25 Ind. App. 522 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
—This was an action by appellee against appellant to recover damages on account of an injury received caused by the alleged negligence of appellant in failing to keep its streets in repair. The complaint is in two paragraphs. The two paragraphs of complaint are substantially the same. Both paragraphs were ineffectually challenged in the lower court by demurrer. The cause was put at issue by an answer in general denial. There wafe a trial by jury and a verdict in favor of appellee. Over appellant’s motion for a new trial, judgment was rendered upon the verdict. Appellant has assigned as error the overruling of its demurrer to each paragraph of complaint, and the overruling of its motion for a new trial.
The facts averred in the complaint, upon which appellant’s negligence is based, are that appellant is an incorporated town; that two of the streets most traveled in said town are Main and Elm streets, which streets cross‘each other at right angles, Main street running east and west, and Elm street running north and south; that Main street is fifty-eight and one-half feet wide, and Elm street is fifty feet wide; that at the intersection of said streets there is and was a ditch or water course two feet deep and eight feet wide, which runs along the north side of Main street between the sidewalk and the wagon road; that in order that the public or persons using said Elm street might travel over said street, coming from the north and turning to the west on Main street, it was necessary that appellant construct and maintain over and across said ditch or water course a bridge or culvert. That at the time said accident occurred appellant disregarding its duty, and regardless of the safety of
We think the complaint states a cause of action. The defective condition of the culvert, the absence of knowledge on the part of appellee of the defect, the knowledge of the appellant that the defect existed, are facts clearly averred in the complaint. Appellee avers in her complaint that
The other questions argued by counsel for appellant relate to the giving and the refusal to give to the jury upon the trial certain instructions. Those given cover every phase of the case as made by the evidence. They were as favorable to appellant as the law applicable to the evidence would justify, and it appears from the evidence that the jury returned a just verdict. Stockwell v. Brant, 97 Ind. 474; State v. Ruhlman, Ex., 111 Ind. 17; Sanders v. Weelberg, 107 Ind. 266; Norris v. Casel, 90 Ind. 143; Woods v. Board, etc., 128 Ind. 289.
We find no reversible error. Judgment affirmed.