122 Ind. 538 | Ind. | 1890
The complaint of the appellee alleges that a sidewalk in the city of Elkhart was negligently suffered to become unsafe; that it had been unsafe for more than six months; that it was necessary for the appellee to use it in going to and from her work ; that in November, 1885. the appellee was walking on the sidewalk after dark, and no lamps were lighted; that while she was carefully walking thereon a portion of it gave way, and she was violently thrown to the ground, without any fault or negligence on her part, and injured.
It is asserted by counsel that the complaint is bad because it does not show that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence, but in our opinion counsel are clearly in error. The direct averment is made that she was injured without fault or negligence on her part, and this, as has been many times decided, is sufficient to show that she was not guilty of contributory negligence. Ohio, etc., R. W. Co. v. Walker, 113 Ind. 196, and cases cited ; Pennsylvania Co. v. O’Shaughnessy, post, p. 588.
Where the complaint alleges that the injury occurred without the-fault of the plaintiff it will be sustained, unless it clearly appears, from the facts specifically stated, that there was negligence on his part which contributed to the injury.
There is no bill of exceptions containing a motion to make the complaint more specific, nor does the paper, denominated a motion, indicate in what particulars the defendant desired the complaint to be made more definite ; and, in this condition of the record, we can not consider any question asserted to be presented by the alleged motion. Manhattan L. Ins. Co. v. Doll, 80 Ind. 113.
It is very seldom, if, indeed, ever, that a judgment is reversed because the court permitted a leading question to be asked; and there was here no abuse of discretion in allowing the plaintiff’s counsel to ask the surgeon this question : “ You may state if you applied the remedies.”
It was entirely proper to permit the witness White to state that “ there were defects in the sidewalk; one of the planks was rotted off at one end, so that if a person stepped on it it would tilt down.”
There was. no answer presenting any issue as to a champertous agreement with the plaintiff’s attorney, and even if such evidence would have been competent in any case it certainly was not in this, because it was irrelevant.
A witness can not be impeached upon a purely collateral matter ; and an agreement with an attorney was purely collateral to the issue joined.
It was proper to allow the plaintiff’s counsel to ask the witness Foltz whether he did not tell' Mr. Goblosky that he asked Mr. Chapman to repair the walk ; and to ask the witness, also, what he said. So, too, it was competent to show by Goblosky what he did say, since it tended to contradict what he testified to while on the witness stand.
We can not disturb the verdict on the evidence.
Judgment affirmed.