172 Ind. 697 | Ind. | 1909
Appellee recovered a judgment for $7,166 against appellant for causing the death of Charles C. Berndt at a grade crossing in the city of Evansville. Errors have been assigned upon the overruling of (1) appellant’s demurrer to the complaint, and (2) its motion for a new trial.
The complaint alleged, in substance, that William street in the city of Evansville was used constantly by the public for travel and traffic at a point where it was crossed by a number of appellant’s tracks, and that a certain ordinance of the city required appellant to maintain automatic safety gates on each side of its tracks at said street crossing, and to operate the same so as to afford persons using the street full and complete protection against injury, and to cause the same to
Appellant’s counsel urge as errors requiring the granting of a new trial, that the court gave certain erroneous instructions, and refused others properly requested, and that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law.
The cases cited in support of these instructions were all decided prior to the passage of the act of 1899, supra, imposing upon defendants the burden of proving contributory negligence in actions for damages on account of personal injury or death. What was said in considering the sufficiency of the complaint is applicable in this connection, and it is manifest that these instructions were incorrect and improper under the law as it now exists in this State.
The sixth instruction given by the court of its own motion was as follows: “If you find from a preponderance of the evidence, either direct or circumstantial, that the decedent entered upon defendant’s tracks at the William street crossing in the city of Evansville, at a time when the gates of the defendant were open, indicating to deSedent that there was no train or engine approaching said crossing, and there was no watchman present to warn the decedent of approaching danger from an oncoming train or engine, and after so entering upon defendant’s tracks was injured and killed by one of defendant’s passing engines, in the view of the ease here suggested the plaintiff is not bound, as precedent to his right to a verdict in his favor, to prove that the decedent on his approach to defendant’s tracks stopped, looked and listened for approaching trains or engines. Under such circumstances,
It follows that the court did not err in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial. The judgment is affirmed.