10 Ind. App. 626 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1894
The appellee filed his complaint against the appellant to recover damages for an injury to a horse by coming in contact with a barbed wire fence placed by appellant around a lot owned by him in the city of Kokomo. Upon issue joined, there was a trial, verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of forty-five dollars.
The complaint, omitting the caption, is as follows: “The plaintiff, Edward Sweeney, complains of the defendant, Jackson Morrow, and says that on or about the 25th day of November, 1892, the defendant, Jackson Morrow, was, and for two or three years prior to said date had been, the owner of lot No. 36 in Mansfield addition to the city of Kokomo, Howard county, Indiana;
“Immediately south of the said lot 36, between it and the lot immediately south thereof, when said addition was laid off there was indicated in said plat an alley about ten or twelve feet in width; said roadway entering said alley at the east end thereof, where it intersected or entered said Washington street, and leaving said alley and crossing said lot at the points as hereinbefore set forth and indicated; that the travel upon said roadway across said commons and said lot was, as aforesaid, continuous and uninterrupted by persons traversing the same in attending to their business as well as by those who desired to use the same for pleasure-riding.
“That at no time prior to said date, to wit: the 25th day of November, 1892, was there any fence, barrier, line or monument, or obstruction of any kind upon the line or around said lot 36 to indicate or give warning to
“That the said Jackson Morrow, after placing said barbed wire, as aforesaid, around said lot, placed nothing across or near said traveled way to indicate to those traveling upon the same that the said roadway was
“That said Jackson Morrow thus negligently and carelessly placed said wire across and over said roadway, as aforesaid, without giving any notice, warning, or indication of any kind to this plaintiff that he intended to or had placed the same across the said traveled way, and placed no obstruction, board or post, or anything-of any character in and about said roadway to indicate or warn this plaintiff, and those traveling upon the same, that by passing over the said roadway they, or the horses that they might have attached to vehicles, would come in contact with the said barbed wire'.
“That on or about the 25th day of November, 1892, the wife of this plaintiff, while driving along said roadway, about, or shortly after, sundown of said day, in a buggy of this plaintiff, with a valuable mare of this plaintiff attached thereto, she being at said time driving in a brisk trot, suddenly drove the said mare against said wire, and caused her to come violently in contact therewith, wounding and cutting the muscles of the breast of said mare, the sinews, arteries and veins thereof, the muscles of both fore legs, the blood vessels and ligaments in such a manner as to permanently disfigure and cripple the said mare, rendering her almost valueless; that the wife of this plaintiff, or this plaintiff at the time the said mare was so driven against and in contact
The sufficiency of the complaint was tested by a demurrer, and held good. This ruling of the court is the first error assigned on this appeal.
The theory of the complaint is to recover on account of appellant’s failure to give notice of his intention to erect, and for having erected, a barbed wire fence around his lot, over and across which persons were in the habit of driving their teams.
The appellant is charged in the complaint with having erected a fence from two and a half to four feet in height around his lot by stretching and fastening strands of
The facts alleged in order to constitute a cause of action must be sufficient to charge the defendant with a negligent breach of a duty, and the facts thus alleged must of themselves be such as will authorize the court to draw the legal inference of actionable negligence. As a general rule negligence can not be presumed. Brazil Block Coal Co. v. Young, 117 Ind. 520. For no action can be maintained, although there is negligence, unless the party guilty of negligence was under some duty to the person injured. Hence, it was the duty of the court, in passing upon the demurrer to the complaint, to determine whether or not the facts alleged, and which were admitted by the demurrer to be true, constituted actionable negligence.
“In every case involving actionable negligence, there are necessarily three elements essential to its existence. 1. The existence of a duty on the part of the defendant to protect the plaintiff from the injury of which he complains. 2. A failure by the defendant to perform that duty; and 3. An injury to the plaintiff from such failure of the defendant.
