64 Ind. App. 206 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1916
This is an appeal from a judgment in appellee’s favor for $2,250, in an action brought by her to recover damages for the death of Lorenz Miller, her husband. The complaint is in three paragraphs, to each of which a demurrer was filed, but as the verdict and judgment below are based on the first and second paragraphs, they only will be considered.
The averments common to both paragraphs and necessary to an understanding of the questions herein considered, briefly stated, are in substance as follows: Appellant operates an electric railroad in Posey county, Indiana. On its line of road in said county is a flag station called St. Phillips, where appellant maintains a small building and a narrow platform for the embarkation of passengers on its cars when such cars are signaled to stop by such intended passengers. On the day in question, about six o’clock in the evening and after dark, appellee’s decedent was at said, station on said platform intending to become a passenger on one of appellant’s cars. Many other persons who also intended to become passengers on the same car were at the same time on said platform. Such platform was small and so filled with passengers that there remained little room to move about thereon, and decedent was forced to be near the edge thereof next to appellant’s track when one of appellant’s cars approached such station at. a high and dangerous rate of speed, to wit, forty-five miles per hour. Appellant’s servants in charge of such- car and the operation thereof negligently failed to have it and its machinery under control so that it might be stopped at said station. Appellant had carelessly and negligently constructed that
From this point the two paragraphs differ. The averments of the first are to the effect that appellant’s servants, by looking in front of them as the car approached, could have seen, and hence-did see, said signal in ample time to have stopped the car at the station; that they well knew the danger of running such car past the platform at high speed while persons were standing thereon; that such servants carelessly and negligently failed to look forward along said track in front of such car and negligently and carelessly caused and permitted such car to run past such station and platform at said high and dangerous rate of speed with the result that the steps of such car projected over said
The averments of the second paragraph differing from the first are as follows: Said car was provided with a headlight which cast a bright light in front thereof, and along said track for five hundred feet and by means thereof decedent, while standing upon said platform was in plain view of appellant’s servants in charge of said car, and said servants sa,w decedent and knew that said car and the steps thereof would come in contact with and strike him, unless said car should be stopped, or the speed thereof greatly decreased, before the same reached him, that said servants in disregard of such knowledge negligently and carelessly caused and permitted said car to run past said platform, and said station at said high and dangerous rate of speed and negligently and carelessly suffered and permitted said car and the steps thereof to come in contact with and strike decedent, etc.
Both paragraphs aver that decedent was at all times in’the exercise of due care and caution, and was wholly ignorant of the danger of so standing upon said platform and of the fact that said steps projected so near the same and that decedent’s death was caused solely by the negligence of appellant and its servants as herein alleged.
No. 6. “If you find from the evidence that the defendant’s motorman in charge of the car that collided with plaintiff’s decedent, saw and knew or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen and known, that plaintiff’s decedent was in close and dangerous proximity to the track and was in a perilous and dangerous position and was likely to be injured by being struck by the car, and you further find from the evidence that defendant’s motorman saw and knew the peril in which plaintiff’s decedent was in time to have avoided striking him, but failed to do so, the motorman’s negligence in so failing was in law the last negligence that caused the injury.”
Neither of these instructions correctly state the doctrine of last clear chance as applied to the facts of this
The doctrine of last clear chance applies to those ‘"cases only where the defendant’s opportunity of preventing the injury by the exercise of due care was ■later in point of time than that of plaintiff,” and constructive knowledge on the part of the defendant gives rise to such opportunity in either of two instances, viz.: (1) If decedent were in fact in a situation of peril from which he could not extricate himself, like a man with his foot fastened in the frog of the track, appellant’s duty to keep a lookout, if such duty in fact existed, and it did in this case, would charge it with constructive knowledge of what it saw or might have seen by keeping such lookout, and hence charge it with knowledge of decedent’s perilous situation and thereby give rise to the new duty born of the emergency, to use care commensurate therewith to prevent injury to decedent. (2) If appellant’s motorman actually saw decedent, he would likewise be constructively charged with seeing the peril to' which he was exposed, or was about to expose himself, provided, of course, that decedent’s situation was such, when seen by such motorman, as to indicate to a man of ordinary prudence that he, decedent, was in danger of being injured by appellant’s car, in which event the new duty born of this emergency
Appellee insists that instruction No. 7, supra, is practically the same as one approved by this court in the case of Indiana, etc., R. Co. v. Kraemer (1913), 55 Ind. App. 190, 102 N. E. 141. In the case mentioned the instruction is not set out in the opinion and was not necessarily approved. The court in that case simply held,- and properly so, that the giving of such instruction was not reversible error under the facts of that case, which facts differ from those here involved, in that the motorman in that case admitted that he saw the injured party approaching the track with an umbrella over him, etc.
In this connection it should be stated that, in instruction No. 7, the court in applying said doctrine to the facts of this case required the jury to find that “it became apparent to the motorman on the defendant’s car that a collision was likely to occur,” etc., thereby in a measure curing the error present in the first part of the instruction; but in applying the doctrine in instruction No. 6, supra, the error indicated is repeated, so that the instructions are in themselves contradictory, and hence may have misled the jury.
In view of the conclusion reached, we deem it unnec
Note. — Reported in 111 N. E. 1031. Carriers: who are passengers, creation of relation, Ann. Cas. 1917C 1206; 61 Am. St. 75; 10 C. J. 613; 6 Cyc 536. Application of doctrine of last clear chance where danger is not actually discovered, 55 L. R. A. 418; 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 957. See under (4) Ann. Cas. 1916A 139.