City of Indianapolis v. Cauley

164 Ind. 304 | Ind. | 1905

Hadley, C. J.

Action by William Cauley, appellee, against the city of Indianapolis and the Indianapolis Street Railway Company, appellants, to recover damages for personal injuries received by reason of the fall of the West Washington street bridge over White river, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of appellants. As against Indianapolis, appellee charges that the city negligently permitted said bridge to become out of repair and dangerous for traffic, and, with knowledge, negligently suffered it toi be and remain out of repair, and to be used by the public as a thoroughfare for traffic. As to the railway company, it is charged that the company, well knowing the bridge was out of repair and dangerous to travel, negligently permitted its cars to run over, and negligently carried its unknowing passengers and employes over, said bridge while in such dangerous condition, with full knowledge that the same was liable to fall and precipitate its passengers and employes into the river. A separate demurrer by each of the defendants for insufficiency of facts was overruled. Each of the defendants answered by general denial. Verdict and judgment for appellee against both appellants. Separate assignments question the action of the court in overruling the demurrers to the complaint, in overruling separate motions for judgment on answers to interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict, and in overruling like motions for a new trial.

1. The chief assault upon the complaint by the city is that it does not sufficiently charge negligence, or show that any act of that defendant was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries; and, by the street car company, that the complaint does not adequately negative assumption of risk. It has been many times decided in this State that in cases of this class a general charge of negligence is sufficient to withstand a demurrer. Here it is charged that the city negligently permitted the bridge to get out of repair and dangerous for traffic, and, “well knowing said bridge was *307out of repair and dangerous for traffic, negligently suffered the same to remain out of repair, and negligently suffered it to be uSed by the street car company and the public for travel.” These allegations are clearly sufficient under the rule. If, before answering, this defendent had desired, and was entitled to, more definite and specific information concerning the want of repair, and elements of danger existing and continuing in the bridge with such city’s knowledge, it had an ample remedy by motion to have secured such information.

2. It is charged that the plaintiff was an employe of the street car company, as a member of its track-repairing force, and was by the company ordered to take passage on its construction ear to be carried over the bridge to his work on the other side of the river, the company at the time well knowing that the bridge was out of repair and dangerous, and liable to give way and precipitate those traveling upon it into the river. The plaintiff at the time having no knowledge, nor means of knowledge, of the defective and dangerous condition of the bridge, took passage upon said construction car, and was by the company negligently carried upon and along said defective bridge, and “while said car was so passing over said bridge, by reason of the defects in the bridge, and its insecure aud unsafe condition, it gave way and fell, and the construction car, with the plaintiff and other employes of said defendant, were precipitated into the river, and the plaintiff thereby injured,” etc. Under these averments the falling of the bridge was the result of tlie city’s wrongful failure to repair, and the falling the direct and proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries.

3. ETeither can we sustain the street car company’s contention that the complaint fails to show affirmatively that the plaintiff did not assume the risk. It makes no difference that the plaintiff was an employe, and not a passenger. He was in the ear rightfully, and by command of the company. He had no knowledge, nor means of knowledge, of the de*308fective and dangerous condition of the bridge, and, in the absence of opportunity or means of information, it can not be said that the plaintiff assumed an extraordinary risk that was wholly unknown to him. We find no infirmity in the complaint as to either of the apellants, and the demurrers thereto were properly overruled.

4. Were the motions of appellants for judgment on answer’s to interrogatories correctly overruled ? In effect, the jury found by their general verdict that the plaintiff’s injuries were caused, directly and proximately, by the negligence of appellants in the manner as alleged in the complaint. The jury’s special findings as relating to the city are to the effect that the board of public works had, and have, full control and authority over all the bridges of the city, including the one in question. Shortly prior to plaintiff’s accident the board caused the bridge to be inspected by the city civil engineer, and a civil engineer in the employ of the street car company, which inspection disclosed an unsound and unsafe condition. Upon such disclosure the board immediately closed the bridge to all traffic, except one empty street car at a time, and proceeded at once to repair in accordance with the recommendations of the inspecting engineers. The bridge fell and caused the plaintiff’s injuries about 2 o;clock p. m. of the day upon which it was opened for traffic after being repaired. The board of public works believed the inspectors selected by them were competent, but they did not exercise reasonable care in selecting men capable and qualified to inspect, and to determine and conduct repairs, and did select engineers who were incompetent either to ascertain the condition of the bridge, or to determine and conduct necessary repairs. The board had no reason to believe that the persons selected by them were competent to inspect and repair this kind of a bridge. The defects that caused the fall of the bridge were not discemable by ordinary inspection. The engineers and workmen who repaired the bridge were not skilled, and the *309repairs were made in an unskillful and unworkmanlike manner, and the board of public works, after the repairs were completed, knew that defects in the bridge still existed, and knew at the time of the accident that the bridge was unsafe for ordinary traffic.

