Indiana Union Traction Co. v. Scribner

93 N.E. 1014, 47 Ind. App. 621, 1911 Ind. App. LEXIS 84
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1911
DocketNo. 6,781
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 93 N.E. 1014 (Indiana Union Traction Co. v. Scribner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Union Traction Co. v. Scribner, 93 N.E. 1014, 47 Ind. App. 621, 1911 Ind. App. LEXIS 84 (Ind. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Felt, J.

— Action by Nelson P. Scribner, as administrator of the estate of Lora H. "Whitson, deceased, against appellant, Indiana Union Traction Company, for damages resulting from the alleged negligence of appellant.

The action was originally filed in Marion county, and upon change of venue was sent to Hancock county, and from there was venued to the Hamilton Circuit Court, where, upon issues formed by a general denial to the complaint, after trial and verdict by jury, judgment was rendered for appellee in the sum of $5,000, from which this appeal is prayed.

The following errors are assigned: (1) The complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; (2) error of the Marion Circuit Court in overruling the demurrer to the complaint; (3) error of the Hamilton Circuit Court in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment on the answers to the interrogatories, notwithstand[626]*626ing the general verdict; (4) error in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The first and second assignments of error are not discussed by appellant’s counsel in their brief, and are therefore waived.

1. The record discloses that on August 7, 1905, appellee’s decedent, and other excursionists from the city of Indianapolis, took passage over the electric railway line of appellant to Broad Bipple, Indiana; that appellant owned and controlled a certain boat — named Sunshine— which it operated on White river as an inducement to excursionists, and on said date undertook to carry decedent and about one hundred seventy-five other persons on said boat from Broad Bipple up White river a distance of about three miles and return; that decedent paid his passage thereon, and while a passenger upon said boat it became disabled and sank in the water, resulting in his death by drowning.

It was alleged that the boat was old, rotten, unsafe and incapable of carrying the number of passengers taken aboard on the fatal trip; that it was negligently and carelessly managed by the servants and employes of appellant, and became uncontrollable; that the hull of the boat became filled with water, the deck was broken off, and decedent was thereby thrown into the water; that decedent was about twenty-nine years of age, in good health, earning from $800 to $1,000 a year; that he left surviving him a widow and also two children, six and eight years of age, respectively, who were dependent upon him.

Appellant denied ownership or control of the vessel, and sought to show that the accident was due to the conduct of the passengers in rushing to the side of the upper deck, causing the vessel to tip to one side, by reason of which a chain was displaced upon the sprocket wheel, leaving the boat without motive power, and causing it to capsize.

[627]*627Appellant has not set out the answers to the interrogatories in its brief, bnt appellee has supplied the omission.

The motion for a new trial alleges that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, is contrary to law, and that the damages assessed are excessive. Other alleged errors are based upon the admission and exclusion of evidence, the giving of certain instructions and the refusal to give instructions requested by appellant.

Appellant insists that the answers to the interrogatories show a failure of proof to establish that appellant either owned or was operating the boat at the time of the accident.

The answers to the interrogatories state, in substance, that there was no direct evidence as to the time appellant’s board of directors authorized the purchase or operation of the boat. They show, however, that the board authorized the purchase of the boat, by its general superintendent of transportation, one Baldwin, and afterwards rebuilt it, and transferred its employes from service upon its ears on the Broad Ripple line to service upon the boat, and continued them upon the pay-roll of the company without reemployment or change of contract; that at the time of the accident employes of appellant were in charge of said boat as follows: Crockett as engineer and captain, Metsker as pilot, Davis as purser and McMahan as local superintendent of transportation; that the other men were employed by McMahan with the approval of Baldwin, appellant’s general superintendent of transportation; that there was no direct testimony that the directors knew that said employes and officers were engaged in operating said boat at the time of the accident, but they did have notice through said official, Baldwin, that such was the ease; that all the money earned by operating the boat, both before and on the day of the accident, and the money earned by operating appellant’s ears on the Broad Ripple line, was, by its [628]*628employe, placed in the same bag and deposited together in the bank, to the credit of appellant; that the directors of appellant, in the spring of 1905, and thereafter to the time of the accident, knew that its employes were operating said boat, and both before and at the time of said accident the persons so operating said boat represented to the public that they were operating it on behalf of appellant, and such representations were also made by the employes and officers of appellant operating ears on its line passing through Broad Ripple; that, at the time of the accident, Baldwin, the general superintendent of transportation, knew that the boat upon which appellee’s decedent took passage was being operated for and on behalf of appellant by its employes aforesaid. The evidence further shows that the employes on said boat were paid by appellant, and that the captain of the boat wore the uniform of appellant.

2. Answers to interrogatories and the general verdict must be in irreconcilable conflict, before the former will control the latter.

3. Courts indulge every reasonable presumption in favor of the general verdict, and nothing is presumed in favor of the answers to interrogatories.

4. The antagonism between the general verdict and the answers to interrogatories must be apparent upon the face of the record, beyond the possibility of removal by any evidence legitimately admissible under the issues.

5. However, if the answers to the interrogatories exclude every conclusion that will authorize a recovery by the party in whose favor the general verdict is rendered, then judgment should not be rendered upon the general verdict, but upon the answers to the interrogatories.

[629]*6296. [628]*628Applying the well-established rules before stated to the facts shown by the answers to the interrogatories, we think [629]*629it a reasonable presumption, fully warranted by the facts shown by the answers to the interrogatories, that the directors and officers of appellant had such knowledge and information about the operation of the boat in question by its employes before and at the time of the accident, as to amount at least to a ratification of their acts in so doing. Flynn v. Des Moines, etc., R. Co. (1884), 63 Iowa 490, 19 N. W. 312; Kneeland v. Gilman (1869), 24 Wis. 39; Bennett v. Millville Improv. Co. (1902), 67 N. J. L. 320, 51 Atl. 706.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.E. 1014, 47 Ind. App. 621, 1911 Ind. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-union-traction-co-v-scribner-indctapp-1911.