167 Ind. 262 | Ind. | 1906
Appellee recovered a judgment for a personal injury sustained while being carried as a passenger by appellant. The only assigned error relied upon is the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial. The grounds of the motion urged upon us are insufficiency of evidence to sustain the verdict and error of law in giving to the jury instructions two and four at the request of appellee.
Appellant's counsel argue from these facts that appellee voluntarily left a place of safety, and took a perilous position upon the car, and that she is guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. If appellee had been furnished a customary seat within the car, this argument would impress us more favorably, but it can hardly be conceded that she was in a place safe against such perils as produced her injury, as long as she was required to stand or to occupy an improvised seat in the doorway where she was liable to be trampled by the standing passengers of the crowded car. The lateness of the hour and the unusual number on board would naturally suggest the' desirability of dispatch in the dischárge of passengers, and the slow speed at which the car was running would ordinarily induce a person already standing to believe that it was safe to move toward the place of exit, and we cannot say that under the circumstances shown appellee was guilty of negli
We. have already shown that the court could not declare as a matter of law upon the conceded facts of this case that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. What was said in the consideration of the first proposition argued, and the authorities there cited, uphold the correctness of this instruction, and it is accordingly our conclusion that no error was committed in giving the same to the jury.
Ro reversible error appearing in the record, the judgment is affirmed.