78 Ind. App. 123 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1922
— Appellee was a section hand on the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railroad, then being operated by the United States Government. The railroad company was originally a party defendant, but the cause was finally tried on the amended complaint, with appellant as the sole party defendant.
There was a motion to make the amended complaint more specific, which was overruled; a demurrer to the
Appellant assigns as error: (1) Overruling the motion to make the amended complaint more specific; (2) overruling the demurrer to the amended complaint; (3) overruling the motion for a new trial.
We only need to decide as to the second error assigned. The substance of the complaint, so far ás here involved, is that on September 20, 1919, appellee was in the employ of said railroad company as a section hand, and was employed together with other employes of said company under the direction of their several foremen and engaged in unloading gravel from cars comprising a work train. Said train consisted of cars loaded with gravel and drawn by an engine, and after appellee together with other employes, had assisted in unloading a part of said cars of gravel, said engine was attached to the remaining gravel cars and appellee with other employes, was ordered and directed to board said train and assist in the unloading of gravel from said cars which were to be hauled to a point further east on said railroad. Appellee when so .ordered and directed by his foreman took his position between two of
The engineer had a right to use this method of operating his train, and in the absence of knowledge that appellee had placed himself in a dangerous place and where he was likely to be injured by the use of the slack the engineer owed him no duty other than that owed generally to those on the train. He had a right to presume that appellee would use reasonable care in the selection of a place to protect himself. But knowing, as he must have known, of the slack between the cars and of the common bumping and jerking of such trains, appellee chose to ride on a train sitting on the end sill of one car with his feet resting on the end sill of another. We can scarcely imagine a more dangerous situation in which he could have placed himself to ride. The facts pleaded do not show that the engineer was guilty of neg
The court erred in overruling the demurrer to the amended complaint.
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to sustain the demurrer to the amended complaint and for further proceedings in harmony herewith.