26 Ind. App. 1 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
This was an action for damages growing out of an injury received by appellee and which occurred in the manner following: Appellant and the Muncie
The complaint is based upon the negligence of the appellant in running its locomotive while within the steel company’s yard. In the language of appellee’s complaint, the acts constituting negligence are stated in the following words: “Plaintiff further alleges that the proximate causes of plaintiff’s injury and wounds were and are due to defendant’s negligent acts, to wit, swiftly running and backing said train without any warning or notice to plaintiff and negligently and unnecessarily hitting, striking, and moving and violently hurling forward the car on which plaintiff was attempting to place said heavy iron plate and thereby sud
It was necessary for the complaint to show in this case a legal duty or obligation of the appellant towards the appellee existing at the time and place of the injury, which the appellant failed to perform, and that appellee’s injury was occasioned by such failure. This appellee did in the language of the complaint above quoted. Appellee was not in the employ of the appellant. He was not engaged in the work he was doing, at the time he received his injury, by the direction, invitation, permission, or with the knowledge of appellant, nor was he in any way subject to the orders of appellant. Appellant was on premises owned and controlled by appellee’s master. Appellant could only be there by permission and consent of appellee’s master. The entry was by a gate which was kept closed and locked and each entry of appellant required the active permission of appellee’s master in unlocking the gate. While within the gates, appellant was under the orders of the Midland Steel Company and did whatever work said company desired done, in bringing in, removing, or placing cars. Appellant, if liable at all for the injury to appellee, was so liable because of its negligence in manner and form as stated in appellee’s complaint.
The jury found that the appellant’s employes attempted to couple the train to the section of three cars, which ran down upon the car and caused appellee’s injury, in the usual anfl ordinary way of coupling cars with automatic couplers. That they had no notice or knowledge of the fact that appellee was working in the car at the platform, and that the appellant’s said employes did not intend to push said cars down against the cars where appellee was at work. That the cars were equipped with automatic coup
It was not the fault of appellant if appellee’s master did not furnish him a safe and suitable place in which to work. Appellant was doing the work under the direction of appellee’s master, and in the usual and ordinary way, using suitable and safe appliances, and in so doing it appellee was injured; he was injured not by the negligence of appellant, but because the position in which appellee was placed to work was rendered unsafe by the presence of appellant in the yard in the proper exercise of its rights there, under the permission and control of appellee’s master. It must follow then, that if in the prosecution of the work of handling the cars in the usual and proper way in the yards of the Midland Steel Company, the employes of said company are placed in moré hazardous positions, the liability, if any, arising from the increased risk must fall upon said steel company. This case is in all the material facts presented like the ease of McInerney v. Delaware, etc., Co., 151 N. Y. 411, 45 N. E. 848.
The negligent acts which appellee alleges caused his injury are squarely contradicted by the answers to interrogatories returned with the general verdict. The facts found flatly contradict all the averments of negligence in appellee’s complaint. They show that appellant has not violated any alleged duty owing to appellee. Appellant’s motion for judgment ought to have been sustained.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the lower court to sustain appellant’s motion for judgment upon the facts found by way of answers to interrogatories.