151 Ind. 358 | Ind. | 1898
The lower court sustained the ap
In the body of the pleading there was no allegation of the name of or as to who the decedent was, nor, beyond the allegation already referred to, as to the capacity in which the appellant sued. There are no allegations as to the distance of the train from the decedent when he discovered its approach, nor as to the rate of speed at which the train ran over the space of forty rods next before reaching the trestle; but the allegations support the theory that he discovered the approach of the train when it was 2,000 feet distant, and that its speed of twenty-five miles per hour was to the point forty rods from the trestle. The ad damvim allegation was as follows: “Plaintiff avers
Three objections are urged against the complaint: First, that it does not appear from the body thereof that the appellant sues in a representative capacity; second, that the allegations do not disclose the name of the person killed; and, third, facts sufficient to constitute a wilful killing are not alleged. Deeming the last of these objections sufficient, we disregard the others, and wTe also pass over the serious doubt as to whether the assignment of error is sufficiently specific to present any question for decision, it appearing from the record that the second paragraph of complaint was superseded by four separate filings of an “amended second 'paragraph of complaint,” three of such amended paragraphs having gone down under demurrer. No claiin is made for the pleading that it states a cause of action sounding in negligence, and it is practically conceded that its sufficiency must be determined as a charge of a wilful killing, the decedent having been a trespasser upon the railway at the time. Mere epithets give the pleading no force, and it is conceded by the learned counsel for the appellant, specific averments control general averments.
The following analysis of the specific averments of the pleading is made on behalf of the appellant: “(1) Appellant’s decedent was on a high trestle.- (2) There’ was no escape from the trestle except by either end. (3) Appellant’s decedent was 100 feet from the end. (4) Appellant’s decedent was endeavoring to retrace his steps. (5) Appellee’s engineer in charge of the engine saw appellant’s decedent on the trestle; (a) knew where the trestle began; (b) knew the construction of the trestle; (c) knew appellant’s decedent was cut off
A single authority is cited in support of the complaint, Palmer v. Chicago, etc., R. R. Co., 112 Ind. 250. That case correctly decides that there may be what the law will pronounce a wilful killing where life is taken purposely, or where one pursues a course which he must reasonably know will bring death to another, although he may not intend.to inflict injury; and, further, that one upon a railroad when a train is approaching, although he may be seen by the engineer, may be presumed until the last moment to leave the track and avert danger, unless there be something from which the engineer may reasonably infer that such person, from inability to do so or from ignorance of the approach of the train, will not leave the track. To the same effect are many other decisions of this court, including the late cases of Parker v. Pennsylvania Co., 134 Ind. 673; Pennsylvania Co. v. Meyers, 136 Ind. 242; Evans v. Pittsburgh, etc., R. W. Co., 142 Ind. 264.
It is apparent, therefore, that to bring the case within the rules of the authority cited, it not being claimed that the killing was done intentionally, it must appear that the decedent was in a position of peril from which he could not escape unless the engineer should slacken the speed or stop the train, and that the engineer knew of the peril in time to have so slackened speed or stopped the train. No doubt there was a time when the decedent’s position was one of peril; and that was when the locomotive first came so near him that he could not reach the end of the trestle before it arrived. That was the time when
It is manifest that at the point of two thousand feet from the trestle, with knowledge that decedent was upon the structure and attempting to retrace his steps for one hundred feet, to a place of safety, the engineer was not reasonably required to lessen the alleged speed of twenty-five miles an hour, which would give the decedent nearly fifty-five seconds to escape, requiring him to walk only at the rate of one and one-quarter miles per hour. Peril did not exist when the train was two thousand feet distant, and from that point, under the authorities cited, the engineer had the right to presume that the decedent would get off the trestle, and the right to continue that presumption until the point making it perilous to continue was reached. It cannot be said, therefore, that it was the engineer’s duty to reverse his engine when two thousand feet from the trestle, and we are not advised by the pleading at what other point the peril became reasonably manifest, nor that at such point the engineer failed to make every possible effort to stop the engine. The absence of allegation of the rate of speed covering the last forty rods, and at the time the engine struck the decedent, is suggestive that the rate was unfavorable to the appellant, and that would also imply effort on the part of the engineer to check the speed or stop the engine. If the engineer acted on the presumption that the deceased could and would get to1 a point of safety, and so acted until it became too late by the use of the means within his control, to avoid running upon him, such reliance could not be considered wilfulness.