165 Ind. 219 | Ind. | 1905
Appellant sues to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received through the negligence of appellee., The court sustained a demurrer, for insufficiency of facts, to what is called in the record the third amended complaint. The plaintiff refused to amend, and judgment for cost was rendered against her, from which judgment she appeals.
It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant owns and operates a double-tracked railroad running generally east and west through Dekalb county, which, as it approaches the town of Butler, runs in a slightly northeast and southwest direction; that it is twenty feet from the north end to the south end of the ties of the tracks; that near Butler there is what is known as Reynolds Crossing, made by the railroad intersecting an east-and-west highway at an angle of fourteen degrees; that to promote safety and expedition in the running of trains, the company had adopted and established the uniform custom of running all east-hound trains on the north track, and all west-hound trains on the south track, all trains being run in such order, except in cases of wreck, blockade, or other emergency, which was very rare; that the custom had been so long established and unvaryingly observed that it became well known throughout the community; that beginning at the east cattle-guard fence at a point 111 feet east of the crossing and thence eastward, said east-and-west highway is fenced on the north side thereof, and on the south side a fence beginning 200 feet east of the crossing at a lane running south continues west along the south line of the highway to a cattle-guard fence on the west of said crossing; that these fences and the acuteness of the angle with which the railroad crosses the highway, cause the former so to encroach upon the latter that from the crossing for fifty feet eastward the highway available for travel is but sixteen feet wide, and for the next 100 feet eastward is but twenty feet wide, so, having approached nearer than one hundred and fifty feet of the
. That the complaint sufficiently charges negligence against appellee railroad company is not controverted, but it is claimed by the company that the complaint is bad, because it shows by its averments, and presumptions arising from the absence of averments, that the plaintiff (appellant) was guilty of contributory negligence; while on the other hand
hibited are of a character to be reasonably subject to more than one inference or conclusion under established rules of law, then the ultimate fact, of contributory negligence, or due care, should have been determined by the jury. Stoy v. Louisville, etc., R. Co. (1903), 160 Ind. 144, 152, and cases cited; Cooley, Torts (2d ed.), 805; 1 Shearman & Bedfield, Negligence (4th ed.), §54.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions to overrule the demurrer to the third amended complaint.