The action is against appellant, a common carrier of passengers, for damages for personal injuries sustained when appellee, a passenger on one of appellant’s interurban ears, after alighting from said car at appellant’s station at the town of Acton, Indiana, fell into an excavation between appellant’s tracks in the public highway of Washington Street in said town.
The negligence charged consists in appellant’s leaving said excavation in said highway without guards, barriers, or lights to warn its passengers who alighted from its ear at said point of the dangerous condition of said excavation, and in failing to warn or notify appellee of said dangerous excavation.
The court did not err in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories, nor in overruling its motion for new trial based on the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 105 N. E. 162. As to the rights and duties of passengers in alighting from trains, see 50 Am. Rep. 277. As to the duty of street railways to provide a safe place for boarding and alighting from cars, see 1 Ann. Oas. 916; 9 Ann. Cas. 854. See, also, under (1, 2) 84 Cyc. 439; (3) 38 Cyc. 1927; (4) 6 Cyc. 1915 Ann. 632-New.
