Board of Commissioners v. Creviston

32 N.E. 735, 133 Ind. 39, 1892 Ind. LEXIS 247
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1892
DocketNo. 15,973
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 735 (Board of Commissioners v. Creviston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Creviston, 32 N.E. 735, 133 Ind. 39, 1892 Ind. LEXIS 247 (Ind. 1892).

Opinion

McBride, J.

Horace M. Wright was killed by the breaking down of a bridge in Allen county.

[41]*41This suit was brought by his administrator to recover ■damages of the appellee for his death on the ground that it was caused by actionable negligence, both in the erection and in the maintenance of the bridge. The errors assigned and discussed relate:

First. To the sufficiency of each paragraph of the complaint.

Secmd. To the action of the trial court in sustaining a •demurrer to the second paragraph of answer.

Third. To the action of the trial court in refusing to render judgment in favor of the appellant on the special verdict of the jury, and in rendering judgment in favor •of appellee thereon.

The first paragraph of complaint, after certain prefatory averments, alleges: “ That said board of commissioners, having competent authority so to do, did erect on said highway a bridge upon and over Pleasant Run, a stream there situate and crossing said highway at a point one and three-fourth miles north of the south line of said township, so as to connect the banks of said stream on the line of said highway for the public to pass over and along said highway as travelers thereon. That said board of commissioners negligently and carelessly constructed said bridge, in part, of defective and wind-shaken timber, in material parts thereof, and suffered the same to remain there for more than five years, and negligently suffered the same to then remain in said bridge until it became rotten, brittle, weakened and insufficient to support the ordinary loads passing thereon with safety.

That said bridge was twenty-nine feet in length, eighteen feet in width and eight feet in height from- the bed of the stream. And said board failed and neglected do repair the same, and put it in a safe condition for the public travel, and failed to remove the same; and failed and neglected to warn the public of its unsafe and dangerous ’condition, and suffered it to so remain dangerous [42]*42for more than one year before the 2d day of October, 1889, at which time said Horace M. Wright, who was then and there in the employ of Henry M. Sparks, on his engine and wagon, and when on said bridge, without fault,or negligence on the part of said Wright, said bridge, by reason of said negligence df the board of commissioners-in the construction thereof, and in their failure to keep the same in repair, being rotten in material parts thereof, the same broke and fell down into the bottom of said-stream, and threw and precipitated said Wright down between said engine and boiler and wagon attached thereto, fastening, pinning and holding him fast between said engine and boiler and said wagon in such a way that the hot, boiling steam, ejected therefrom, scalded, boiled and burned his body from his breast to his ankles and his arms and hands until the nails of his fingers came off, and the skin and flesh dropped off vand rotted off' from near his neck to his feet, the entire length of his body, causing him great pain and anguish of body and mind of the most excruciating kind, and of long enduring, and ending in his death, leaving his wife and six children, etc. * * * * * All of which was occasioned by the negligence of said board of commissioners as aforesaid, and without fault or negligence of said Horace M. Wright, etc.” It is also averred that before the commencement of this suit the plaintiff had filed a claim for allowance before the board of county commissioners upon the same cause of action, but that the board had disallowed and dismissed the same.

The second paragraph is' substantially a repetition of the first, except that it is averred that the highway of which the bridge in question formed a part, had become a public highway by use for more than twenty years, while in the first paragraph it is alleged that it had been established by order of the board of county commissioners.

While this complaint may well be subjected to criticism [43]*43■upon some grounds, we are of the opinion that it states a good cause of action.

No question is better or more firmly settled in this State than that counties are liable for negligence in the construction and maintenance of bridges. Board, etc., v. Chipps, 131 Ind. 56; Apple v. Board, etc., 127 Ind. 553, and cases cited in both.

Boards of county commissioners erecting bridges, or charged with the maintenance of bridges already erected, are required to exercise at least ordinary care in so doing. The negligent use of defective material in the construction of a bridge, or negligently allowing the timbers composing a bridge to become so rotten, brittle and weakened that they will not for that reason support the ordinary ■loads, passing thereon, with safety, is actionable, and is sufficient to render the county liable to one who is injured ■by reason thereof, who is himself without fault.

The complaint clearly shows actionable negligence. It 'is expressly averred that the decedent’s death was caused by such negligence, and that he was himself without fault •or negligence.

It is equally well settled as a rule of pleading in such cases that the general averment by the plaintiff of freedom from contributory fault or negligence is sufficient, unless it is overcome by other and specific averments of fact in the complaint, showing, notwithstanding, that he was guilty of negligence. Ohio and Mississippi R. W. Co. v. Walker, 113 Ind. 196; City of Wabash v. Carver, 129 Ind. 552.

A party is not required by specific averment to show in what particulars he was vigilant and careful, and wherein he refrained from doing negligent acts. As said by Elliott, J., in Ohio, etc., R. W. Co. v. Walker, supra.: “ If the specific facts absolving the plaintiff from fault must be pleaded, then it would be necessary to enumerate every fact that might be considered as tending to charge him with fault, [44]*44and negative its existence. In some cases this process of enumeration and exclusion would be practically impossible ; in others it would lead to a prolixity of pleading that, would do no good, but would produce uncertainty and confusion.”

This disposes of many of the objections urged to the complaint. It is contended by the appellant that the specific avenn’ents of the complaint show affirmatively, that the decedent was not attempting to transport the usual and ordinary load over the bridge in question, but was subjecting it to an unusual use and weight, because it appears that he was taking an engine, boiler and wagon over it when it fell. This would require at our hands an unwarranted extension of the range of judicial notice-Courts could with equal certainty and assurance take judicial notice of the weight of any other vehicle or load.

To sustain the appellant’s contention would require us .to hold that to attempt to cross a bridge with an engine, boiler and wagon was per se negligence so gross as to overcome the general averment that the party was free from negligence or fault. This we can not do. City of Wabash v. Carver, supra.

The appellant also contends that the complaint is bad because it shows that the decedent was in the employ of Henry M. Sparks and does not show that Sparks was free from fault. This was not necessary.

The second paragraph of the appellant’s answer was a plea of former adjudication.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 735, 133 Ind. 39, 1892 Ind. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-creviston-ind-1892.