60 Ind. App. 626 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1916
This is an appeal from a judgment for $300 in appellee’s favor in an action brought by her against Preston B. Arnold and Earl Arnold, doing business under the firm name of P. B. Arnold & Co., and Flora Weis, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the defendants. During the progress ■of the trial, the action was dismissed as to the defendant Flora Weis and by agreement of the parties the appellant, “P. B. Arnold Company”, a corporation, was substituted below as party defendant instead of Preston B. Arnold and Earl Arnold. The errors assigned and relied on for reversal in this court and presented by appellant’s brief, are the overruling of appellant’s motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories and its motion for a new trial. ■
The averments of the complaint necessary to an understanding of the questions herein considered are in substance, as follows: On November 5, 1911, Flora Weis was the owner of a lot in the city of Fort Wayne, Indiana, on which was located a two-story building, and on that day appellee and her husband rented and leased from said Weis three rooms on the second floor of said building and agreed to pay, and did pay, therefor, $5 per month. Appellee and her husband and son occupied said rooms until March 17, 1912. During that period appellee was employed at the General Electric Works in said city. On March 13, 1912, she went to her work as usual, and before leaving her rooms she securely locked the doors. While she was away and so engaged, said Weis employed appellant to make certain repairs to the first story of said house. During appellee’s absence, appellant entered her rooms without her knowledge or consent and removed some boards from the floor of her bedroom and
9. The instructions above set out disclose that under them appellee’s right to recover was made to depend on whether she had defaulted in the payment of her rent and thereby lost her . right to lawful possession of the premises in question. They ignore any possibility' of appellee’s right to recover against appellant, except she was lawfully entitled to possession of said premises. This is true of all the instructions tendered by either appellant or appellee, and in determining the correctness of the instructions on sueh subject we have limited our consideration of them to the objections made against them, and considered them solely with reference to the theory of liability adopted by the parties and the trial court, with no intention of intimating that such theory was correct. Upon sueh theory, the instructions were as favorable to appellant as the law would permit, and the theory itself more favorable. This is so because there was evidence showing that when appellant entered the rooms occupied by appellee and made the hole in the floor, into which appellee stepped, it knew some one occupied the rooms, and the jury found in answer to the interrogatories that the appellant knew when it started to wire said house on March 14, 1912, that some one was lawfully living in the upstairs rooms. Whether such occupancy was lawful or unlawful, appellant could not ignore its knowledge thereof, and such knowledge imposed on it a duty to use ordinary care with reference to such occupants. Peru Heating Co. v. Lenhart (1911), 48 Ind. App. 319, 326, 95 N. E. 680; Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Means (1915), 59 Ind. App. 383, 104 N. E. 785, 108 N. E. 375;
The answers to interrogatories are in the main entirely consistent with the general verdict, and any apparent inconsistency between the two is not of that irreconcilable character necessary to warrant a judgment on such answers.
We find no error in the record, the judgment below is therefore affirmed.
Note. — Reported in. Ill N. E. 204. As to liability of landlord for letting dangerous premises, see 66 Am. St. 785. On the right of married woman to recover for loss of time, services, wages or impaired capacity to labor, see 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 215; 4 Ann. Cas. 205. See, also, under (2) 24 Cyc 1352; (3) 24 Cyc 1360; (4) 21 Cyc 1574; (5) 21 Cyc 1393, 1526; (6) 3 C. J. 850; 38 Cyc 1693; (7) 38 Cyc 1595; (8) 38 Cyc 1711; (9) 29 Cyc 443.