3 Ind. App. 437 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1892
The appellant’s complaint showed that there
It was alleged that after this appropriation of the highway, and at the time of the grievance hereinafter mentioned, the highway so appropriated was generally used as a highway by all persons travelling in vehicles or otherwise, and was a public highway, and was used as such by the travelling public; that on, etc., the appellant’s team of two horses, with a wagon, was being driven lawfully and carefully along said highway so impaired, going west thereon about fifty-five or sixty rods east of said west highway; that while said horses were so being driven, the appellee’s agents, servants and employees approached along said railroad running parallel with said highway, going east, with a locomotive and caboose attached ; that, when said locomotive and caboose were so coming east, they could not be seen by the driver of said team in
There was an answer in denial, and upon the trial of the issue there was a general verdict for the appellant for one
The court sustained the appellee’s motion for judgment in its favor upon the answers to interrogatories.
The interrogatories, with their answers, were as follows:
“ 1. Was Otis Hoggatt in chárge of plaintiff’s team at the time of the injury complained of? Yes.
“ 2. Was he, the said Otis Hoggatt, in charge of said team with the plaintiff’s knowledge, and under plaintiff’s direction at that time ? Yes.
“ 3. Is the said Otis Hoggatt the plaintiff’s son ? Yes.
“ 4. Did the plaintiff’s team become frightened at defendant’s train of cars so as to cause them to run away at the - time complained of? Yes.
“ 5. Was the team afraid of the cars ? Yes.
“ 6. Did plaintiff and Otis Hoggatt know that said team would scare at the cars ? Yes.
“ 7. How close could said team be driven to the cars with safety ? Thirty yards.
“ 8. Was said team, or either of said horses, in the habit of running off? Yes, one of them.'
“ 9. Had either of said horses ever run off before, and if so about how often ? Yes, two or three times.
“ 10. Did said Otis Hoggatt know that said team or either of said horses would run off? Yes, one of them.
“ 11. Was the plaintiff and his son, Otis Hoggatt, familiar with the condition of the highway and its relative location with the railroad tr&ck, and the condition of said highway along that east ..and west road where the alleged inj ury occurred ? Yes.
“ 12. Was plaintiff and his son, Otis, familiar with the number of trains that usually passed along that place each day ? Yes.
“ 13. Did the plaintiff send his son on the errand in question with a knowledge that he would probably pass along . this highway? Yes.
*441 “ 14. At the time the plaintiff sent his son on this trip, did he know that the usual number of trains had not yet passed along that day, and that there was still another train liable to pass that place that day ? Yes.
“15. Was that train overdue at the time plaintiff’s son was sent on said errand ? Yes.
“ 16. Was the team going west and the train going east at the time they met and the team ran off? Yes.
“ 17. Did Otis Hoggatt start west along the highway that runs alongside of the railroad track for a distance of 114 rods and within twenty feet of it without stopping to listen for a train? Yes.
“ 18. Did he continue until he came within 80 yards of said train without stopping his wagon to listen for a train? Yes.
“ 19. Did he travel west on said road within 20 feet of the railroad track, talking with his little brother, and until he came within 80 yards of the ears, without making any special effort to ascertain whether he would meet a train or not, and, if he did, state what effort he made ? He did.
“20. Was the age of Otis Hoggatt 15 in November, 1890? Yes.”
The jury in the general verdict found that the appellant’s team was injured by reason of the appellee’s negligence, as alleged in the complaint. Thus far the special findings do not antagonize the general verdict.
The jury in the general verdict also found that the appellant was without such fault as could bar his recovery ; that he did not contribute directly to the injury by his own negligence.
If, not indulging any presumption in aid of the answers to interrogatories, but considering the special findings together and in connection with any supposable evidence admissible under the issue, they are not wholly irreconcilable with the conclusion involved in the general verdict that the appellant was not chargeable with contributory negligence, the court
Do the facts specially found, notwithstanding any and all additional facts that were provable, constitute negligence in law on the part of the appellant ?
