158 Ind. 621 | Ind. | 1902
Suit by appellee to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by appellant. It is averred in tbe complaint that the defendant is a railroad corporation, and owns and operates a trolley railroad between South Bend, in St. Joseph county, and Goshen, in Elkhart county, upon which, as a common carrier, it transports passengers for hire to and from the cities and towns, and to and- from a highway known as the “County Line Road Crossing”, and other highway crossings along its line, where passenger's desired to get on and off its cars. The complaint then proceeds: “That at about 6:30 o’clock in the afternoon of February 24, 1900, plaintiff entered one of the defendant’s cars at the said city of Goshen, as a passenger from Goshen to the aforesaid and described ‘County Line Road Crossing’, and told the conductor in charge of said car that his destination was the aforesaid ‘County Line Road Crossing’, paid to the said conductor the amount demanded by him for transportation to the place where plaintiff desired to go. The plaintiff was a stranger along the route of defendant’s line, and dependent upon the knowledge of defendant’s agent or conductor in charge of said car as to the location of said road crossing, and told the conductor of his desire to get off at the aforesaid crossing, and the conductor agreed to tell plaintiff when the car arrived at the place where plaintiff desired to stop; plaintiff depended upon the defendant’s conductor to notify him of the arrival of the car at the aforesaid place. Some time after the car had passed through the city of Elkhart on its way to plaintiff’s destination, the said conductor came to plaintiff and informed him that the car had arrived at the place where plaintiff desired to stop, and plaintiff relied on the conductor’s statement, and acted in accordance with his invitation, and went to the rear end of the car and stepped off onto the ground. The car passed on to its destination, the said city of South Bend. After plaintiff had alighted and the car had passed on, plaintiff discovered that
The theory of the pleader is obscure. From the nature of the action it cannot be treated as a suit for damages for a breach of contract of carriage. Cincinnati, etc., R. Co. v. Eaton, 94 Ind. 414, 478, 48 Am. Rep. 119. It must be regarded as an action sounding in tort, and the debated question is whether the tortious act complained of is appellant’s dereliction of duty as a common carrier, in causing appellee to leave its car at the wrong place, or appellant’s negligent obstruction of its railroad, whereby appellee was injured
Our attention is called to the rule that requires the character of a pleading to be determined from the facts stated, and not from the epithets employed. But this rule will not permit us to carry qualifying terms from one subject to another to meet the varying fortunes of a lawsuit. Appellee had the right to predicate his action upon the delinquency of appellant in causing him to leave the car at the wrong place, or upon the wrong of the company in leaving its roadway obstructed in a manner dangerous to footmen, or upon both
Under the complaint as it stands, we must assume that the discharge of appellee from the car was satisfactory to him or justifiable. If satisfactory or justifiable, then the company’s duty to him as a common carrier was performed when he left the car safely. And as he stood upon the crossing, after the departure of the car, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, his relation to the company was the same as that of a stranger. This being so, when he took up his journey on the company’s private railroad, without invitation, he did so with no greater rights than an ordinary licensee, taking upon himself all the perils that were incident thereto. “The owner of premises,” says Mitchell, J., in Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Griffin, 100 Ind. 221, 50 Am. Rep. 783, “is under no legal duty to keep them free from pitfalls or obstructions for the accommodation of persons who go upon or over them merely for their own convenience or pleasure, even where this is done with his permission. In such case the licensee goes there at his own risk, and, as has often before been said, enjoys the license with its concomitant perils.” To the same effect, see Faris v. Hoberg, 134 Ind. 269, 39 Am. St. 261; Lingenfelter v. Baltimore, etc., R. Co., 154 Ind. 49; Cannon v. Cleveland, etc., R. Co., 157 Ind. 682.
The complaint states no cause of action.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions to sustain appellant’s demurrer to the complaint.