Chicago & Erie Railroad v. Fretz

90 N.E. 76, 173 Ind. 519, 1909 Ind. LEXIS 168
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
DocketNo. 21,330
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 90 N.E. 76 (Chicago & Erie Railroad v. Fretz) 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
Chicago & Erie Railroad v. Fretz, 90 N.E. 76, 173 Ind. 519, 1909 Ind. LEXIS 168 (Ind. 1909).

Opinion

Myeks, J.

Action by appellee for damages caused 5y being struck by one of appellant’s trains at a highway crossing. The action was begun in Fulton county, and the venue was changed to the Marshall Circuit Court, where there was a trial, and judgment for appellee.

The complaint was in three paragraphs. The third was withdrawn by an instruction of the court, and errors are assigned on the ruling on the demurrers to the first and second paragraphs, on the overruling of the motions for judgment on the interrogatories and answers notwithstanding the general verdict, for a new trial, and in arrest of judgment.

[522]*522The second paragraph of complaint, after the formal parts, alleges that appellant’s road extends in a northwesterly direction through Fulton county, and crosses a public highway leading from Leiters Ford to Rochester, in Fulton county, running in a southeasterly direction, and that in traveling from Leiters Ford to Rochester on such highway appellee was compelled to cross the railroad at a point where the highway at and near the railway was about sixty feet wide and the traveled track thereof ten feet wide; that about 10 o’clock on the night of April 14, 1906, appellee, in company with Ray Fretz, was driving a horse and buggy on such highway from Leiters Ford to Rochester; that Ray Fretz had never traveled upon said highway, and neither he nor appellee had any knowledge whatever of the location of such railroad at the point where it is crossed by the highway; that the night was dark and it was raining; that to prevent getting wet, appellee was compelled to, and did have the top of the buggy up and the side curtains on; that neither of them had any knowledge of the approach of any train, and there was no light at or near the crossing to reveal its location; that they were driving cautiously, slowly and carefully along said highway, and neither of them was familiar with the location of the crossing, nor did they know that the crossing was there, nor were they familiar with the time of the running of trains on said railroad; that as appellee’s horse approached the track, and just as Ray Fretz and appellee were about to drive the horse on the track, defendant carelessly and negligently ran a through freight-train from the west over the crossing at the dangerous and reckless speed of forty miles per hour; that the steam was wholly shut off; that defendant negligently and carelessly failed to sound the whistle within eighty rods of the crossing or ring the bell, or to give any sound or signal of the approach of the train to the crossing; that, as the train approached the crossing, Ray Fretz quickly attempted to stop the horse, leaped from the buggy, and grabbed the horse by [523]*523the rein; that, by reason of the careless approach of the train, the horse became unmanageable and intractable, and plunged upon the track, tearing away from the hold of Ray Fretz; that, owing to the negligent and reckless rate of speed of the train, he was unable to get the horse and buggy out of the reach of the train and locomotive, but said engine ran upon and against the horse, buggy and appellee, the pilot struck the horse, buggy and appellee with great force and violence, and thereby jarred and jolted and carried appellee about one-fourth of a mile, and threw her from the locomotive to the side of the track, whereby she was greatly injured, her injuries being set out specifically; that if the whistle had been sounded or the bell rung in approaching the crossing both she and Ray Fretz could and would have heard the signal, and the accident could and would nave been avoided; that at and prior to the time of the injury she was free from pain, and in almost perfect health; that her injuries were occasioned solely by said negligence of defendant.

The first paragraph is the same as the second, except that the former omits the allegations that appellee was in almost perfect health, and avers that defendant, in the operation and management of the train, carelessly and negligently failed to sound the whistle or ring the bell, or give any signal of the approach of the train to the crossing; that by reason of the shutting off of the steam, and the rapid speed of the train, it made no noise that could be heard for any distance, and no noise was heard by the parties in the buggy.

1.

[524]*524 2.

[523]*523Appellant assails the complaint principally upon the ground that it appears from the complaint that appellee knew that she had to cross the railroad in traveling upon the highway, and that as she knew that fact, and as the night was dark, and it was raining, and the side curtains were on the buggy, she was chargeable with greater diligence, and that the complaint on its face discloses contributory negligence. The contention is based principally upon the allegation that, in traveling upon the highway from [524]*524Leiters Ford to Rochester, appellee was “compelled to cross the railroad,” and that she could not be said to be ignorant of a condition which that allegation discloses she knew was to be encountered. We do not so interpret the allegation. It is an averment after the occurrence of the accident, of the fact that in traveling upon such highway the railroad had to be crossed, by reason of the highway’s crossing it. It is the averment of an after-discovered condition necessarily encountered in traveling on that highway, but not an averment that she had notice before that time that it did cross the railway; and it is specifically averred that neither of them had any knowledge that there was a crossing at that point, and each was unfamiliar with the location of the crossing, the location of the railroad at the crossing, and the time of running trains, and had no knowledge of the approach of any train; that the night was dark, and there was no light to reveal the existence of the crossing. We do not think the objection to the complaint is well taken on that point. Even if appellee knew there was a crossing of the railway to be encountered, she was not thereby precluded from traveling upon the highway, and it was not in itself negligence for her to do so, even on a dark and rainy night, or to do so with the side curtains on the buggy. The use of the highway and the crossing by appellee and the railroad was a reciprocal use, with the precedence in crossing with the railroad train, in which certain duties were imposed by statute upon the railroad’s servants, and certain duties upon appellee by the commonly recognized law.

3.

[525]*525 4.

5.

6.

7.

[524]*524She alleges that by reason of the rapid approach of the train without signal, and the want of knowledge of the existence of the crossing, the horse was driven so close to the track that, upon the approach of the rapidly-moving train, the horse became unmanageable and plunged upon the track. The omission of the statutory duty of the defendant’s servants to give the signals required by statute, is in and of itself negligence. She alleges her injury [525]*525to have occurred from this failure to give the statutory signal, or any signal, setting out the conditions under which she approached the crossing and was injured.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.E. 76, 173 Ind. 519, 1909 Ind. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-erie-railroad-v-fretz-ind-1909.