169 Ind. 18 | Ind. | 1907
The complaint consists of two paragraphs, in each of which appellee seeks to recover damages for personal injuries- sustained while in the employ of appellant as a motorman in the operation of its electric railroad. A demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint for insufficiency of facts was overruled, to which an exception was reserved. Answer, general denial. Trial by jury, and a general verdict returned in favor of appellee, awarding him damages. Along with this verdict the jury returned answers to a series of interrogatories. The motion by appellant for'a new trial, based upon various grounds, was denied, to which ruling it excepted. Judgment on the verdict.
The errors assigned herein relate to the decision of the court (1) in overruling the demurrer to the complaint and to each paragraph thereof; (2) in denying the motion for a new trial. The first paragraph of the complaint may be summarized as follows: On March 11, 1904, the defendant was a bridge and railroad corporation organized under the laws of Kentucky. It owned and operated a line of electric railroad between the cities of New Albany, Floyd county, Indiana, and Louisville, Kentucky, and on said day was engaged in the business of a common carrier of passengers for hire. This line was equipped with motor-cars propelled by electricity, and these ears were used by the defendant for the carriage and transportation of passengers. Among the cars so owned and operated by the defendant in its aforesaid business was motor-ear No. 9. On March 11, 1904, plaintiff was in the employ of defendant, serving as a motorman, and by its direction he was on said day placed in charge of said motor-car No. 9, to work and operate thereon as a motorman. .This car was equipped with air-brakes which were operated by the motorman in charge thereof by means of a lever in the front vestibule. Said brakes consisted of brake-shoes attached to the brake-beam, and the
• The second paragraph of the complaint is the same as the first paragraph, except that the defect in the brake-rod is
The mere facts, standing unaided by any other averments, which disclose that the brake-rod on the day of the accident contained a break or flaw therein, which rendered the same, as charged, “weak and insufficient for the purpose for which it was intended, and liable to break, ’ ’ which condition was unknown to the appellee, but was well known to the appellant, are not such as clearly raise, as a matter of law, a presumption or inference that the appellant was guilty of negligence. There are no specific or general averments to show that the appellant, after it was chargeable with knowledge, either actual or constructive, in respect to
This case was transferred by the Appellate Court because it was the opinion of that Court that the case of Malott v. Sample, supra, was out of accord with the law as above declared. That case, as will be perceived from a reading of it, rests on the exceptional manner in which knowledge was sought to be averred. It is true that the complaint which was then before the court contained two averments of negligence, but the first of said averments confined the negligence to the time when the defendant, by the exercise of ordinary care, might have discovered the defect, while the second was coupled with, and a part of, a mere assumption of the existence of matter which had not been directly averred. Thu's understood, Malott v. Sample, supra, is in nowise out of accord with the authorities.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with instructions to the lower court to sustain the demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint, with leave to amend.