The question of negligence is, in general, one which should be left to the jury, under proper instructions from the court. It appears from the record that the court instructed the jury.
Applying the law, as stated in the instructions, to all the facts found under the evidence, the jury decided the question of contributory negligence in favor of the appellant. The court then decided the same question against the appellant, upon the particular facts found in answer to interrogatories.
The instances are comparatively few in which the question can be taken from the jury, and it can be decided by the court that there was contributory negligence of the plaintiff.
If the standard of duty applicable to the particular facts be not ascertained and fixed by law, and it be not clearly manifest what course a person of ordinary prudence would take under the circumstances, and different persons seeking to solve the question may reach different conclusions honestly, the question should be left to the jury.
“ The question of contributory negligence is generally one for the jury, and courts interfere with the verdict only in clear cases.” Terre Haute, etc., R. R. Co. v. Buck, 96 Ind. 346 (359) ; Indianapolis, etc., R. R. Co. v. Stout, 53 Ind. 143 ; Pennsylvania Co. v. Hensil, 70 Ind, 569 (575) ; Stevens v. City of Logansport, 76 Ind. 498 ; Shoner v. Pennsylvania Co. (Ind. Sup.), 28 N. E. Rep. 616.
The appellant’s driver was pursuing his journey upon a public highway. He was lawfully there. It may be said that he took a risk, but he did not go to the perilous situation knowing that he would there be in peril. Knowledge of danger does not always defeat recovery for negligence.
The danger was dependent upon contingencies. The team could be driven as near as thirty yards from the cars with safety. The appellee, having rendered the usé of the highway unsafe in violation of the statute (section 3903, R. S.1881, cl. 5), was bound in operating its railroad to exercise proper care to prevent the injury of a person placed in danger by that wrong, in his lawful use of the highway. Evansville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Crist, supra.
In considering the question whether the appellant was negligent, it must be admitted that he could not be expected to abandon his right to use the public highway for fear the appellee would not do its duty in this regard, and,would not exercise ordinary care to give needful warning to travellers on the highway along which it had so constructed its track.
The evidence may have shown, and in the decision of the question before us under the motion for judgment it must be presumed that it did show, that the driver could have driven the team out of danger at any point on the journey before reaching the place where the injury occurred.
Undoubtedly the appellant and his driver were bound to' exercise ordinary care to avoid injury ; but if the rule of law as to the precaution of looking and listening, to be taken by a traveller about to cross a railroad track upon a public highway, were applicable to the ease in hand (Evansville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Crist, supra), there is no rule of law requiring a person approaching a railroad crossing with a team to stop still. Terre Haute, etc., R. R. Co. v. Clark, 73 Ind. 168 ; Pittsburgh, etc., R. W. Co. v. Martin, 82 Ind. 476 ; Baltimore, etc., R. R. Co. v. Walborn, 127 Ind. 142 ; Miller v. Louisville, etc., R. W. Co., 128 Ind. 97 (101) ; Mann v. Belt R. R., etc., Co., 128 Ind. 138 (144).
If the driver’s failure to stop, when by doing so he could have heard the train in time to escape, would have been neg
How often would it have been necessary to stop in order to escape the imputation of negligence for failure to stop ? What place or places in the journey could be said to be points at which he must have stopped in the exercise of ordinary care ?
It can not be said by the court as a matter of law that by failing to stop to listen, as indicated in the special findings, he directly contributed to the injury through want of ordinary care.
The fact that he made no special effort to ascertain whether he would meet a train or not is not inconsistent with proof that he looked and listened for a train, or that he made some effort, which, though it was not special, and did not include the stopping of the team to listen, was an effort which the jury could find to have been such as an ordinarily prudent person would make under the circuinstances shown by the evidence.
The special findings do not present a case of a person voluntarily encountering ah obvious danger, but rather, when considered in connection with provable facts, make a case proper for the consideration of the jury for the purpose of determining, under the instructions of the court, whether the appellant and his driver acted with ordinary care.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with instruction to render judgment upon the general verdict.