21 Ind. App. 323 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1898
Appellee sued appellant to recover damages for injuries received while in the service of appellant as an employe. The complaint upon which the case was tried was in two paragraphs, and a brief statement of its allegations will suffice. In the first paragraph it is averred that appellant maintained and operated machine shops in the city of Washington, Daviess county, Indiana, connected with which was a blacksmith shop, wherein a large number of blacksmiths and their helpers are employed; that appellee was helper of one of the blacksmiths employed therein; that near said blacksmith shop appellant kept and maintained a scrap bin, in which scrap iron was thrown and kept; that some sheet iron had been put in said scrap bin, with one end leaning against the wall; that it was a part of the duty of appellee to, and his employment frequently called him to go to said scrap bin for pieces of iron to be used by the blacksmith, whose helper appellee was; that when the doors of said shop building were left open, as they frequently were in the warm wéather to let the air circulate through the building, if the wind was strong, it would blow the fire and
The second paragraph of the complaint is like the first, except that in the second it is alleged that the
As to the first paragraph of the complaint, appellant urges that there is no averment that the scrap bin was a place provided by the master for its servants to work in, or that scrap iron was placed therein in any particular manner. We do not think this position is tenable in the light of the averments. It is charged that the bin was kept and maintained by appellant for the purpose of storing scrap iron; that it was the duty of the employes to go to said bin from time to time to get scrap iron to use in and about the forges in the blacksmith shop; that this was one of the duties of appellee in the course of his employment; that on the occasion of his injury he went into said bin for the specific purpose of getting a piece of scrap iron to put up at the forge to protect the blacksmith, for whom he was helper; that appellant knew that that was a part of his duty, and while thus engaged was injured. It is true, as appellant suggests, the complaint does not aver that scraps were placed in such bin in any particular manner, but we do not think such averment was necessary. The term “scrap bin” as used in the complaint, implies the character
We cannot conceive it to have been the duty of the appellee, under the facts charged, to have examined with care the sheet iron that fell upon and injured him. It was not his duty to take hold of it and move it to see if it would fall upon him. He saw it leaning against the wall of the bin, and assuming, as he had a right to assume, that it was safe, he relied upon his apparent safety from danger, and went about the discharge of his duties. It seems to us that he used ordinary care under the circumstances. Appellant has not cited us to any authorities in support of its insistence that the complaint is insufficient, and we have been unable to find any so holding. The second paragraph of complaint is so nearly identical to the first, that what we have said applies to both. The
Appellant’s motion for a new trial was grounded on three reasons: (1) That the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence; (2) that the verdict is contrary to law; (3) that the court erred in giving certain instructions, on its own motion, and in refusing to give certain instructions tendered by appellant. Appellant has failed to discuss the second reason assigned in its motion for a new trial, and hence under the rule it is waived. The other two we will dispose of in their order:
(1) That the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence. Appellant insists that the verdict and judgment cannot stand, because the evidence does not sustain them. The evidence is somewhat voluminous, and it would not serve any good purpose to refer to it, even in the abstract, yet after a careful examination of it, we find that there is an abundance of evidence to support every material averment of the complaint. True, there is some conflict of the evidence, but in such case the appellate tribunal can not weigh it. It is only when there is no evidence to sustain the verdict of a jury, that the court of last resort can disturb it, because it is not sustained by the evidence. There being evidence in the record from which the jury might reach the conclusion as expressed by their verdict, it must stand. Currie, etc., Co. v. Byfield, 9 Ind. App. 180; Town of Ladoga v. Linn, 9 Ind. App 15; Coryell v. State, 130 Ind. 51.
(2) The instructions. The appellant first makes a general attack on the instructions given by the court, because they proceed, as appellant insists, upon the theory that it was the duty of appellant to beep its scrap bin in a safe condition, and as to this counsel say: “While some of them [the instructions] fall far
The fourth instruction, it is urged, is erroneous, because in it the court submitted the case to the jury on both paragraphs of the complaint, and that as the first paragraph is defective, such instruction was fatal. This probably might be true if the first paragraph was bad; but as we have held that it stated a cause of action, the objection is unavailing. This instruction is also criticised because in it the court instructed the jury that they might find for the appellee, “if he prove to your satisfaction the material averments of either paragraph of his complaint” (quoting the language of the court). Counsel urge that as the court, in this instruction, did not tell the jury that appellee must prove every material averment of his complaint by a preponderance of the evidence, it was erroneous. This instruction, standing alone, might not be a technically correct statement of the law, as it told the jury that it would be sufficient if appellee had proved the material facts to their “satisfaction,” yet, when we come to consider all the instructions, and construe them together, appellant’s objection is obviated, for in other instruc
The eighth instruction is as follows: “A railroad company is not an insurer of the lives and limbs of its servants, and it cannot be held liable for an injury sustained by its servants, unless> it was guilty of some act of negligence which resulted in the injury, and which was not contributed to by the carelessness. or negligence of the servant himself.” Appellant insists that this instruction was erroneous, because it wholly disregarded the question as to whether appellant’s negligence was the proximate or remote cause of the injury. The instruction is not subject to the objection urged. It stated the law clearly and plainly, and we do not know how it could be more forcibly and explicitly expressed.
The tenth instruction reads as follows: “It is. the duty of a railroad company not only to provide, but maintain, reasonably safe places for its servants to work in; and it cannot delegate this duty to another, and thereby relieve itself from responsibility. And a servant engaged in the service, of a railroad company has a right to rely upon the company to furnish him with a reasonably safe place in which to work, and it is the duty of the company to maintain such place in a reasonably safe condition while the service continues.” Appellant says this instruction is erroneous, because it is not applicable to the facts alleged and proved. We cannot so regard it. It states the law in strict harmony with what we have said in the for
Instruction twelve is: “It is the duty of one engaged in a hazardous employment to keep a constant lookout for the danger that besets him, and if he receive an injury because of a danger to which he is exposed, of which he had equal advantages and opportunities with the master to know, and fully understand, he cannot recover for an injury as a result of such danger.” Appellant’s learned counsel insist that this instruction is vitiated and rendered bad by the expression “and fully understand.” The instruction, in our judgment, states the law most advantageously to the appellant. The objection at most, is highly technical. It would have been good with these words omitted, and the 'appellant could not have been prejudiced by them, because it placed upon appellee an additional burden, and for this appellant cannot complain.
The appellant, at the proper time, tendered to the court a series of instructions, numbered from one to fourteen, and requested that they be given to the jury. The court gave instructions one, three, four, seven, eight, nine, and twelve, and refused .to give instructions two, five, six, ten, eleven, thirteen, and fourteen. After a careful examination of these instructions which the court refused, and comparing them with the instructions the court gave, we are clearly of the opinion that those tendered by the appellant which correctly stated the law were fully covered by other instructions given, and in such case refusing to give the instructions asked is not error.
The fourteenth instruction requested by appellant was a plain direction to find for appellant. The court correctly refused this instruction, because to have given it, under the evidence, would have been an invasion of