32 Ind. App. 130 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
Action for damages on account of personal injuries averred to have been negligently caused by appellant. Appellee was a passenger upon one of appellant’s street cars within the city of Indianapolis, and while attempting to leave the car was thrown or fell to the pavement. Her theory, supported by the testimony of several witnesses,- was that she signaled for .the car to stop, that it did stop, and that she was in the_ act of stepping off when it suddenly started ahead, throwing her.' Appellant’s theory, supported by the testimony of several witnesses, was that she did not wait for the car to stop, but stepped off while it was in motion, and was thereby thrown. That she was injured is not disputed. As to the extent of her injury there was conflicting testimony. Verdict for appellee assessing damages at $1,200, with answers to interrogatories. Motion for a new trial overruled. Judgment on verdict.
The only questions argued relatfe to the giving of certain instructions and the refusal to give others requested. Appellant asked that the jury be instructed that if the accident did not happen as alleged in the complaint — i. <?., by appellee starting to alight from a car that was standing still, but from one that was in motion — there could bo no recovery. The answers to interrogatories show that the car was not moving. Error, if any, in refusing the instruction requested was not, therefore, harmful. Roush v. Roush, 154 Ind. 562.
The seventeenth instruction given was as follows: “If, however, the car was stopped to let the plaintiff alight
The plaintiff’s right to recover is stated, if the facts are found to be that the car was stopped to let her alight, and that she, while attempting to do so, using ordinary care, was thrown and injured by the motorman suddenly starting the car before she had alighted. Had it been stated in the instruction that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, if, in view of all the facts, the motorman “negligently” started the car, it would have been unobjectionable. It is argued with force that, in the absence of such word, the instruction took the question of fact from the jury, and declared the. defendant’s negligence, without taking into account the circumstances other than those detailed. To start a street car suddenly while a passenger is in the act of alighting therefrom is held to be negligence. Citizens St. R. Co. v. Merl, 26 Ind. App. 284; Citizens St. R. Co. v. Huffer, 26 Ind. App. 575. The car having been stopped for the purpose of enabling appellee to alight, appellant was bound to know that she had done so before starting the car again, and suddenly starting it while she was in the act of • alighting was an act of negligence. Anderson v. Citizens St. R. Co., 12 Ind. App. 194; Washington, etc., R. Co. v. Harmon's Adm., 147 U. S. 571,
The eighteenth instruction given was as follows: “While a common carrier of passengers is not an insurer of their safety, still, in consideration of the great danger to human life consequent upon the neglect of duty upon the part of the carrier, the law exacts of it the exercise of the highest practicable care for the safety of its passengers in the operation of its cars, and stopping and starting its cars to enable passengers to get on and off the same, and for any failure to exercise such care, and for slight neglect of its duty in this respect resulting in an accident or injury it is liable to a passenger, who is herself without fault, for an injury sustained as the proximate result of such negligence.” The law as stated has been declared to be “well settled.” Citizens St. R. Co. v. Hoffbauer, 23 Ind. App. 614-620.
The twenty-ninth instruction related to the answering of interrogatories, submitted, and was in part as follows: “If the burden is upon either party to show any particular fact called for in any question, such fact should be established by a fair preponderance of the evidence "to warrant you in so answering the question as to show the fact established. If there is no preponderance of evidence on any question — that is to say, if the evidence tending to prove the fact in question is only balanced by the evidence to the contrary — then such fact would not be proved, and your answer should be in the negative.” It is argued that the instruction is bad on the authority of Citizens St. R. Co. v. Reed, 151 Ind. 396. The language of the instruction condemned in that ease is practically the same as that of the last clause above quoted. The difference is that in the Reed ease the burden was upon the plaintiff to establish
The substance of the instructions refused, in so far as they contained correct statements of the law, was fully covered by other instructions given by the. court.
Judgment affirmed.