40 Ind. App. 74 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
This was an action brought on the relation of the widow and minor children of Henry'M. Roe, against the appellants, Dudley and the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company of Baltimore, Maryland, the surety on his bond given to procure a license to vend liquors at retail, and it is charged in the complaint that in violation of the law the appellant Dudley sold to said Roe, when he was in a state of intoxication, intoxicating liquor of which he drank, and thereby increased his intoxication, and that while in such state of intoxication he fell by the roadside, and was, by reason of his intoxicated condition, unable to help himself, and perished with cold, whereby the relators were injured' in their means of support. A general denial was filed to the complaint, a jury trial had, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the relators.
The only error complained of here is the action of the court in overruling appellants’ separate motions for a new trial, and it is only necessary to consider one question raised upon these motions. The court, over the appellants’ objection, instructed the jury as follows: “If you find from the evidence, by a preponderance thereof, that on or about December 12,1903, the defendant Dudley, or his employe in his place of business at the town of Sullivan, Indiana, sold to the deceased intoxicating liquor at a time when he was in a state of intoxication, and the seller had knowledge of his intoxicated condition at the time he so furnished such liquor, or had an opportunity to know of such intoxicated condition of said Roe, and you further find from the evidence that the deceased and his son, then about seventeen years of age, started in a two-seated buggy, of the ordinary kind, to drive to their home, a distance of about ten miles, in a rural district ; that they left said town in the manner aforesaid about 5 o’clock p. m. on said day; that when they had proceeded on their way homeward some four or five miles said deceased got out of said buggy for the purpose of obtaining aid from some person to uncork and open a bottle of whisky
For this error the judgment of the court below must be reversed.