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ARK.] ROARK TRANSPORTATION, IN 7 C. v. WEST. 941 ROARK TRANSPORTATION, INC. v. WEST. 4-3377 Opinion delivered February 19, 1934. 1. JURYDISQUALIFICATION.—That two of the jurors Of the panel of jurors from which a drawn jury was to be selected were related to a person who was killed in the same automobile collision in which plaintiff's intestate was killed did not render them disqualified. 2. APPEAL AND ERRORHARMLESS ERROR.—Where the names of two jurors of the panel from which the jury were selected were stricken by appellant after objection to them had been overruled, and no complaint was made that any of the jurors selected to try the case were disqualified or were not fair and impartial, and no challenge was made to any juror selected, no prejudice was shown. 3. NEGLIGENCEBURDEN OF PROOF.—The burden is on the party alleging contributory negligence to establish it by a preponderance of the evidence. 4. APPEAL AND ERRORHARMLESS ERROR.—Where there was no evidence that an automobile guest was guilty of contributory negligence, an instruction ignoring that defense was not prejudicial. Appeal from Carroll Circuit Court, Eastern District ; John S. Combs, Judge; affirmed. Festus 0. Butt, for appellant. C. A. Fuller, A. J. Russell, Jr., and J. W. Trimble, for appellee. MCHANEY, J. This case is controlled in nearly all -respects by the decision of this date in the case, Roark Transportation, Inc., v. Sneed, ante p. 928. Appellee's intestate and Mr. Sneed were riding in the same car at the time of the collision between it and appellant's bus, Sneed being the driver and Mrs. West an invited guest, and both received injuries from which they died. Trial resulted in a verdict and judgment against appellant for $3,000.
942 ROARK TRANSPORTATION, INC. V. WEST. [188 For a reversal, a number of errors are assigned and argued, which are the same as in the Sneed case, and we will not repeat them here. Only such assignments as are not covered in the Sneed case will be discussed in this. In the panel of 24, qualified as prospective jurors, from which to select by lot 18 for a drawn jury, appeared two persons who were related to Mr. Sneed, driver of the Ford car, within the prohibited degree, and they were challenged on this ground. The court held them competent, and they were stricken from the list by appellant. This was not -reversible error for two reasons : (1) that they were not related to Mrs. "West or the plaintiff, and (2) appellant was not required to accept them on the trial jury. It exercised its right so to do and struck them off. It is not contended that any of the twelve jurors selected to try the case were disqualified in any way, or that they were not fair and impartial, nor is it shown that any challenge was made to any juror selected. The relationship prohibited by § 6334, Crawford & Moses' Digest, is to either party to the suit. Sneed was not a party to this suit. Objection was made to the giving of instruction No. 6 for appellee, on the ground that it "ignores the possible existence of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff's decedent." Only a general objection was made to the instruction as given, but it is now said that it should have contained the clause, "and without fault on the part of Fannie Clark West." No such request was made to the trial court. Contributory negligence is an affirmative defense, and the burden is on him alleging it to establish it by a preponderance of the evidence. There is no proof in this record that Mrs. West was negligent in any particular. The proof is to he contrary. Therefore the court would have been justified in refusing the modification now suggested had the request been made. The same thing is true as to objections made to instructions 10 and All other errors assigned and argued are covered in the Sneed case. . Affirmed.
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