38 Ind. App. 172 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1905
In Southern R. Co. v. Jones (1904), 33 Ind. App. 333, cited by appellant, the complaint alleged as negligence the use of defective brakes and running the train in excess of the speed -limited by a city ordinance. The allegation was: “That by reason of the carelessness and negligence of said defendant in failing and neglecting properly and securely to supply said caboose with good, sound, safe, and secure appliances, whereby the speed of the same could be controlled, and by reason of the carelessness and negligence of said defendant in running its said train at such high rate of speed, to wit, twenty miles per hour, within the corporate limits of said, city of Huntingburg, and thereby causing said collision as aforesaid, he received his said injuries, and not otherwise.” It was held that the injury is stated to be due to the two causes named. The court recognizes the rule that, as a general rule, all acts of negligence averred need not be proved, but says: “It is not averred that the brake would have been insufficient to check the caboose if it had been going at the rate of only eight miles an hour [the ordinance rule]. It may be fairly inferred that if the caboose had not been going at an unlawful rate of speed the brakes would not have been insufficient, or that if the brakes had not been defective the high rate of speed could have been checked; in other words the high rate of speed rendered the brakes useless.”
There is no necessary connection between the several acts of negligence attempted to be alleged, and there is nothing in the pleading to indicate that it proceeds upon the theory that all the alleged acts of negligence combined caused the accident. If the attempted averments of negligence, aside from the allegation of failure to give, the statutory signals, should be omitted from the pleading, the averment that the accident was caused by the negligence
Camera 1X7 feet north of center of crossing looking west, engine 1,500 feet west of center of crossing.
It is also argued that decedent was guilty of contributory negligence. At the crossing the highway and railroad form an angle of twenty-six and three-fourths degrees; the railroad running in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction over the highway running east and west. From the crossing the highway slopes to the east and at 100 feet is three and seven-tenths feet lower than the railroad. The fence on the north side of the highway was a rail fence, the right-of-way fence was wire, with a board at the top, and the wing fence west of the crossing and extending up
Evidence was introduced to the effect that from certain points in the highway the track of appellant’s road could be seen for certain distances, and it is argued from this that the approaching train could have been seen by decedent had she looked for it. The jury also answered a number of interrogatories concerning the same matters, but these answers are not altogether uncontradictory and conclusive. “It does not necessarily follow,” said the court in Massoth v. Delaware, etc., Canal Co. (1876), 64 N. Y. 524, “from the fact that a skilled engineer can demonstrate that from a given point in a highway the track of a railroad is visible for any distance, that an individual in charge of a team approaching the track is negligent because he does not from the same point see a train, approaching at great speed, in time to avoid a collision; and it is not enough to disturb a verdict of a jury in this court, in which legal errors only can be corrected, that the questions of fact are doubtful and that a different result might have been reached.” In the case at bar there is evidence in the record sustaining the
Judgment affirmed.