5. With respect to the street car company, it is found that on the day of the accident the company was restricted' in the use of the bridge to the passage of one loaded oar at a time, and, in violation of the restriction, the company was at the time drawing over it more than .one loaded car. The company knew at the time of the accident, and before, and after the completion of repairs, that using the bridge as it was being used by it at the time of the plaintiff’s injury was dangerous. The plaintiff and other employes of the company loaded the cars upon which plaintiff was riding, when hurt, with ordinary and usual loads, and it was the loaded cars and weak condition of the bridge that caused it to fall.

6. Counsel for the city argue that, as the city was bound to use only ordinary care in the inspection and repair of its bridges, the selection made by it of two reputable civil engineers, and the making of repairs in conformity with their recommendations, was the full limit of the city’s legal duty. In disposing of this contention, we find it unnecessary to resort to inference in support of the general verdict, as would be required of us in case of doubt or uncertainty, for it is plainly obvious that the special findings themselves furnish a complete answer. It is expressly found that the city did not exercise reasonable care in the selection of engineers who were competent and qualified to inspect and repair the bridge, and, without having any fact or reason to lead a prudent person to believe them compe-, tent, actually selected engineers that were incompetent both to inspect and to conduct repairs to a bridge of this class.

It is a legal duty of a municipality to exercise such supervision over the bridges under its control, and to make such *310inspection from time to time, as ordinary care and diligence require. The samé reasonable care also extends to the selection of persons skilled and competent, not only to make the inspection, but to- determine whether repairs are necessary, and, if so', the kind. And in this case, if the city knowingly, or through the culpable negligence of its officers, employed incompetent persons, it is liable in damages for special injuries occasioned thereby. Board, etc., v. Pearson (1889), 120 Ind. 426, 429, 16 Am. St. 325; Elliott, Roads and Sts. (2d ed.), §64.

1. Furthermore, in the selection of inspectors, the diligence required of the board of public works, to be accounted reasonable, must be measured by the known importance and difficulty of the work to be performed — that is, such degree of care as men of ordinary prudence would observe in like undertakings. In all cases the act of selecting such experts should be accompanied with due inquiry and reasonable grounds to believe that the person chosen was qualified for the task. When it comes to the selection of a skilled man to inquire- into and determine the true condition of a bridge of great magnitude- — more than four hundred feet in length — and of questionable safety, over which heavily loaded cars, vehicles of every description, and thousands of people pass every day, the law is not satisfied with the finding of a professional civil engineer of good repute and creditable employment. Berofe it can be said that the board of public works was justified in the appointments made by it, it must appear that they not only believed their appointees were competent, but they must be able to show that they had good grounds for entertaining such belief. Neither diligence nor justifiable reason is shown by the record in the selections made. Besides, it is specially found that both appellants knew at the time of the accident that the bridge was dangerous to travel, and unsafe for the use to which it was at the time being put by the street car company. This finding of itself imports negligence in both. *311The findings of the jury are not repugnant to the general verdict, and appellants’ motions for judgment on answers to interrogatories were correctly overruled.

8. The city complains of certain instructions given by the court. By number four the court directed the jury, in substance, that, before the plaintiff could recover, he must establish by a fair preponderance of the evidence that he had received the injuries, or some part thereof, as charged in the complaint, and that the negligence charged was the proximate cause of such injuries. The effect of the instruction is that, before the plaintiff can recover, he must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he recived his injuries “as charged in the complaint” — that is, by the negligence of the defendants as therein alleged — and that such injuries were the direct and proximate result of the negligent acts charged. The instruction is not fairly subject to the criticism that it was calculated to lead the jury to believe that the preponderance of the evidence required related only to the injuries, and not to the negligence of the defendants. We think it could not have misled the jury.

9. Instruction five and one-half was in these words: “If you believe from the evidence that the negligence, if any there was, on the part of the plaintiff contributed to the injuries complained of, I instruct you that he can not recover; but the burden of proof is upon the defendants to show that plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence, if any there was, and the defendants must prove that fact by a fair preponderance of the evidence.” Contributory fault, like any other fact that must he affirmatively shown, is to be considered established when it is found to be sustained by a preponderance of all the evidence in the case, without reference to whether it was produced by one party or the other. The instruction quoted is equivalent to telling the jury that it must not charge the plaintiff with fault unless the defendants have proved the fact by a preponderance, thus depriving the defendants of the benefit of any evidence that may *312have been disclosed by the plaintiff and his witnesses. For this reason the instruction was erroneous. Indianapolis St. R. Co. v. Taylor (1902), 158 Ind. 214; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Lightheiser (1904), 163 Ind. 247; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Collins (1904), 163 Ind. 569.

