by the argument of appellee's counsel, and wanted to put the burden of this accident on the *Page 313 solvent defendant, it would undoubtedly have found a joint verdict against both defendants, leaving the solvent one to pay it. It did not do this, however, but assessed a very substantial portion of the total verdict against the defendant whose insolvency was so strongly intimated by appellee's counsel. By so doing the jury demonstrated that the solvency of the defendants did not enter into its deliberations, but only the relative blame for the causing of the collision. It follows that the argument of appellee's counsel, though highly improper, was not under the circumstances of this case prejudicial.
Perceiving no error prejudicial to appellant's substantial right, we conclude that the judgment of the lower court must be, and it is hereby, affirmed.