51 Ind. App. 480 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1912
— Appellee brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while riding in a box-car, with a stallion which was being transported therein over appellant’s railroad. The cause was tried by a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of appellee in the sum of $5,000, together -with answers to interrogatories. Appellant’s motions for judgment in its favor on the answers to the interrogatories and for a new trial were overruled, and this appeal taken.
The first question presented by appellant’s assignment of errors is the sufficiency of the first paragraph of appellee’s complaint. Omitting the formal parts, showing that appellant is a common carrier of passengers and freight, the first paragraph avers, in substance, that on November 4, 1908, appellant, as such common carrier, accepted from appellee at New Bargersville, Indiana, a certain horse for shipment from said point to the city of Bloomington, Indiana; that at the same time appellant accepted appellee as a passenger on said railroad and in the same box-car with said horse, and received from appellee the usual fare therefor; that when near the place of destination appellant, through its agents and employes in charge of the train, did “then and there disconnect and uncouple said car in which appellee was so riding from the engine drawing the same and all the other cars composing such train, except a certain car which was then heavily loaded with saw logs, which latter car was attached to and coupled with the said box-car in which appellee was so riding, and appellee alleges that while said two cars were so attached to each other and detached from the engine and the other cars composing said train, appellant did, through its agents and employes, negligently and carelessly, violently and with great force, start, hurl, shove and push forward, on
Appellant asserts that this paragraph of complaint is insufficient because (1) it fails to show that the alleged “injury was the result of defendant’s negligence”; (2) that plaintiff was not shown to be a caretaker, but a voluntary passenger for hire on a freight train; that he thereby assumed the risks incident to such mode of conveyance, among which are those of switching; that the occurrence alleged to have caused appellee’s injury is not shown to have been other than one of the ordinary happenings in the switching of freight cars, and was therefore not due to any negligence of appellant; (3) that appellant does not come within the rule where negligence may be inferred from the alleged occurrence and injury.
Among the risks assumed by appellee as such passenger were those of the sudden bumping or jerking of the cars in stopping, starting and switching in the usual and ordinary way of handling freight trains. But applying the rule as stated to the facts of this complaint, it does not appear that the hazard necessarily assumed by appellee included the
An act of switching done in the manner described in the complaint cannot be held to be the usual and ordinary mode of switching ears so loaded as in this instance. Specific averments of facts may be sufficient to overcome the general charge of negligence, but here the facts and circumstances alleged tend to support, rather than lessen, the force of the general allegations of negligence.
The first paragraph of complaint is sufficient as against the demurrer. The question on the motion to make the complaint more specific is not discussed, and is therefore waived.
Appellant contends that the answers to certain interrogatories cannot be reconciled with the general verdict. The jury by its answers found that the door on the east side of the car, in which appellee was riding, opened easily, and he was told to stay away from it; that the door was partly
■But appellant insists that these answers show that it was guilty of no negligence causing appellee’s injury; that the jury did not know how appellee was injured; that the answer “No' evidence” is equivalent to a finding that appellee had failed to prove he was injured as alleged.
The general verdict finds every material and issuable fact in favor of appellee, which includes a finding that appellee received all the injuries alleged in the manner stated in the complaint.
There is nothing in the record that affirmatively shows that the jury considered the injury to the hand in the assessment of damages, nor does appellant claim that any amount Avas allowed for the injury to the hand, hut insists that the answer “No evidence” to the aforesaid questibn overcomes the general verdict by shoAving a failure to prove the injury alleged. The jury was instructed by the court that it must decide the case in accordance Avith the law as given by the court and on the evidence which was intro
The court, at the request of appellant, gave instruction five, which, in substance, told the jury that a railroad company is not bound to furnish a passenger on a freight train the same conveniences that are afforded on a passenger train; that such passenger is presumed to know the way in which freight trains are ordinarily operated; that he assumes the additional risks ordinarily incident to riding on such freight train. The court also told the jury in another instruction that there are some perils-which are necessarily incident to traveling in a stock car, among which are the sudden jars which occur in operating the train; that these are assumed risks of such travel; that if the occurrence which caused appellee’s injury was only such as would necessarily attend the operation of the car on which he was riding, its verdict should be for appellant. The jury was also told that if it found that appellee’s injury was due to a mere accident, without any fault on the part of appellant or its employes, there could be no recovery.
Appellant also insists on a reversal on the ground that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and especially urges three points to sustain this contention: (1) The evidence shows that appellee was not a caretaker, but a passenger; (2) as a passenger, he should have left the train at the passenger depot; that appellant only undertook to carry him to that place, and by remaining in the ear after it left the passenger station, appellee assumed the risks incident thereto, and appellant owed him no duty except not wilfully to injure him; (3) that the evidence does not tend to support the verdict in showing that the injury was the proximate result of the alleged negligence.
No error harmful to appellant has been shown in the admission or exclusion of testimony. The motion for a new trial was properly overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 98 N. E. 431. See, also, under (1) 29 Cyc. 583; (2) 6 Cyc. 026; (3) 6 Cyc. 594; (4) 6 Cyc. 620; (5) 31 Cyc. 358; (6) 38 Cyc. 1921; (8) 38 Cyc. 1927; (12, 16) 38 Oye. 1778; (14) 38 Cyc. 1711; (15) 38 Cyc. 1632; (18) 31 Cyc. 674; (19) 3 Cyc. 348; (20) 17 Cyc. 234; (21) 16 Cyc. 1164. As to the liability of a railway company to a person riding with livestock to care for it, see 61 Am. St. 89; 31 L. R. A. (N. S.) 632. As to the liability to a person riding on a drover's pass or in charge of stock, see 0 Ann. Cas. 799.