22 Ind. App. 601 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1898
— Appellant sued appellee to recover damages resulting to her by falling into a ditch in one of the public streets of appellee city. The negligence charged in the complaint against appellee was that it caused to be constructed a deep ditch in Madison street, in said city, atnd maintained the same in a dangerous and unsafe condition, in that it failed to place any guard-rails on either side thereof, and failed to keep any lights, or other danger signals, in the vicinity, as warnings, etc.; and that appellee, long prior to the time appellant received her injuries, knew of the unsafe and dangerous condition of said street on account of said ditch. The complaint avers that appellant, while walking along said street at 9 o’clock at night, “without any knowledge and without being able to see the location of said ditch, and without any fault on her part whatever, and without the aid of any lights or guard-rails, she stepped, and fell to the bottom of said ditch,” to her injury, etc.
There was a trial by jury, a general verdict for appellant,
Recurring to the answers to the interrogatories, we are confronted at the threshold with the facts that appellant knew of the ditch, its location and relation to the street and sidewalk; that the sidewalk was in the course of construction, by having placed on the space intended for it crushed stone and cinders preparatory to laying the brick; that the ditch was about two feet from the sidewalk; that the ditch was six feet deep, with a precipitous stone wall and a solid stone bottom; that she knew it was a dangerous place; that it was a dark night; that she had just been looking into a house through a window, where there was a light; that the only precaution she took to avoid falling into the ditch was to feel with her feet, and search with her eyes, while she was walking; that even though she “searched with her eyes”, she was unable to determine the exact location of the ditch, and that, under these circumstances, it is shown that she undertook to
In Bruker v. Town of Covington, 69 Ind. 33, 35. Am. Rep. 202, where appellant fell into an open cellar way as she was passing it at night, adjacent to the street, of which she had knowledge, the court said: “'To sustain the defense in this case, it was sufficient to show that the plaintiff had knowledge of the obstruction. Having such knowledge, it was for the plaintiff to judge for himself as to the dangerous character of the obstruction, and take the risk accordingly'if he ran upon it.” See, also, Kelly v. Doody, 116 N. Y. 575, 22 N. E. 1084; McGinty v. City of Keokuk, 66 Ia. 725, 24 N. W. 506; Parkhill v. Town of Brighton, 61 Ia. 103, 15 N. W. 853.
In Reist v. City of Goshen, 42 Ind. 339, appellant’s servant was driving a team of horses, and passed over a bridge which was defective, and the servant had knowledge of such defect. The court said: “The law is well settled, that if the plaintiff or his servant knew of the true condition of the bridge when the team and wagon were driven upon it he cannot, under such circumstances, recover.” Where one goes upon a structure voluntarily, “with full knowledge of its dangerous condition, and of the perils
In Town of Gosport v. Evans, 112 Ind. 133, appellee was injured by reason of a defective sidewalk while attempting to pass over it, with a knowledge of the defect. The court said: “One who knows of a dangerous obstruction in a street or sidewalk, and yet attempts to pass it when, on account of darkness or other hindering causes, he cannot see so as to avoid it, takes the risk upon himself.” In the same case- it was said: “The authorities, however, lend no countenance to the notion tha’t a person having knowledge of an obvious defect, or of a place on a highway which naturally suggests to a person of common understanding that it is dangerous, may, nevertheless, voluntarily cast himself into or upon the defect, upon the theory that he is not obliged to forego travel upon the highway.”
In the first appeal of this Case, 9 Ind. App. 230, it was held that if appellant passed along the street in question,- with a knowledge of its dangerous condition, she did so at her peril. The court, by Eoss, J., said: “She knew it [the ditch] was in the street, and she knew when it was dark she could not see it, hence she had no right to cast herself upon it.”
In Town of Salem v. Walker, 16 Ind. App. 687, appellee was riding a horse through a public street in appellant town, when his horse frightened at an obstruction in the street, and suddenly turned in the opposite direction. Appellee saw and knew what frightened his horse. Notwithstanding that, he turned his horse about, and attempted to ride him past the obstruction at which he frightened, when the horse, being still frightened, reared up, falling backward, throwing appellee to the ground, whereby he was injured. This court held he could not recover, because of his own negligence in
In Sale v. Aurora, etc., Co., 147 Ind. 324, appellant was a physician, and was called to see a patient on a dark night. He drove along and over appellant’s turnpike in a buggy drawn by one horse. lie was familiar with the highway, and knew that at a certain point in it there was a bend, or turn, immediately in front of which was a precipitous embankment, 100 feet long and five feet deep; that immediately on the opposite side of the turnpike for 100 feet was a ditch three feet wide and three feet deep, and the space between the ditch on the south side and the embankment on the north side was only twenty feet. In making said turn, appellant’s horse walked over said embankment, and he was injured. It was so dark he could not see. After citing and qiioting from many authorities, applicable to the facts, Monks, J., said: “Applying the doctrine declared in the cases cited, if the night was dark and appellant could not while driving his horse distinctly see the twenty-foot space, the curve of the road and the ditch on one side and the embankment and pitfall on the other as alleged in the complaint, ordinary care required that he provide a light of some kind or that he alight and lead his horse over that part of the road. Not taking these precautions under the circumstances
The Town of Boswell v. Wakely, 149 Ind. 64, is directly in point' here, and is the last expression of the courts of last resort in this State applicable to the question we are now considering. There appellee was injured in passing over a sidewalk at night, with which walk he was familiar, and knew it was out of repair. He was walking with his hands in his pockets, when a loose board, upon which he stepped,, tipped up, and threw him. It was held that he could not recover, because he did not use ordinary care commensurate, with the known danger. In that case the court quoted approvingly from the case of the City of Bedford v. Neal, 143 Ind. 425, the following: “But the doctrine to be extracted from these cases is that a person with knowledge of the defect or danger must, in attempting to pass, exercise care proportioned to the known danger to avoid injury. And as a consequence, the appellee in the case before us having knowledge of the defective and unsafe condition of the sidewalk when she entered upon it the last time in the dark, she was-required to exercise more care than she would have been required to exercise had she been ignorant of the defect, or there had been no defect and it had been daylight.” Mr. Beach states the rule as follows: “The law imposes upon the-traveler the duty of ordinary care, and this’is the measure of’ his obligation when he brings his action for damages for an. injury sustained by reason of an obstacle or defect in the-highway. Accordingly in proportion as the risk of injury increases, must his care and diligence to avoid injury be increased. It is, therefore, held that a traveler is bound to exercise greater care and attention in passing over a highway
We might multiply authorities of the same tenor, for there are many; but we do not see any necessity for so doing. As the facts found specially by the jury show beyond all controversy that appellant was guilty of negligence which contributed to her injury, it follows, as we have shown, that such facts are irreconcilable with the general verdict, and must control. The court did not err in rendering judgment for appellee on its motion, and the judgment is affirmed.
Black, C. J., and Comstock, J., dissent.