35 Ind. App. 485 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1905
In the complaint of the appellee, a demurrer to which for want of sufficient facts was overruled, it was alleged, after introductory matter, that January 2, 1903, the appellee with his wife, about 6 o’clock in the evening, at Indianapolis, took passage on one of appellant’s cars, for the purpose of being earried to a point about four miles east of Greenfield, Hancock county — said point being stop No. 63, a regular stop for said car — for which passage the appellee paid the appellant the regular fare for himself
The facts stated in a complaint may show that a conductor was' acting within the line of his employment, without a direct allegation that he was so acting. Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Wood (1888), 113 Ind. 544, 548, 570.
In Terre Haute, etc., R. Co. v. McMurray (1884), 98 Ind. 358, 367, 49 Am. Rep. 752, it is said: “The authority of a conductor of a train in its general scope is known to all intelligent men, and the court that professes itself ignorant of this matter of general notoriety avows a lack of knowledge that no citizen who has the slightest acquaintance with railroad affairs would be willing to confess. It is true
Under our statute (§359a Burns 1901, Acts 1899, p. 58) it is not necessary, in actions of this character, for the plaintiff to allege or prove the want of contributory negligence ; but the existence of contributory negligence is matter of defense, and such defense may be proved under the an-SAver of general denial. Yet if contributory negligence be
There were other instructions in which the subject of contributory negligence was involved, which can not be said to have been erroneous, yet there was no withdrawal of the erroneous statements on that subject in the third and fourth instructions; and there was no express contradiction which can be supposed to have removed the impression that contributory ngeligence was not available as a defense unless proved by the defendant.
Judgment reversed.