Director General of Railroads v. Nicewanner

141 N.E. 1, 193 Ind. 463, 1923 Ind. LEXIS 97
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1923
DocketNo. 23,796
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 N.E. 1 (Director General of Railroads v. Nicewanner) 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
Director General of Railroads v. Nicewanner, 141 N.E. 1, 193 Ind. 463, 1923 Ind. LEXIS 97 (Ind. 1923).

Opinion

EWBANK, J.

Appellee sued to recover, damages for the death of her decedent, who was killed at a crossing in the city of Evansville by a collision between an automobile which he was driving and a locomotive drawing [465]*465a freight train on a railroad operated by. appellant. The complaint alleged that the defendant (appellant) was negligent in the following particulars: (a) that he operated his train without a sufficient headlight; (b) at a rate of speed exceeding eight miles an hour in violation of a city ordinance prohibiting a speed greater than eight miles; (c) that he failed to give any signal or warning of the approach of the locomotive and train; and (d) that he failed to close the gates at the crossing, as it was alleged a city ordinance commanded should be done, and thereby invited plaintiff’s decedent to drive on the track. It expressly alleged that the railroad company constructed lights and gates at the crossing and that plaintiff’s decedent saw the gates standing open as he approached to cross over, and. it did not allege a failure to keep the lights burning. . And the complaint concluded with an express averment that the injury was caused solely by the negligence of the defendant in the four particulars as charged. With a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the jury returned answers to interrogatories to the effect that the train was running only six miles an hour, with a sufficient headlight properly burning, that the bell was ringing, that the whistle was blown 800 feet from the crossing, that a light on the street was located ninety feet east of the crossing and decedent approached from the west, and that decedent saw the gates standing open as he approached and drove upon the crossing, and accepted the fact that the gates were open as an invitation to cross; that he was driving the automobile at the rate of eight to ten miles an hour, and that the collision occurred about two hours after midnight; that the street on which he was driving had a paved roadway 80 feet wide from curb to curb, with a sidewalk on each side, which crossed the railroad almost at right angles, that [466]*466both the street, and the railroad were on embankments elevated above the adjoining ground, that the ground in the angle between them was vacant, that the only obstruction to a view from the street toward the south, from whence the train was coming, was a bill board, which was 110 feet from the railroad track, and that there were no side curtains on the automobile, but that it was raining and weather conditions obscured the view in that direction; and that plaintiffs decedent had before crossed the railroad track at that crossing.

The answers to interrogatories disclose with reasonable certainty that the negligence charged in the complaint of which the jury found defendant to have been guilty was failing to close the gates at the crossing, in compliance with the alleged requirements of a city ordinance, appellee’s brief asserting that they “clearly show that the verdict was based on the negligence of appellant in failing to operate the gates.”

Overruling the motion for a new trial is assigned as error, under which assignment, appellant complains of the exclusion of certain evidence, and of the giving and refusal to give certain instructions. It was stipulated that the railroad was built under authority of a franchise agreement entered into between the board of public works of the city of Evansville and the railroad company that built the track, as approved by a city ordinance adopted in 1909, reciting the franchise agreement in the preamble, and enacting “that said contract and agreement be. in all things confirmed and approved”, which agreement stipulated, among other things, that “suitable gates are to be maintained at” the crossing where the collision occurred, and that “said gates are to be operated day and night”, and that for each violation of the provisions as to “maintaining lights or gates” the railroad company should be fined $25. But it contained no specifications as to how the [467]*467gates were to be operated, or when they were to be closed and when open, nor any explanation of the provision that they should be “operated day and night”, nor what should constitute a punishable violation of “the provisions as to maintaining lights or gates.” The defendant offered to introduce and read in evidence a duly authenticated ordinance, adopted in 1916, which it was agreed by the parties had been “in full force and effect continuously since said date”, but an objection to it was sustained, and the defendant excepted. This ordinance prescribed the hours during which flagmen or watchmen were required to be on duty or gates to be operated and under what circumstances such gates should be closed or kept open at forty-one different crossings throughout the city of Evansville, on the tracks of five different railroad companies and the tracks of two “unions”'of two or more railroad companies,- including the crossing at which plaintiff’s decedent was killed, at which crossing it enacted the safety gates should be operated by skilled operators who should remain on duty, and keep the gates closed, while any engine, car, handcar or train of cars was passing, and open at all other times “between the hours of six o’clock A. M. and twelve o’clock P. M. each day”, and that any failure to comply with its provisions should be punished by a forfeiture to the city of not less than $10 nor more than $100, and that each day the violation continued should constitute a separate offense.

Appellee insists that a franchise contract entered into by express statutory authority between a railroad company and a city, as represented by the board of public works in negotiating it and the common council in confirming and approving it by ordinance, could not be abrogated or changed by the mere passage of a subsequent ordinance, without any consideration for a new or modified agreement passing from one party to the [468]*468other or expressed in such ordinance, and cites the following authorities. Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. v. Town of Newcastle (1909), 43 Ind. App. 467, 474, 87 N. E. 1067; Western Paving, etc., Co. v. Citizens St. R. Co. (1891), 128 Ind. 525, 531, 26 N. E. 188, 10 L. R. A. 770, 25 Am. St. 462.

It may be that the part of the franchise agreement as confirmed by ordinance which granted to the railroad company authority to construct and operate a double track railroad over a certain route through the city, and across and along certain streets in and upon parts thereof as designated, and determined how close together the two tracks must be, and bound the railroad company to grade and improve the space between its tracks and for eighteen inches on either side to conform to any improvement laid in the rest of the street, and to pay the cost thereof, and to keep such space in repair, and to indemnify the city for all damages to which it might become liable by reason of the construction of the railroad track's and bridge, were mere matters of contract, as to which the parties could lawfully bind themselves during the period of time that the contract should remain in force. But the city could not, by contract or ordinance, surrender its police power, and the common council could not disable itself to enact ordinances, under the authority conferred by clause 49 of §8655 Burns 1914 (Acts 1905 p.

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.E. 1, 193 Ind. 463, 1923 Ind. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/director-general-of-railroads-v-nicewanner-ind-1923.