150 Ind. 576 | Ind. | 1898
The appellee sued the appellant to recover damages resulting from a personal injury to appellee, at a place where appellant’s railway is crossed by a highway, caused, as is alleged, by the negligence of appellant. The issues were tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which judgment was rendered, over appellant’s motion for a new trial. The trial court overruled a demurrer to the complaint, and overruled appellant’s motion to reject the complaint. Upon these several rulings alone error is assigned by appellant. The court, we think, properly overruled the motion to reject the complaint. The statute requires the court not only to reject, as sham,
Only two points are urged under the motion for a new trial, namely: That the circuit court erroneously refused certain instructions, and that the evidence is not sufficient to establish appellee’s freedom from contributory fault.
The substance of the seventeenth instruction asked by appellant and .refused by the court, is as follows: “If the evidence fails to satisfy your minds by a preponderance, that the plaintiff by diligently listening for trains, and diligently looking behind him or in the direction of the train, could not have seen or heard said train at any time or place as he approached the crossing, and before too near to it, then * * * I instruct you that the law demands that your verdict be for the defendant.” In view of the evidence in the case this instruction was peculiarly applicable, and ought to have been given, if it correctly expresses the law.
It is also thoroughly established law in this State that “In attempting to cross, the traveler must listen for signals, notice signs put up as warnings, and look attentively up and down the track. * * * If a
traveler, by looking, could have seen an approaching train in time to escape, it will be presumed, in case he is injured by a collision, either that he did not look, or, if he did look, that he did not heed what he saw.” Mann v. Belt R. R., etc., Co., supra; Lake Erie, etc., R. R. Co. v. Stick, supra.
It is also established that the law will assume that such person “actually saw what he could have seen, if he had looked, and heard what he could have heard, if he had listened.” Cones, Admr., v. Cincinnati, etc., R. W. Co., 114 Ind. 328; Lake Erie, etc., R. R. Co. v. Stick, supra.
The law then will presume that this appellee saw the train in time to escape, if he could have seen it by looking, and heard it also in time to escape, if he could have heard it had he attentively listened. Then how necessary it was to instruct the jury, as requested in the seventeenth instruction, that in case appellee had failed to prove that he could not see or hear the
Appellee’s counsel insist that there was no available error in refusing the seventeenth instruction, even though it correctly stated the law, because the twelfth instruction given by the court, at appellant’s request, as is claimed, covers the same ground covered by the refused instruction. But we have examined that instruction, and find that it does not embrace the peculiar element embraced in the seventeenth, which we have been discussing, nor was there any instruction given by the court that did embrace that matter. We therefore hold that the court erred in refusing to give .the instruction, for which the judgment must be reversed.
We are also asked to reverse the judgment because of the insufficiency of the evidence to establish appellant’s freedom from contributory negligence.
For the error in refusing the seventeenth instruction asked by the appellant, the trial court should have granted appellant’s motion for a new trial. For that error the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to sustain the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.