37 Ind. App. 586 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
Action by appellee against appellant for the killing of George Corps, her husband. The decedent was driving his two-horse team to a wagon, and while crossing appellant’s track on a public highway tyas run into by an engine, drawing a caboose, and instantly killed. The complaint was in one paragraph, to which a demurrer for want of facts was filed and overruled. Appellants answer by general denial. There was a trial by jury, and a general verdict for appellee for $1,400, and answers to interrogatories were returned^ with the general verdict. Judgment was rendered in favor of appellee, and appellants assign as errors the action of the court in overruling
Omitting formal parts, the substance of the complaint is as follows: Appellant’s road at the crossing in question is on a curve and is located on the slope of a steep hill, the top of said hill being west of said railroad track about three hundred feet and the foot of said hill being a distance of about three hundred feet east of said track. In crossing said highway said defendant company negligently failed to restore said highway to its former state, or in a sufficient manner not to impair unnecessarily its usefulness, but carelessly, in making and maintaining said crossing, so constructed it and its approaches that it interfered, at all times mentioned in the complaint, with the free use of the same, and rendered the same insecure for the life and property of the persons using said highway, and insecure for the life and property of this plaintiff’s intestate, in this, to wit: that said defendant negligently failed to cut back into said hill west of said track a. sufficient distance to enable any one approaching said crossing to stop within from eight to ten feet of said track, but negligently made the descent to said track from the top of said hill very steep; and was further negligent in this: that it negligently, in making said crossing and the right of way approaching the same, caused to be permitted, and negligently suffered to remain, an embankment of mud, stone and dirt from six to eight feet in height, to the north of said highway, so that by reason of said obstruction any one, and this plaintiff’s decedent, approaching said crossing from the west could not see a train approaching from the .north until almost on said track, and then, by reason of the steepness, could not retreat up said hill or to one side. Eor the purpose of warning travelers on said highway of the approach of trains at said crossing, defendant, south of said highway and a short distance east of said railway, had erected a warning bell, from four to eight inches in
The demurrer was properly overruled.
Other questions argued will not likely arise upon a subsequent trial and will not, therefore, be further considered.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial, and for other proceedings not inconsistent herewith.