75 Ind. 542 | Ind. | 1881
Appellee sued appellant for injuries received while being carried on a passenger train by appellant; issue by a denial: trial by jury ; verdict for appellant; motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment for appellant; appeal to general term, and judgment of special term reversed ; appeal to this court, and the error assigned here is the reversal by the general term of the judgment of the .special term ; and this brings in review the error assigned in the general term, which was the overruling of the motion for a new trial. •
The only questions presented to the court in general term, and that are insisted upon in this court, arise upon the instructions to the jury. The instructions, six, eight, ten, eleven and thirteen, given by the court, were excepted to by appellee’s counsel, and upon them the court below in general term reversed the judgment in special term. Questions as to instructions live, six, seven and eight, asked by appellee’s counsel, and refused, were- also reserved. But as these instructions,which were refused,were substantially contained in those given by the court, and equally as favorable as the appellee asked, their refusal was harmless. Crandall v. The First National Bank, etc., 61 Ind. 349 ; Steeple v. Downing, 60 Ind. 478 ; The Ohio, etc., R. W. Co. v. Dickerson, 59 Ind. 317 ; The City of Indianapolis v. Gaston, 58 Ind. 224.
This clause in the instruction well says that the law requires that the cars shall not be run at an excessive or dangerous speed; but how is the question of excessive or dangerous speed to be settled? Certainly not by proving the tacit acquiescence of a community in a certain rate of speed, but by proving the fact as to what rate of speed would be-reasonably sáfe in the case in controversy. No rate could be established, consistent with the idea of railroad travel, that would be absolutely safe, though it should be as near so as human wisdom and skill can reasonably make it. A safe rate of speed on one railroad line is not a definite criterion for another, unless the latter is in a similar condition to the former. What would be a safe speed on one railroad line might be a very dangerous speed on some others. The alignment and grades of a road, as well as the road-bed, superstructure and rolling stock, are all to be considered with reference to their perfectness in establishing that highest speed with which it would be safe to run cars over the road. The railroad companies have exclusive control of all these considerations, and each one establishes its owm speed at its own risk, and if it establishes a dangerously high speed, it is liable for any injury resulting on account
The fact that trains have been run over a railroad line at a high and dangerous rate of speed, without injury, is by no means conclusive that it will continue to be so, and thereby relieve the company from liability on account thereof. The tacit acquiescence in, and toleration of, a wrong for the time being, by the community, does not justify a repetition and perpetuation of the wrong.
The only authority referred to by counsel, in support of this part of the eighth charge, is the case of Wilds v. The Hudson River R. R. Co., 29 N. Y. 315, from which, by the similarity of the language, this clause of the instruction appears to have been drawn. But the learned judge in making this extract from Judge Denio’s opinion in that case, omitted a very important part thereof, and that is, that “If it be cleai’ly shown, that on the occasion in question the velocity was not greater than that which had been usually practiced for a considerable period.” With this qualification, the usual practice for a considerable period would tend to prove the reasonable safety of the speed. Without this qualification, any rate of speed that had been accomplished without accident, would be a license to continue the same velocity, which certainly is not the law. The opinion of this distinguished judge, in Wilds v. The Hudson River R. R. Co., supra, goes to the very verge of, if not beyond, the right point upon this question. The community may, for a considerable length of time, uncomplainingly tolerate a wrong, which they are remediless to correct, without that toleration amounting to a tacit consent to its continuance. But it may be questionable whether that case can be considered as authority in the case under consideration. In that case the injury occured to an outsider at'a street crossing, where there was no contract for safety existing between the railroad company and the injured party. In this case
This clause in the instruction is limited to the means of determining what rate of speed would be excessive or dangerous, and does not embrace the questions as to what was the rate of speed, or whether it was excessive or dangerous. We, therefore, do not decide anything upon either of these questions.
The eleventh instruction reads as follows : “It appears that the west-bound express passed over the rail a short while before the east-bound train, in which Mr. Newell was being carried, was thrown from the track. There is no presumption that the rail was broken before this train (on which Mr. Newell was riding) reached it, and, if the plaintiff claims that it was, the burden of proof is upon him.”
In order to understand the application of this instruction it is necessary to refer to the facts as established by the evidence. The injury complained of occurred by the car in which appellee was riding leaving the track, caused by a broken, or the breaking of, a rail. The injury occurred about 9 o’clock a. m. The watchman passed over the track early that morning, and caused this rail to be put in the place of another broken rail. The eastern express train had passed over the rail between the time of its being put in and the passage of the train in which appellee was riding.
Counsel for appellee insist that the rail may have been cracked or broken by the passage of the eastern express, and that the appellant was guilty of negligence in not having it examined, and repaired if injured, before the passage of the train in which appellee was riding.
The law is well settled, that, where a passenger is injured in consequence of a train running off of the track, the law raises, prima facie, a presumption of negligence against the railroad company. Curtis v. The Rochester, etc., R. R. Co., 18 N. Y. 534 ; Edgerton v. The New York, etc., R. R. Co., 39 N. Y. 227 ; Feital v. Middlesex R. R. Co., 109 Mass. 398 ; Sherlock v. Alling, 44 Ind. 184 ; The Pittsburgh, etc., R. R. Co. v. Williams, 74 Ind. 462.
This injury occurred by the breaking of a rail in the railroad track, and, by proof of the fact that the injury occurred on account of some defect in the road, its machinery or management, the general presumptiqn of negligence would attach to the company, and it would be required to rebut that presumption by explaining and proving that there was no negligence on its part. Now, to say that no presumption existed in relation to specific facts tending to constitute negligence, and that the onus of those facts was changed to the injured party, would be to rebut and destroy the general presumption, without any explanation or proof whatever. The company must l’ebut the general presumption of negligence, by proof, and to say the injured party must establish the facts, by proof, which constitute the negligence, without the general presumption being removed, would be strange logic, and certainly erroneous reasoning, and would tend to confuse and mislead the jury.
We think the court in special term erred in its instruction to the jury, for which a new trial ought to have been granted.
It is therefore ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that the judgment below, at general term, be, and it is hereby, in all things affirmed, with costs.