44 Ind. App. 635 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
This was an action brought by the appellee as administrator of the estate of John Reed, deceased, to recover damages for the death of appellee’s decedent, caused by the alleged negligence of the appellant. This cause is here for the second time. See Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Reed (1905), 36 Ind. App. 67. Upon the return of the cause to the Jasper Circuit Court the venue was changed to the court below, in which the appellee filed an amended complaint in three paragraphs, a demurrer to each of which, for want of facts, was overruled.
Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and this ruling is assigned as error. Counsel have invited our attention to a great many instructions given by the court to the jury, and to the action of the court in refusing to give quite a number of instructions tendered on behalf of appellant. The brief of appellant contains an elaborate argument directed to a number of instructions given, in an attempt to show that those tendered and refused should have been given. From a careful consideration of all of the instructions covered by the argument of counsel, we deem it entirely unnecessary to take the space to record our views on any except those pertaining to the facts here enumerated, as preliminary to a discussion of certain instructions given by the court to the jury, as well as certain ones refused.
The decedent was about seventy years of age at the time of his death, and was not engaged in any business. His wife died in 1897. He left surviving him four sons and three granddaughters, the latter, children of a daughter. The father of the three grandchildren had been dead about twelve years, and their mother died four or five years before the accident. The youngest of the sons is the administrator, and the appellee herein. The oldest son was between forty and forty-five years old, the next son was thirty-seven, and the next thirty-five years of age. All of these sons were married, were in business supporting themselves, and were in no way dependent upon their father for support. The decedent had been living for about two years in a house of his own in Remington, and was receiving the income from a
Having passed upon all of the questions raised in appellant’s brief which are at all debatable, and finding no reversible error, the judgment is therefore affirmed.