“When these elements are brought together they unitedly constitute actionable negligence. The absence of any one of these elements renders a complaint bad or the evidence insufficient.” Faris v. Hoberg, 134 Ind. 269.
In Thiele v. McManus, 3 Ind. App. 132, this court said: “A complaint for personal injury through negligence must show a legal duty or obligation of the defendant toward the person injured, existing at the time and place of the injury, which the defendant failed to perform or fulfill, and that the injury was occasioned by such failure.”
In such use he is not bound to anticipate that others will go upon his property or put themselves in the way of his rightful use thereof, but he has a right to assume that his right to the use and possession is exclusive, except he has granted rights or privileges with reference thereto to others, in which event he is bound to so use it as not to interfere with their rights.
‘ ‘There is an elementary and fundamental principle of law, which is based upon, and is coeval with, the right to own and control property, that a man must so use his own rights and property as to do no injury to those of his neighbor.” Gagg v. Vetter, 41 Ind. 228.
There is a duty, therefore, resting upon all persons to so use their property that in such use they may not injure others in the exercise of their rights. The duty thus imposed extends only to the extent of recognizing and observing such rights. If no rights exist there is no duty imposed. In the case under consideration the question arises: what rights had appellee or the general public to pass over and across appellant’s property? If no right of passage existed, and appellant had a right to enclose his property with a barbed wire fence, the complaint does not state a cause of action.
It is not contended that a highway had been established across appellant’s lot by user. If appellee’s wife attempted to drive upon appellant’s lot, it was not because she was exercising the right of the general public to use a public highway. It must be inferred, therefore, that she was a trespasser unless the facts alleged show that she was a licensee.
“The owner or occupant of premises is not under any legal duty to keep them free or safe from the danger of
When the owner induces another to come upon his lands, he thereby assumes the obligation of making them reasonably safe, and protecting such persons so induced to enter thereon from unseen dangers, but the law will not infer that the injured party was induced to enter, except the facts are sufficient to show an express or implied invitation. Mere- acquiescence, or failure to object, is not sufficient to sustain such an inference.
It is alleged in the complaint, however, that prior to the time the appellant commenced to improve his property, and erected the fence complained of, a well defined road, which was almost continuously traveled by the public, extended across his lot. Whether he knew from actual observation that the public were in the habit of so driving, is immaterial, for if there was a well defined way across the lot, indicating that the public were in the habit of driving across there, he was bound to take notice of it. True, if the public had not used the way for a sufficient length of time, or under such circumstances as to create a highway by user, appellant had the right to forbid the further use, and to fence his property, but he must not do so in a manner calculated to injure those who attempt to continue to drive across without any knowledge of his revocation of the existing privilege, or that a barrier had been erected. Had the fence erected by appellant been of such a character that persons driving across the lot must have seen it, he could not be made to answer for any injury resulting therefrom, but
The questions here discussed arose in the case of Carskaddon v. Mills, 5 Ind. App. 22, and were fully and ably discussed there, and we adhere to the principles there announced.
It is also urged by appellant’s counsel, that the court erred in giving certain instructions to the jury. If we were to consider the instructions complained of separate and apart from the other instructions given, the objections urged to some of them might be entitled to some consideration, but, taking the instructions altogether, we are of opinion that they state the law correctly, and in no wise tended to mislead the jury.
There was no error in overruling the motion for a judgment on the answers to the interrogatories. The facts found in answer to the interrogatories were not such as could not be reasonably reconciled with the general verdict, hence did not overthrow the general verdict.
The court did not err in refusing to give the several instructions asked by the appellant. While some of them, in a measure, state general propositions of law correctly, they were not applicable to the facts in this case, as we view them. To point out wherein each instruction is defective would unnecessarily prolong this opinion and add nothing to whát has already been decided. For that reason we thus summarily pass the questions urged in support of these instructions.
Under the evidence introduced, the verdict appears to be a just and proper one. We find no error in the record for which the judgment should be reversed.
Judgment affirmed.