71 Ind. App. 249 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1919
— This action was in tort for damages resulting from personal injuries sustained by the appellant caused by the collapse of a tier of seats, one of which she occupied at appellees’ invitation while patronizing a public exhibition for- hire, given by appellees, and for admission to which the appellant had paid the charge required.
It is averred in the complaint in substance that: On May 22,1914, the appellees gave, maintained and conducted for profit at the baseball park in the city of Evansville, a public exhibition and place of amusement and entertainment known as a “Field Day Exhibition.” On and prior to said date, the appellees invited the public to attend the same, and charged twenty-five cents admission with an additional charge for certain seats. Appellant accepted such invitation, purchased tickets, on the surrender whereof she was duly admitted and invited to occupy, and did occupy one of the tiers of temporary seats erected by appellees. While she was so seated, the seats gave way and fell to the ground, whereby the appellant was thrown violently to the ground amid a struggling mass of people, and severely injured. That at all times referred to, the management, maintenance, and supervision of said premises and seats, as between appellant and appellees, were in the exclusive power and control of the appellees. At the time of such injury and at the time the public were so invited to attend, said seats were not in a safe condition for such purpose, and were not strong enough to hold the people intended and suffered by appellees to
There was no demurrer to the complaint, but each appellee separately answered with a general denial. On change of venue, the ease was tried in the Warrick Circuit Court. On trial, the appellant dismissed her action as tó the defendant Tomlin. Appellant having introduced her evidence and rested, the appellees each moved the court to direct a verdict in his favor, each of which motions was by the court sustained, to which ruling the appellant excepted, and, the jury having returned a verdict according to such instructions for appellees, the court rendered judgment thereon that the appellant take nothing by her suit, and that the appellees should recover from the appellant their costs, to which judgment the appellant duly excepted. Thereafter the appellant filed her motion for a new trial, in which' she specified as error: The court’s ruling in sustaining the motion of each of the appellees to instruct the jury to return a verdict for such appellees and each of them; in so instructing the jury to return a verdict for each of the appellees; that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence; that the verdict is contrary to law, and that the court erred in rendering judgment on the verdict of the jury against the appellant and in favor of each of the appellees. This motion was overruled by the court, to which ruling the appellant
In each of the following cases, from which we do not need to quote, the powers held by the officer were held to be discretionary powers for which he was not liable: Lynn v. Adams (1850), 2 Ind. 143; Morrison v. McFarland (1875), 51 Ind. 206; Butler v. Haines (1881), 79 Ind. 575; Houston v. Board, etc. (1862), 18 Ind. 396; State, ex rel. v. Gough (1913), 55 Ind. App. 118, 103 N. E. 448; Lamphier v. Karch (1915), 59 Ind. App. 661, 109 N. E. 938; Baker v. State (1867), 27 Ind. 485; Walker v. Hallock (1869), 32 Ind. 239; Spitznogle v. Ward (1878), 64 Ind. 30; McOsker v. Burrell (1876), 55 Ind. 425.
In the last case cited a clear distinction was made between discretionary or judicial acts and ministerial acts, for the first of which there is no liability, but for the second of which there may be. In Clark and Skiles on Agency, the rule is well stated that: “Where-an agent is guilty of misfeasance, that is, where he-actually entered upon the performance of the duties to his principal, and in doing so fails to respect the rights of others, by doing some wrong, whether it' be a wrong of omission or a wrong of commission,as where he fails or neglects to use reasonable care or diligence in the performance of his duties, he will be personally responsible t.o third person who is injured by reason of such misfeasance; the agent’s liability in such case is not based upon the ground of agency but upon the ground that he is a wrong doer.” Following this doctrine in the case of Shepherd v. Lincoln (1837), 17 Wend. (N. Y.) 249, it was held that for misfeasance it is enough to prove negligence or mismanagement. In that case the superintendent
The' ease of Tearney v. Smith (1877), 86 Ill. 391, was an action for damage for the careless, improper and negligent manner in which the defendants, as commissioners of highways, had cut and dug a drain and graded an embankment so near the premises' of the plaintiff, and so unskilfully, as to cause the rain and surface water running from the ditches and drains into and upon the lands of the plaintiff to his injury and the injury of certain walls, fences and ditches. It was held that the facts established the unskilful and careless manner in which the defendants discharged their duty'; that the public had an undoubted right to have the highway constructed and the commissioners to construct the same, but that they had no right to use such rights in such way as to injure others, that their acts in constructing were ministerial acts for which they were personally responsible.
In McCord v. High (1868), 24 Iowa 336, it was held that the construction by a road supervisor of a crossing of a stream over which a highway passed is a