This is a suit for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by appellee while a passenger on a street car belonging to the Vincennes Traction Company, when the car was struck at a crossing by a cut of freight cars operated by appellant on its road. The complaint is in one paragraph. It avers facts which show that appellant owns and operates a railroad which runs through the city of Vincennes and across North Second Street in said city, on which the Vincennes Traction Company operates an electric railway; that appellant has a switch track which runs across said traction line on said North Second Street at a point between Lyndale and Swartzel avenues; that on August 7, 1909, appellee was a passenger on one of the cars of said traction company operated over and upon North Second Street; that said traction car reached said crossing ahead of appellant’s train and was about to cross appellant’s switch track when “the said defendant railroad company did, before said street car had passed over said crossing, carelessly and negligently and without due care and precaution, run a locomotive and train of cars over, upon and along its said track at said point where said track crosses the line of said traction company, in such manner as to run against, upon and over the car of said traction company, in which this plaintiff was riding
Appellant’s demurrer for want of facts was overruled and it filed an answer in general denial. A change of venue was taken to the Daviess Circuit Court where a trial by jury resulted in a verdict for appellee. Over appellant’s motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment, the court rendered judgment on the verdict. These rulings are
Appellee does not assert that this instruction is correct, but contends that the instructions as a whole gave the jury a correct idea of the law applicable to the case and that an error in any particular instruction was harmless. Also that a correct result was reached and the case should not be reversed for an error in the instructions. It is true that the instructions are to be considered together and that many defects, verbal inaccuracies and incomplete statements are thereby remedied, or rendered harmless,'so that notwithstanding such defects in particular instructions the court may know and declare that the instructions when considered as a whole state the law of the case correctly. But where an instruction deals with a material proposition or issue of the case, and is erroneous, the presumption is that the error was harmful and such presumption will prevail unless it affirmatively appears from the record that it was not prejudicial to the complaining party. The error of such instruction can not be cured by the giving of other correct instructions which contradict the erroneous instruction, but to avoid the effect of such error the instruction must be withdrawn. Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Case (1910), 174 Ind. 369, 376, 91 N. E. 238; Steele v. Michigan Buggy Co. (1912), 50 Ind. App. 635, 643, 95 N. E. 435; Wenning v. Temple (1896), 144 Ind. 189, 194, 41 N. E. 600; Southern Ind. R. Co. v. Moore (1902), 29 Ind.
Some of the instructions given are criticised as not applicable to the evidence. Our view of the case compels a reversal and the questions depending upon the evidence may not arise at another trial.
Most of the instructions are full and accurate statements of the law, and the other objections urged relate to matters that in view of our conclusion do not justify the further extension of this opinion to discuss them, for they are in effect decided by the view we have already expressed of the case.
The questions which involve the ordinance of the city of Vincennes might have been of consequence but for the admission of the ordinance without objection, and the agreement of record that it was in force when the accident occurred. Cumberland Tel., etc., Co. v. Pierson (1908), 170 Ind. 543, 546, 84 N. E. 1088.
The judgment is reversed with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.
Note. — Reported in 105 N. E. 788. As to the care a railroad must exercise at crossings of highways, see 26 Am. Rep. 207. See, also, under (1) 31 Cyc. 85; (2) 33 Cyc. 1053; (3, 4) 33 Cyc. 1097; (5) 3 Cyc. 386; 38 Cyc. 1778; (6) 38 Cyc. 1782; (7) 33 Cyc. 1129; (8) 29 Cyc. 427, 636; (9) 3 Cyc. 386; (10) 3 Cyc. 383.