143 Ind. 381 | Ind. | 1895
The appellee, as the administrator of one Perry Whiteman, deceased, sued the appellant in the Madison Circuit Court for damages for the alleged negligence of appellant in causing the death of said Whiteman. The venue of the cause, on the appellant’s application, was changed to the Henry Circuit Court, where a trial of the issues formed by a general denial, by a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $4,000 over appellant’s motions for judgment non obstante veredicto, and for a new trial. The errors assigned here call in question these several rulings and the action of the court in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the complaint.
It appears from the complaint, that appellant was a corporation operating a plate glass factory in the city of Elwood, Madison county, Indiana, and that the deceased was engaged in working for appellant as a common laborer about the appellant’s factory building; that on September 3, 1892, said Whiteman was engaged in said employment, and under the direction of said company, shoveling dirt and removing accumulated debris from the grounds of said company in the immediate neighborhood of a high paling fence, and while so employed a large, heavy, wooden fence, then situate on the grounds of said company near where said Whiteman was at work, fell on and killed him ; that prior to that time the officers and agents of appellant had caused a panel of fence to be taken up out of the ground from its
The answers to interrogatories propounded by the defendant to the jury show that the fence panel was placed in the position complained of on the 2d day of September, 1892, the day the injury complained of happened, at about half after eight o’clock in the morning; that the appellee’s intestate could have seen the panel of fence and the position in which it was standing long before the same fell upon him, by ordinary care, if
These facts are such as cannot be reconciled with the general verdict under any supposable state of the evidence. Three facts essential to the support of the general verdict are involved in and found by it, namely, that appellant had been guilty of negligence in placing the panel of fence in its position leaning against the permanent fence; that the decedent had not been guilty of contributory negligence in its fall upon and injury to him ; and that the risk was one that he did not assume. All of these facts are indispensable to the maintenance of appellee’s cause of action. Cincinnati, etc., R. R. Co. v. Grames, 135 Ind. 44; Pennsylvania Co. v. Meyers,
In Pennsylvania Co. v. Meyers, Admx., supra, it was said: “ Appellee’s cause of action does not consist alone of injurious consequences resulting from appellant’s negligence, but superadded to that must be established that no act, or omission to act, on the part of decedent contributed materially to the production of the injuries complained of. While this contribution to the injury, by act or omission to -act, on the part of the injured person, may, under the general rule, be a defense, its absence is as much a part of the cause of action as the negligence of the defendant, and, like it, must be affirmatively alleged and proven. Ohio, etc., R. W. Co. v. Hill, Admx., supra; Chicago, etc., R. W. Co. v. Hedges, Admx., supra; Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Stommel, supra; Indiana, etc., R. W. Co. v. Hammock, supra; Cincinnati, etc., R. W. Co. v. Howard, supra, and cases there cited. ”
Here the answers to the interrogatories show that the injured servant' had as good an opportunity to know of the danger to which he was exposed, as the master or any one else, and the means of avoiding such danger were as much within his reach as within the reach of the master or anybody else, and yet he worked on without looking or observing or heeding the same. Bedford Belt R. W. Co. v. Brown, 142 Ind. 659; Coal Co. v. Estievenard, (O.) 40 N. E. Rep. 725.
In Day v. Cleveland, etc., R. W. Co., 137 Ind. 206, it was said: “In a case where the servant is one of mature age and experience, as in this case, the law never imposes the duty on the master of becoming eyes and ears for his servant, where there is nothing to prevent the servant from using his own eyes and ears to avoid danger. * * * We need not stop to inquire whether the foreman’s act was the act of the principal, and binding on the appellee.” To the same effect is Prothero v. Citizens’ Street R. W. Co., 134 Ind. 431. According to these principles the |acts found by the answers to interrogatories are absolutely inconsistent and irreconcilable with the general verdict under any supposable state of the evidence; because the general verdict finds that the decedent did exercise due care for his own safety, and, therefore, was not guilty of contributory negligence. While the answers to interrogatories find that he did not exercise due care for his own
It will not do to say that the decedent was not guilty of contributory negligence because he had no means of knowing that the fence — standing as it was, with the wind blowing as it was from the west — would not be liable to fall west contrary to the way it was leaning, and contrary to the way the wind was blowing. If he could not reasonably foresee and apprehend that a sudden whirlwind would or might come blowing the contrary direction, and therefore foresee and guard against the danger that did actually come, then how could the other employes of the appellant — even conceding without deciding that the foreman of them and decedent, under whose orders the panel of fence was placed in the position, were not fellow-servants — foresee and guard against the danger? If it was not negligence in appellant to fail to foresee and guard against the danger, neither was it negligence in the other employes of the appellee to fail to foresee and guard against the danger. And in that event appellant would be free entirely from negligence, and hence not liable for the damages resulting. “There is no liability for an injury inflicted by one person upon another, even
We do not wish to be understood as holding that the act of the co-employes of the decedent in rendering his working place unsafe without direction from or sanction by the common master, rendered the appellant liable to the charge of negligence. See Hoosier Stone Co. v. McCain, Admr., 133 Ind. 231; Reed v. Browning, 130 Ind. 575.
But it is insisted that we cannot consider the motion for judgment on the special findings in answer to interrogatories, nor the motion for a new trial, because the two motions were both filed before either had been acted on, and being inconsistent they destroy each other. In support of this contention counsel cite Nixon v. Downey, 49 Iowa 166, and Stone v. Hawkeye Ins. Co. (Iowa), 28 N. W. Rep. 47. The latter case only holds that the motion for a new trial being filed after the overruling of the motion for judgment, and within three days after the return of the verdict, the right to file the motion for a new trial had not been waived. In the
Conceding, without deciding, that the Iowa Supreme Court correctly stated the rule, it does not help appellee any, because it only extinguishes the motion for a new trial, leaving the motion for judgment on the special findings in full force and vigor. In the case before us the record shows that the motion for a new trial was filed first, and immediately thereafter, and before action on such motion, the motion for judgment was filed. The most that could he said of the filing of the latter motion was to ask the court not to grant the former. Whether it had the effect to actually withdraw the motion for a new trial from the record, we need not and do not decide. The inconsistency of the two motions consisted only in the relief they asked; they both alike disaffirmed the general verdict. There is authority for saying that the two motions may be pending at the same time. 2 Elliott Gen. Prac., section 995; Habersham v. Wetter, 59 Ga. 11; Pope v. Latham, 1 Ark. 66; Jewell v. Blandford, 7 Dana (Ky.) 473. And if there is nothing to the contrary, it will be presumed that they were ruled upon in their proper order. Elliott Gen. Prac., supra; Water, etc., Co. v. Gildersleeve, 4 N. Mex. 171. See also Bank v. Bayliss, 41 Mo. 274.
But we do not place our decision upon this ground, because, as before observed, it is unnecessary to the determination of the case.
The facts found in answer to the interrogatories having’ shown that the plaintiff had no cause of action, the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment thereon, notwithstanding the general verdict.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the circuit court to sustain the defendant’s motion for judgment in its favor on the answers to special interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict.