Faris v. Hoberg

33 N.E. 1028, 134 Ind. 269, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 119
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1893
DocketNo. 16,156
StatusPublished
Cited by127 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 1028 (Faris v. Hoberg) 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
Faris v. Hoberg, 33 N.E. 1028, 134 Ind. 269, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 119 (Ind. 1893).

Opinion

Hackney, J.

The appellant prosecuted this action in the court below for the recovery of damages in the sum of twenty thousand dollars, alleged to have been sustained by falling into an open elevator shaft upon the premises of the appellees. The issue was joined by a general denial, and in the submission of the cause the court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the appellees. This action of the court is here submitted for review.

The appellees were retail merchants in the city of Terre Haute, their store-house fronting on Wabash avenue and extending north one hundred and forty-one feet and ten inches, with an alley on the west sixteen feet in width. In the northwest corner of the building, on the first floor, was a freight room extending north and south eighteen feet and eleven inches, and being seven feet and eleven inches in width. To this room double doors opened from said alley, and immediately south of this room was the shaft of the freight elevator (where the injury was sustained), occupying the full width of said freight room. Immediately south of the elevator was a vestibule entrance to the store room. To the elevator shaft was an entrance, on the south, of four feet in width by seven feet in height, and a like entrance from the freight room, four feet and nine inches wide, and directly opposite the entrance from the sales room. The vestibule entrance to the sales room opened immediately south of the west side of the sales room entrance to the freight elevator, and from this entrance one could pass behind a dry goods counter, on the right, into [271]*271the elevator shaft at the left, or around a large table laden with goods and through a narrow opening between said table and said counter to that part of the sales room devoted to the walks for customers between the counters.

On the alley, and next to the store house, was a walk of stone flagging, thirty inches wide, sixty-eight feet and ten inches long, and extending north from Wabash avenue. Prom the north end of this walk to the vestibule entrance it was forty feet and two inches, without paving.

On the occasion of appellant’s visit to appellees’ store room, he was seeking a drayman to haul some of his goods, not connected with appellees’ business, and learning that John Bums, the owner of a transfer wagon, was in the rear of appellees’ store, .went to the alley and saw the wagon at the entrance to the freight room. Going up the alley, he could not see Burns, and presuming that he was in the building, stepped in at the vestibule entrance. He immediately turned facing the two openings to the elevator shaft, and seeing some person in the freight room, asked for the drayman and received an answer from the freight room that he was in there. At once appellant started into the freight room through said openings and fell through the shaft, neither of the openings to which was guarded or protected by barriers.

All of the foregoing facts are undisputed.

There are some controverted facts as to the character of lights near the shaft and as to the extent of the darkness within the shaft, facts, from the appellant’s theory of the case, essential to the charge of negligence against the appellees. There were also controverted facts as to appellant’s vision having been so obscured by the sudden change from the bright sunlight without and the softer lights and the shadows within the building, and probably as to other matters, but all having reference to [272]*272the question of contributory negligence on the part of the appellant.

Numerous authorities are cited, by the appellant, to the proposition that in a case involving questions of negligence, the court is'not at liberty to take such questions from the jury, but must leave them to the jury for decision. Of the cases so cited are Indiana Car Co. v. Parker, 100 Ind. 181; Koerner v. State, 98 Ind. 7; Weis v. City of Madison, 75 Ind. 241; Crookshank v. Kellogg, 8 Blackf. 256, and Elliott’s Work of the Advocate, 686.

These cases all belong to that class where a question of fact is controverted, and that question is one necessary to plaintiff’s recovery, or essential to the defendant’s proper defense. None of them hold that the jury are the exclusive judges of the existence or nonexistence of negligence as an ultimate fact. A moment’s reflection will show the error of a rule which would deprive the court of the right to determine whether a given state of facts —uncontroverted—does or does not constitute actionable negligence. When the facts are submitted to the court upon demurrer to a complaint, the court exercises the power of determining whether such facts, if proven, will constitute actionable negligence. When, under the practice prevailing, the jury does not return a general verdict, but returns findings of fact by special verdict, the court must determine whether the facts so found are sufficient to warrant the conclusion of the existence of negligence. When, during the trial, the court is called upon to instruct the jury, there is, that we now recall, but one limitation upon the duty to charge that a given state of facts, if found by the jury to exist, does or does not authorize the finding of negligence, and that exception is where the facts, clearly established, are such that one man,impartial and of good judgment,might reasonably infer that negligence existed, while another man, equally [273]*273sensible and impartial, might reasonably infer that proper care had been used. Upon such facts it is the province of the jury to adjudge the existence or nonexistence of negligence. Ohio, etc., R. W. Co. v. Collarn, 73 Ind. 261. The case in hand is not of that class. If it were otherwise, the purpose of the charge to the jury would be thwarted, and that which is designed for the instruction of the jury upon matters of law, where it is supposed the members have, ndt the special knowledge possessed by the judge, would be but a useless ceremony, and the jury-would be given the arbitrary and uncontrolled power to determine what facts, however important or however trivial, should constitute actionable negligence. In the progress of the trial, the court determines the admissibility of evidence as having or as not having a tendency to prove negligence, and it may not be said that in so doing the functions of the jury are usurped by the court.

Some of the authorities cited expressly recognize the existence of cases where the court may take the question from the jury.

In Weis v. City of Madison, supra, p. 254, it is said: “There are cases where the court may rightfully direct a verdict. A judge is not bound to submit a question to a jury, where their verdict, if contrary to his views of the testimony and its legal effect, would be certainly set aside, as clearly against the law and the evidence. Dryden v. Britton, 19 Wis. 31; Godin v. Bank, etc., 6 Duer, 76; Lone v. Old Colony, etc., R. R. Co., 14 Gray, 143; Improvement Co. v. Munson, 14 Wal. 442; Jewell v. Parr, 13 C. B. 909; Parks v. Ross, 11 How. 362; Pleasants v. Fant, 22 Wal. 116; Dodge v. Gaylord, 53 Ind. 365 (377).”

In Indiana Car Co. v. Parker, supra, it is said: “There are, no doubt, cases where the court will determine the [274]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 1028, 134 Ind. 269, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faris-v-hoberg-ind-1893.