10. Being erroneous, it must be held sufficient to sustain the appeal, unless it clearly appears from the whole record that it was harmless. If it turns out that there was no question of contributory negligence in the case, and no evidence by either party upon the point, it can not be said to have harmed the defendants. There is not a syllable or item of evidence pointed out as appearing in the case', either direct or indirect, that tends to establish such negligence. The sum total of the evidence relating to the plaintiff’s knowledge, or means of knowledge, of the condition of the bridge, is this: He had been in the employ of the street car company for about one year as a track repairer; had worked over all parts of the system; it was no part of his duty to inspect the track or bridges; he was a pick and shovel man; had never worked on or about the bridge; had, without incident, ridden over the bridge on loaded and unloaded cars frequently before the bridge was closed for repairs ; he knew the bridge was being repaired, and learned on the evening of January 15, that it was to b'a opened to traffic on tire following day; he assisted other employes in loading with cinders the cars that fell through the bridge; they put on usual and ordinary loads, and, in obedience to the company’s orders, he got upon the train, composed of two cinder-loaded cars and a motor car, which was the usual and common train before the bridge was repaired, and suffered himself to be carried onto'the bridge with no greater belief or fear that the bridge would break than that the chair upon which he sat testifying would break under him. There is in this evidence nothing to indicate fault in the plaintiff in permitting himself to be carried upon the bridge, and no fact or circumstance disclosed from which *313the jury might reasonably infer negligence. Contributory negligence could not have been found by the jury without some evidence, and, there being none in the case, the defendants were not entitled to the benefits of such finding, and therefore not injured by the instruction. Indianapolis, etc., Transit Co. v. Haines (1904), 33 Ind. App. 63.

The city also complains of the giving of instructions numbered eight and nine, Avhich, as we think, clearly and correctly state the law relating to the duty of cities in respect to the inspection and repair of bridges. The general rules heretofore stated in considering the motion for judgment non obstante fully sustain these two instructions.

11. The street railway company submits, without argument, that the court erred in refusing to give to the jury its requests numbered three, five and six, and by giving of the court’s own motion instructions eleven, twelve and thirteen. Number three is to the effect that a street railroad company does not owe to its employes the duty of making the bridges on the highway safe, and is not liable for injuries suffered by such employes, not caused by the negligent act of the employer. So far as this proposal is pertinent to the evidence, it was fully covered by instructions given by the court. Moreover, if it be true, as submitted, that a corporation is under no legal duty to go in advance of its employe traAreling on a highAvay OArer which it has no control, and inspect and make safe the road and bridges, yet we knoAV of no law that gÍAres a corporation the right knoivingly and recklessly to carry its uninformed employes into a place of imminent danger’.

12. Number five states the effect of equal knowledge, and number six the law of felloAV servants. Neither of these was applicable to any eAddence in the case, and both were properly refused.

13. Number eleven, given by the court, advised the jury that a street car company, Avhen using a city bridge for its tracks, thereby adopts such bridge as one of its appliances, *314and if suck company knows, or by tke exercise of reasonable care could know, tkat suck bridge is in a defective and unsafe condition, and liable to give way and fall by reason of suck condition, and knowingly causes or permits its cars to be run over suck bridge, and tke bridge gives way and falls because of said defective condition, wkile ears of suck company are in tke act of crossing, and its employes in charge of tke cars, or upon them in'tke line of their employment, are, without negligence on their part, injured in tke fall of suck cars, suck employes would be entitled to recover for injuries so received; but if suck employe knew, o-r could have known by tke exercise, of ordinary care and diligence, tkat suck bridge was out of repair and unsafe, and liable to fall because of suck condition, and with suck knowledge, .or means of knowledge, operated and ran, or rode upon, cars onto tke bridge, and, wkile attempting so to cross, tke bridge broke and fell by reason of its said defective condition, suck employes must be held to kave assumed tke risk, and can not recover for injuries received by tke fall.

In number twelve, the court applied the general principles announced in number eleven to tke facts of this case, upon the hypothesis that tke evidence established guilty knowledge in tke company, and the absence of fault in tke plaintiff, and in number thirteen applied tke same upon the hypothesis tkat tke evidence established knowledge and assumption of risk in tke plaintiff.

We perceive nothing erroneous in any of tke three last-mentioned instructions.

The verdict was sustained by tke evidence. We find no error. Judgment affirmed.