162 Ind. 374 | Ind. | 1904
This action was brought by appellee against appellant to recover damages for the death of J ames S. McGuire, while in the employ of appellant as a switch-man in its Park Manor yards in Chicago. The action is under the statute of Illinois for wrongfully causing death, and the damages sought to be recovered are for the benefit of the widow and children of the deceased. The negligence charged is (1) that a locomotive was run in said yards,
We recognize as well established in this State that a general verdict must stand if it can be upheld under any supposable state of facts provable under the issues, and that all presumptions must be indulged in support of the general verdict and against the special answers. But such presumptions must be reasonable, and relate only to such facts as might have been proved under the issues as formed. Therefore in this case, in support of his general verdict, appellee can invoke no fact in his own favor, or against appellant, that he would not have been allowed to prove within the limits of his complaint.
The special findings of the jury are in substance as follows: McGuire was employed by appellant on July 7,
Assuming that a2)pellant’s negligence was proved, we are unable, by any proper range of fancy, to find that McGuire was himself without fault. The gravamen of the negligence complained of is the running down of McGuire with an engine which at the time was being unlawfully speeded, and which was driven upon him without ringing the bell, or giving him any other notice or warning of its approach. With respect to this alleged misconduct on the part of the apjiellant, the findings show that McGuire could have escaped injury therefrom by the exercise of reasonable care. It is exhibited by the findings that he was familiar with the yards and his duties as switchman, and with good sight and hearing, in the full light of day, he deliberately stepped onto track No. 3, in front of an oncoming engine, when it was not necessary for him to do so, and when lie knew that it was in violation of the company’s rules. lie not only stepped onto the track, but .proceeded on the ends of the ties northwesterly, with the knowledge that the locomotive was approaching him from the rear on the same track, and, without looking or listening, or at least without heeding, walked thereon seventy feet before being struck by the engine. It was not alone the speed, or the failure to ring the bell or give other notice or warning of the approaching engine that caused McGuire’s injury, for without any other warning he heard, or might have heard,
No situation of probable danger would excuse him from looking out for his own safety. And the more threatening the danger the greater the caution required. Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Stommel, 126 Ind. 35. A railroad track is of itself a suggestion of danger, and walking on the ties so near a rail as to be struck by a passing engine, with the knowledge that one was approaching but a short distance away, was a situation requiring great attention and care, and the failure to give such attention and care constituted negligence. Pennsylvania Co. v. Meyers, 136 Ind. 242; Ohio, etc., R. Co. v. Hill, 117 Ind. 56. What if McGuire was intently looking for a link or a coupling pin, and had been told and believed that the engine would stop where he and the other switchman had been standing? What if he had signaled the engineer to stop, and had seen the steam shut off, or had been informed by a superior that he would send the engine back to come in on track No. 2, and believed it would be done? None of these, or like things which might have been proved, would have dispensed with the duty to look and listen while occupying the track unnecessarily, or have justified such an abandonment of all care as to disregard the noise of the moving engine a hundred feet behind him. Pennsylvania Co. v. Meyers, supra, page 260.
It follows that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment upon the answers to interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain said motion, and render judgment thereon for the defendant.
Gillett, C. J., concurs in result.