33 Ind. App. 599 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
Suit by appellee for personal injuries. The complaint avers that Sampson avenue in appellant' city runs north and south, and crosses Seventh street at right angles; that some years ago the city improved Sampson avenue north and south of and across Seventh street,
The pleading proceeds upon the theory that the proximate cause of appellee’s injury was the negligence of appellant in permitting the steep incline to be and remain at; the intersection of the two streets. It is quite true that
Appellant requested the following instruction: “(7) If the jury find from the evidence that there were two or more roads equally open and available to the plaintiff for traveling to his destination, and that one of said roads was more or less dangerous than the' others, and the choice of said roads was in the discretion of the plaintiff, and the plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily chose and traveled the more dangerous of said roads, and because thereof was injured, as alleged in his complaint, the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover in this action, and your verdict should be for the defendant.” The mere fact that appellee undertook to pass over a road that was unsafe would not of itself prevent a recovery. If the language used in the instruction means that appellee chose a dangerous way with knowledge of the danger, still this would not necessarily establish contributory negligence. In such a case knowledge is an important matter in determining contributory fault, but is not necessarily conclusive. If the known dan
Judgment affirmed.