40 Ind. App. 315 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
Action by appellee for the recovery of damages averred to have been caused by the death, through appellant’s. negligence, of appellee7s son, who was not quite ten years of age. The complaint was in one paragraph. Its substance is that on March 10, 1905, appellant’s railroad, consisting of a main track and side-track, crossed Depot street in the city of Loogootee; that the distance between said tracks was five feet, and that appellant negligently maintained certain buildings upon its right of way adjacent to said side-track, and negligently placed cars upon said side-track and in said street, thereby obscuring approaching trains from persons’ going toward said tracks from the south; that it had for a long time maintained at said crossing an automatic alarm bell, operated by electricity, for the purpose of warning travelers of the approach of trains when the same were 300 feet distant; that the appellee and decedent relied upon said alarm, and that appellant negligently suffered the 'same to be out of order so that it failed to sound any alarm, of which condition appellant knew- and decedent did not know. The existence of an ordinance limiting the speed of trains to ten miles an hour through said city, and the negligent violation thereof on the occasion in question, are also set up. It is further averred that the appellant negligently failed to sound the whistle or ring the bell upon its locomotive engine as required by statute; that said train was due at said crossing at 12:36 o’clock p. m.; that at 12:56 o’clock p. m. decedent undertook to cross said tracks, and was struck by said train, which he did not and could not see, and was instantly killed; that his death was caused by the negligence specified.
The issue formed by a denial was submitted to a jury, which rendered a verdict against appellant for $2,000, with
It is admitted that there was evidence sustaining the verdict so far as the negligence charged against appellant is concerned, and no interrogatory relative to the subject was submitted.
The proposition relied upon by appellant is that the decedent was eontributorily negligent. Appellee asserts that the proposition requires the conduct of a ten-year-old boy to be measured as though he were an adult. Appellant in its reply disclaims this attitude, and asserts that the facts show the child to have exercised no care, and that as it was not non sui juris some care was required.
The standard of reasonable care applicable to an adult is not the standard of care required from a child ten years old. If, upon the foregoing facts, the child was held, as a matter of law, to have been eontributorily negligent, it
Judgment affirmed.