152 Ind. 531 | Ind. | 1899
Appellee brought this action against appellant to recover damages for the loss of an arm which resulted from injuries received while attempting to couple cars while in the service of appellant as a brakeman on one of its freight trains. The complaint is in three paragraphs. A demurrer to each was overruled. Answer in general denial. Verdict and judgment for appellee. Error is assigned upon the. overruling of the demurrers to the complaint; in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment upon answers to interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict; and in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The negligence charged in the first paragraph relates to the order of the conductor to the plaintiff to couple two cars of different construction, — the draw-bars of one being higher than the draw-bars of the other, and the deadwoods so negligently constructed and maintained that the cars were but eight inches apart when the deadwoods, collided, — which
Appellant requested the court to charge the jury that if they found the plaintiff was injured solely by the negligence of the conductor of the train, and that the defendant was free from fault in employing said conductor, or in retaining him in its service, such injury was the result of the negligence of a co-employe, and that they should find for the defendant. Appellant’s counsel says in his brief: “The overruling of the demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint, and the refusal to give said instruction to the jury, present the question of the validity of the Employers’ Liability Act.” No objection is made to either paragraph of the complaint, nor to the refusal of the court to give said instruction number twenty, further than that the act of 1*893 (Acts 1893, p. 29é, section 1083 Burns 1894), upon which it is claimed they rest, is obnoxious to the Constitution. Since the brief was written, this court has decided the question 'here propounded adversely to the position assumed by the appellant. Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Montgomery, ante, 1; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Hosea, ante, 412.
Appellee also contends that neither the instructions given nor those refused are in the record so as to question them severally. The alleged error is stated in the motion for a new trial as follows: Eor “error of the court in refusing to •give to the jury each of the instructions severally asked, numbered one, two, three,” etc. Eor “error of the court in giving to the jury each of the instructions given by the court numbered one, two, three,” etc. “Each” is a word of distribution,— implies severalty, — and the assignment is sufficient to challenge each instruction of each set. Terre Haute, etc., R. Co. v. McCorkle, 140 Ind. 613.
Instruction nineteen given by the court is as follows: “(19) If you find from a fair preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff, without any fault or negligence on his part, while exercising due care, sustained the injury complained of, by reason of the roadbed at the point where he was working being out of repair, as charged in the complaint, and that such condition was unknown to the plaintiff, and that such condition was known to the defendant, or had so long continued or was.of such a nature that it would have been known to the defendant by the exercise of ordinary diligence on the part of the defendant, so as to have avoided said injury, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff.” The defendant requested, and the court refused to give, the following: “(5) The court instructs you further, as a matter of law, that an employe of a railroad company cannot recover from the company for an injury suffered in the course of the business in which he is employed, from defect
Eor error of the court in giving to the jury instruction nineteen and refusing number five, requested by appellant, the judgment must be reversed. As the question upon the overruling of appellant’s motion for judgment upon the answers to interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict, is not likely to arise upon a retrial of the cause, we deem it unnecessary to review it.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial.