40 Ind. App. 240 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
The appellee sued_ appellant in the court below to recover damages for a personal injury alleged to have been caused, by the negligent acts and omissions of the appellant. The complaint was in one paragraph, and appellant’s demurrer addressed to it for want of facts was overruled by the court below, and proper exception reserved. Appellant answered the general denial. The cause was submitted to a jury for trial, and a general verdict returned in favor of the appellee, together with answers to interrogatories submitted by the court to the jury at appellant’s request. Motion was made in the court below by the appellant for a judgment in its favor on the answers to the interrogatories. This motion was overruled by the court, and proper exception reserved. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled by the court, and proper exception reserved. Judgment in appellee’s favor was rendered on the verdict of the jury. These rulings of the court below are assigned as error here, and will be considered in the order in which they are made.
The averments in the complaint, showing the length of time the banana peel remained upon the step of the car, and that it was there long before the train left the terminal station in Louisville, aided by the averment that the defendant might, by the exercise of ordinary care, have discovered the banana peel and its dangerous tendency to the traveling public and removed it, we think make the complaint sufficient to withstand the appellant’s demurrer.
There is a very marked distinction between the ease at bar and the case of Malott v. Sample (1905), 164 Ind. 645, cited by appellant’s counsel. In that ease the complaint failed to state the length of time the defect in the stirrup, the giving way of which caused the accident, had existed before the happening of the accident, and there was no direct averment that the defect had existed such a length of time .that the defendant might, by the exercise of reasonable care, have
The interrogatories find that the ear in which the plaintiff rode was cleaned after it was taken out of the morning run and before it was put on the afternoon run. That there was a morning run is to be known only by inference. There is no express finding that there was a morning run or an evening run of cars on this road, and no finding when the morning run ceased. So far as anything to the contrary appears in the answers to interrogatories, the morning run may have ceased the first hour after midnight, and the cars may have been then cleaned. There is a finding that before the car was placed on defendant’s side-track No. 4 — and where side-track No. 4 is located is not disclosed by the answers to interrogatories — it was inspected by the defendant’s car inspector, and there was no banana peel on the ear steps at that time, but what length of time elapsed between the inspection and the placing of the car on the side-track is no
In this case it will be presumed, in support of the general verdict, that the inspection of defendant’s car found, by the jury to have been made, was so made an unreasonable length of time before the car was put in service, and that had such inspection been made a reasonable length of time before putting the car in service the banana peel -would have been discovered and removed. We therefore conclude that the appellant’s motion for judgment upon the answers to interrogatories was properly overruled.
There is no substantial conflict in the evidence in this ease. It shows that the appellant is engaged as a common carrier of passengers, operating a line of railway connecting the cities of Jeffersonville and New Albany, in Indiana, and Louisville, in Kentucky, and intermediate points; that trains were regularly run from the defendant’s terminal stations in these cities every half hour, and that it took between twenty and twenty-five minutes to make the trip between the terminal stations; that there was a junction of the defendant’s roads near Clarksville, one branch leading to Jeffersonville, the -main line proceeding to New Albany; and that defendant’s passengers from Louisville for Jefferson-ville changed cars at this junction, while the train made up at Louisville proceeded on to New Albany; that defendant’s trains were in service all day between Louisville and New Albany, generally changing engines at Louisville at the end of every round trip; that there were five intermediate stations on defendant’s line between Louisville and New Albany where regular stops were made, and two flag-stations where stops were made on the evening runs; that the traffic on the line was very much heavier in the morning and evening than during the day; that on the 6 o’clock a. m. run there were five or six coaches in the train at Louisville;
In a great many of the decisions is to be found the declaration that this strict rule applies from the moment the passenger enters the car until he is safely set down at the end of his journey. Ft. Wayne Traction Co. v. Morvilius (1903), 31 Ind. App. 464; Louisville, etc., Ferry Co. v. Nolan (1893), 135 Ind. 61; Terre Haute, etc., R. Co. v. Buck (1884), 96 Ind. 346, 49 Am. Rep. 168; Jeffersonville R. Co. v. Hendricks (1866), 26 Ind. 228; Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Athon (1893), 6 Ind. App. 295, 51 Am. St. 303; Cincinnati, etc., R. Co. v. Worthington (1903), 30 Ind. App. 663, 96 Am. St.
There is no iron-bound, hard and fast rule that can be applied under all circumstances governing the duties and obligations of common carriers of passengers. No rule of law is more elastic. There is none in which the circumstances in each case must so largely furnish the measure of duty. There is, however, one fixed, universal principle that runs through the entire doctrine of negligence, and sheds a certain and steady light by which we can be safely guided in each particular case in fixing the measure of duty of all parties concerned. It is this: The vigilance and care required of all persons to be affected in each case must be proportionate to the dangers to be apprehended, not only to the probability or possibility of accident, but to the gravity of the results of the accident. The rule is well expressed in the syllabus to the case of Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. v. Horst, supra, thus: “The standard of duty * * * should be according to the consequences that may ensue from carelessness.” An examination of the cases will disclose the fact that this is really the rule that has been invariably applied to the facts in every case. In all cases where an injury
The rule to be deduced from the cases, applying where the injury has been caused by the elements, as sn'ow or ice falling or freezing on the platform or the steps of the car, or from things which a passenger might lawfully bring into the car, or which some unauthorized person, not connected with the carrier, has deposited in the car, or on the steps or platform of the car, or the approaches to the ear, is that before the carrier can be held liable it must know of, or have reasonable time and. opportunity to discover and remove the object causing-the injury. Snow fallen or ice
Cause reversed, with instructions to the court below to grant a new trial.