Indianapolis Traction & Terminal Co. v. Holtsclaw

82 N.E. 986, 41 Ind. App. 520, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 162
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1907
DocketNo. 6,001
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 82 N.E. 986 (Indianapolis Traction & Terminal Co. v. Holtsclaw) 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
Indianapolis Traction & Terminal Co. v. Holtsclaw, 82 N.E. 986, 41 Ind. App. 520, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 162 (Ind. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinions

Rabb, J.

The appellee was in the employ of the appellant as a conductor on a street-car running over the West Michigan street line in the city of Indianapolis. His employment began some time in the month of June, 1903, and continued • until August 3 of that year. Appellant’s West Michigan street line, over which the appellee’s car operated, extended from Blake street, in said city, to Haughville, a distance of perhaps two miles, and crossed White river. The street-car track approaching the bridge over White river is laid for a considerable distance upon a high embankment sixty feet wide. Over this embankment, prior to the construction of the appellant’s road, the Central Union Telephone Company had erected a line of poles. These poles were thirty feet high and fourteen inches in diameter, and supported the telephone wires. Appellant’s street-car, on this line, in charge of the appellee, was a large, open car, with the seats extending crosswise the full width of the car, and no means provided for the passage of persons up and down the length of the car inside of the body of the car. A running-board extended along the outside of the car its full length. This running-board was about six inches wide, was [523]*523located about eighteen inches below the floor of the car, and extended outside of the body of the car ten and one-half inches. There were stanchions, about four inches square, extending from the floor of the car to the roof, at the end of each seat, and on the outside of these stanchions were metal handholds, extending up and down the stanchions a distance of about three feet, and out from the face of the stanchions about four inches. The running-board was .intended to accommodate the conductor in passing from one end of 'the car to the other, collecting fares, and in the performance of other duties appertaining to his employment. His position upon the car, when not engaged otherwise, was on the rear platform, from where he controlled the1 operation of the ear by means of signals to the motorman, who occupied the front platform. A bar extended from the front to the rear of the platform, just below the roof of the car, to which were attached handles, by means of which a register of fares, located at the front end of the car, was operated by the conductor. In operating this attachment the conductor was compelled to reach above his head to take hold of -those handles, and pull them to register the fares. The running-board was also designed to accommodate passengers when the car was so crowded that there was not enough seats within the ear for all desiring passage. In constructing the road the track had been so laid that it came within three feet of one of the poles along this embankment located about three hundred feet west of Caldwell street, said street being the last street on the appellant’s line going west before reaching the bridge over White river. In passing this telephone pole the running-board of the street-ear came within twelve or thirteen inches of the pole. It was usual for appellant’s street-car passing over this line to run at a high rate of speed over the space intervening between Caldwell street and the first street on the opposite side of the river,-there being no points intervening along the line at which passengers would ordinarily desire to get on or off the car. About 6:30 [524]*524o’clock, on the morning of August 3, while appellant’s car in charge of the appellee was passing at a rapid rate of speed over this grade, and while appellee was passing along the side of the car on said running-board, in the discharge of his duties as conductor, collecting and registering fares, his body collided with this telephone pole, and he was knocked from the car and very severely inju red. To recover damages for this injury he instituted this action against the appellant and the telephone company.

The complaint was in two paragraphs. In the first he charged the telephone company with negligence in erecting their poles in such proximity to the street-car tracks as to endanger the employes of the appellant company in the performance of their work on the cars, and charged both defendants with negligence in maintaining the pole in such dangerous proximity to the street-car line. The second paragraph of the complaint was precisely the same in this respect, except that it charged the appellant with constructing its car lines in dangerous proximity to the telephone pole. Appellant’s demurrer for want of facts to the first paragraph of the complaint 'was overruled. No demurrer was filed to the second. The case was put at issue, a jury trial had, resulting in a general verdict in favor of the telephone company against appellee, and a general verdict in favor of appellee against the appellant, and with the general verdict answers to certain interrogatories propounded were returned by the jury. Motion was made in the court below by appellant for a judgment in its favor on the answers to the interrogatories, which was overruled, as was also appellant’s motion for a new trial. The rulings of the court on the demurrer to the first paragraph of the complaint, on the motion for a judgment in favor of appellant on the answers to the interrogatories, and on appellant’s motion for a new trial, are assigned as error here. The sufficiency of the second paragraph of the complaint is also tested by an assignment of error.

[525]*5251. It is urged against the sufficiency of both paragraphs of the complaint that their averments fail to negative the ability of the appellee to discover the danger of collision with the telephone pole by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence on his part. In each paragraph of the complaint it is substantially averred that ah the time appellee was injured he had no knowledge of the dangerous proximity of the telephone pole to the street-car track. These allegations carry with them the necessary implication that the peril could not have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary care on appellee’s part, and was sufficient on demurrer. Consolidated Stone Co. v. Summit (1899), 152 Ind. 297; Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Duel (1893), 134 Ind. 156.

The answers to interrogatories returned by the jury with their verdict show that appellee continuously served as conductor on appellant’s street-car running over West Michigan street during the month of July, and up to August 3, 1902; that during that time he made 205 trips over said line, 137 of them on car No. 525, and that the trips were generally made in the daytime; that on August 3 he suffered the injuries described in his complaint by coming in contact with pole number 38 of the Central Union Telephone Company, which stood on the north side of the street-car track, while he was engaged in his duties as conductor in charge of car No. 525; that the appellee was possessed of good eyesight during all of said time, and that the pole with which he collided stood in the same position all the time appellee was passing over the road, and was visible to him in a general way as he passed; that appellee did not know and could not, by the exercise of ordinary care, have known of the position of the telephone pole with reference to the running-board of the car. It is earnestly insisted by appellant that these answers show a state of facts that are antagonistic to the general verdict, and that are in irreconcilable conflict [526]*526with it, and that for this reason its motion for judgment on the-answers to interrogatories should have been sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 986, 41 Ind. App. 520, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indianapolis-traction-terminal-co-v-holtsclaw-indctapp-1907.