157 Ind. 463 | Ind. | 1901
Appellee recovered judgment for $7,000 on account of personal injuries. Appellant assigns that the court erred in overruling (1) its motion for judgment on the jury’s answers to interrogatories and (2) its motion for a new trial.
The motion for judgment is predicated on this interrogatory and answer: “Did the defendant city, at the time plaintiff received his alleged injury, have actual notice of the broken condition of the culvert where it is alleged plaintiff fell? Answer: No evidence.” The general verdict found all the material averments of the complaint to be true. If the complaint counted on no negligence of appellee except the continuance of the culvert in a broken condition after actual notice in time to have remedied the defect before the accident, the motion for judgment should have been sustained. But the complaint charges “that the said hoard walk over said gutter and the stringers upon which it was laid had become rotten and decayed and had broken down and had fallen into' said ditch and was unfit for use and dangerous ; and this was its condition for some time prior to the said 21st day of November, 1898; and this defendant had notice that said sidewalk was decayed and unsafe, and also that it was broken down and dangerous, in ample time to have repaired and rebuilt the same by use of ordinary diligence and care before the said 21st day of Noveinber, 1898; but that defendant negligently failed to repair and rebuild said board crossing over said ditch after it became decayed and rotten and unsafe, and negligently left said ditch open and uncovered after the same had broken down, with no means of passing over the same at said crossing, and without any lights or signals of danger, for at least three days and nights prior to the happening of the accident, hereinafter mentioned, on the said 21st day of November, 1898; and all of said time the defendant had notice of the dangerous condition of said board crossing over said gutter, but negligently failed to repair or rebuild the same, although said board
Error is claimed in the instructions on the subject of constructive notice. Appellant does not question the correctness of legal propositions stated, but contends that appellee could recover, under his complaint, only on proof of actual notice, and therefore the giving of instructions allowing a recovery on proof of constructive notice was erroneous and harmful. The complaint, as already shown, warranted proof of constructive notice.
Appellant asserts that the evidence of notice is insufficient to sustain the verdict. There is nothing in the record to show that a bill of exceptions containing the evidence was ever filed in this cause. Without being filed, a bill of exceptions can not become a part of the record. Merrill v. State, 156 Ind. 99. The clerk certifies that he has attached to the record the official reporter’s transcript of the evidence. Appellant evidently followed the requirements of section 6 of the act of 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 384), which was held void
The contentions, also, that the damages are excessive and that it is a physical impossibility for appellee to have been injured in the manner claimed by him', can not be determined without the evidence. It is not claimed that it is impossible that appellee could have been injured in the manner described in the complaint, nor that the damages awarded are more than a just compensation for the grave and permanent injuries pleaded. The „presumption is that the evidence fully sustained the averments.
The remaining ground for a new trial is the alleged misconduct of appellee. It was shown by affidavits that appellee was brought in and out of the court room in an invalid’s chair, and that as soon as the trial was ended he was able to walk without support. ETo counter affidavits were filed. Appellee’s conduct in the court room, unexplained, was a representation to the court and jury that he was helpless. If he was able to walk, as the uncontradicted affidavits respecting his subsequent actions proved, and if the court and jury were deceived by his conduct at the trial into believing that* he was helpless, a new trial should have been granted promptly. Appellee claims that his admissions (by act or word) after the trial can not be used to support a charge of misconduct, and cites Sullivan v. O’Conner, 77 Ind. 149, and Crow v. Brunson, 1 Ind. App. 268. These cases, in so far as they support appellee’s contention, are disapproved. See: Humphreys v. Klick, 49 Ind. 189; Rains v. Ballow, 54 Ind. 79; Andrews v. Mitchell, 92 Ga. 629,18 S. E. 1017; Murray v. Weber, 92 Iowa 757, 60 N. W. 492; Means v. Yeager, 96 Iowa 694, 65 N. W. 993; Klopp v. Jill, 4 Kan. 482; Strout v. Stewart, 63 Me. 227; Gardner v. Mitchell, 6 Pick. 114, 17 Am. Dec. 349; Cole v. Fall Brook Coal Co., 40 N. Y. St. 834; Brooks v. Rochester R. Co., 63 N. Y. St. 508; Corley v. New York, etc., R. Co., 12 App. Div. (N. Y.) 409, 42 N. Y. Supp. 941; Preston v. Otey, 88 Va.
Judgment affirmed.