45 Ind. App. 70 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
This was an action by appellee against appellant for damages for personal injury alleged to have been received by appellee from a fall occasioned by a projection of wooden steps leading from the lawn of a private residence over and upon the sidewalk of said city.
The complaint, after formal averments and description of the streets, in substance, avers that the sidewalk, over which appellee was passing when injured, was a cement walk four feet wide; that he was walking along after night with his brother; that it was dark; that the sidewalk was
In the case of Town of Royal Center v. Bingaman, supra, the complaint, charged that for more than thirty days, in a certain street, piles of brick, sand, gravel, dirt, lumber, lime, boxes, barrels and rubbish, to the height of six feet and extending more than half way across the street, were permitted to remain therein; that the same was calculated to frighten horses, and did frighten appellee’s horse, which caused it to run away, whereby she was injured; that appellant town had ample notice of said condition in ample time to remove the same, and that no lights, or other safeguards, or other warnings were maintained around said obstruction. The complaint contained no direct averment of negligence. The court, in discussing a demurrer to this complaint said: “It was necessary to the sufficiency of the complaint tested by demurrer that, by direct averments of facts, it should show a wrong of the appellant constituting the proximate cause of the injury alleged. No act or omis
For these reasons we cannot say that the facts averred in the complaint show negligence to that certainty required in cases where negligence is not directly averred. The demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained. Other questions presented will not necessarily arise on a retrial.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, with privilege of amending.