39 Ind. App. 592 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
The appellee sued, the appellant to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the wrongful acts of the appellant. The complaint is in three paragraphs, the first and second of which seek a recovery upon the ground of appellant’s alleged negligence. The third charges a wilful injury. No question is made in this court on the pleadings. An answer of general denial was filed to the complaint, the cause tried before a jury, and a general verdict returned in favor of the. appellee, assessing his damages at $3,000, and with the general verdict answers to interrogatories were. returned. Appellant’s motion for a venire de novo was overruled by the court, also his motion for a judgment in his favor upon the first and second paragraphs of the complaint, and upon the answers of the jury to the interrogatories notwithstanding the general verdict. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was also overruled, and judgment rendered in favor of the appellee upon the verdict. Appellant’s motion to modify the judgment was also overruled, and these rulings of the court are assigned as errors.
This case has been twice before the Supreme Court, and upon each appeal judgments in favor of the appellee have been reversed. The decision on the first appeal is Indianapolis St. R. Co. v. Taylor (1902), 158 Ind. 274, where the cause was reversed for error of .the court below in giving to the jury two instructions, one on the subject of wilful injury, and the other relating to the proof of contributory negligence. These were the only questions decided by the court on that appeal. In the second appeal (Indianapolis St. R. Co. v. Taylor [1906], 164 Ind. 155), the. cause was again reversed for error of the court below in admitting in evidence the statements of a witness made to the motorman while the witness and others were engaged in removing the appellee from under the car fender, and for an instruction given by the court to the jury on the subject of the degree of care required of appellant
Ninety-five reasons are given why a new trial should have been granted the appellant in the court below. Happily, however, they are not all urged upon the consideration .of
There is evidence in the case from which the jury were warranted in finding that appellant operates a street car line on Illinois street, in the city of Indianapolis, a populous city and a much frequented street; that said street ear line is operated by electricity, and that there are two tracks in the center of the street; that on the west track the appellant’s cars run south and on the east track they run north; that said line of street railway is crossed by Michigan, Vermont, New York, and numerous other streets of said city; that about 8:30 o’clock p. m., November 11, 1899, appellee was approaching the Vermont street crossing of said railway from the west, riding a bicycle; that the night was dark and there were no street lights; that appellee had a light on the front of his wheel; that immediately before appellee reached the street car track a car passed over the Vermont-street crossing on the east track going north; that the car was lighted, and was observed by the appellee'; that appellee approached the street crossing at a speed of from two to four miles per hour, and from the curb to within eight feet
Judgment affirmed.