Jeffersonville Railroad v. Swift

26 Ind. 459
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 26 Ind. 459 (Jeffersonville Railroad v. Swift) 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
Jeffersonville Railroad v. Swift, 26 Ind. 459 (Ind. 1866).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

This was a suit by John Swift against The Jeffersonville Railroad Company to recover damages for injuries sustained by the former in leaping from the cai’S of the company, on which he was a passenger, while they were in motion.

The complaint contains two paragraphs. The first alleges, in substance, that Swift took passage on the ears of the road at Jeffersonville, on the 7th of February, 1865, for Amity, Johnson county, Indiana, and paid his faro on the contract of the company to carry him safely to, and put him safely off at, Amity, that the company carelessly ran by the station at Amity, and did not stop to enable him safely to leave the cars, whereby it became necessary for him to leave them while they were in motion, to avoid being carried on to the next station, which he did, and thereby received the injuries for which he sues.

The second paragraph is like the first, except, that it alleges that when the train was passing Amity, the “ conductor only checked said train of cars to about one-third the usual speed thereof, and told and directed said plaintiff' to [460]*460jump off and leave said ears, and that he could safely do so; and said plaintiff, while at and passing the place last aforesaid (Amity) on said cars, possessing good health, strength and activity, for a man of his age, hut having no experience or acquaintance as to the safety or peril of jumping from or leaving* ears while in motion, but relying and depending upon the experience, judgment and skill of said conductor for so doing,” and believing the speed of the train would not be further diminished, did, when told by the conductor, as cautiously as he could, under the circumstances, jump off', whereby he was injured, &c.

To each paragraph of the complaint the defendant filed a separate demurrer, on the ground that neither of them contained facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; but the court overruled the demurrers, to which ruling the defendant excepted. The defendant then answered by a general denial.

The jury to which the cause was submitted for trial returned a general verdict for the plaintiff; and assessed his damages at $5,000. They also returned certain special findings, in answer to the interrogatories submitted to them by the court, which will be noticed in another part of this opinion.

The defendant’s counsel moved the court for a new trial, for reasons filed in writing, which the court overruled. He also moved for a judgment for the defendant on the special findings of the jury, which motion was also overruled. lie then moved in arrest of judgment, which the court overruled, and gave judgment for the plaintiff' on the verdict of the jury. To all of which rulings the defendant excepted.

The evidence and instructions of the court to the jury are made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions. Errors are assigned upon the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the complaint; upon the instructions given by the court to the jury, and the refusal to give certain instructions asked by the defendant, and upon the action of [461]*461the court in overruling the motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment.

The first paragraph of the complaint we think is clearly bad. It admits that the plaintiff voluntarily leaped from the cars while they were in motion—running at the rate of one-third their usual speed—and by reason thereof received the injuries complained of,'and the only excuse alleged for this extremely imprudent and perilous act is, that the train was being run past Amity, where he wished to leave it, and where it was the duty of the conductor to stop the train and let him off. These facts, however, do not afford a justification for so rash an act as that of leaping from the train when in motion. Jeffersonville Railroad Company v. Hendricks Adm’r ante p. 228. Admitting that those having charge of the train, in negligent disregard of their duty, were running it past the station, and that they did not intend to stop there, still, the paragraph shows that the injury to the plaintiff' was the immediate result of his own imprudent and rash conduct; and there is no principle of the law more clearly settled, or more universally recognized by all the courts, than that in suits for such injuries, though the defendant may have been guilty of negligence, yet if the plaintiff’s own want of reasonable care and caution directly contributed in producing the injury, he cannotrecover. This principle has been so often announced by this court that a reference to the cases Í3 unnecessary. The court so charged the jury in this caso.

It is evident, however, from the evidence in the case, the charge of the court, and the special findings of the jury, that the verdict for the plaintiff' was based on the allegations of the second paragraph of the complaint. ~We are not satisfied that the facts alleged in the second paragraph of the complaint constitute a cause of action; but without passing upon that question, and assuming the paragraph to be good, we pass to the evidence given to the jury, the charge of the court and the-special findings of the jury, which more clearly and directly present the questions involved in the case.

[462]*462It was in evidence, and not controverted, that Swift and one Ford, his son-in-law, residents of Kentucky, took the cars on the defendant’s road at the time stated in the complaint, at Jeffersonville, as passengers for Amity, on said road, in Johnson county. The train contained seven or eight passenger cars, and Swift and Ford were in a car about the middle of the train, most probably in the third one from the rear end of the train. As the train approached Amity, they went upon the platform of the forward end of the ear they had occupied, and as that car was passing the station platform, Ford leaped from the car upon the station platform and was not injured. Soon afterwards, and when the forward end of that car had passed the north end of the station platform from fifteen to thirty feet, Swift also jumped off, was thrown violently upon the ground, the cars still being in motion, and was seriously injured in the hip. Amity was only a signal station, and the trains on the road only stopped there when signaled. If passengers were to get on the train at that station, the fact was signaled by the engineer to the conductor by a whistle from the engine, and if passengers were to get off the train there, that fact ivas signaled by the conductor to the engineer by a ring of the bell. The station platform at Amity was about one hundred feet long, and the length of the train between five hundred and six hundred feet. The train did stop very soon after Swift jumped off', but whether before or just after the rear car had passed the station platform, is a question about which there is some conflict in the evidence.

Swift was a witness on the trial, and testified on his own behalf. And as the questions for our decision are made to arise more particularly upon the facts testified to by him, we copy into this opinion all that part of his evidence having reference to his jumping off the cars when in motion, and his reasons therefor. It is as follows: “ I was not acquainted with the conductor before that trip, but he passed and repassed in the cars until I got familiar with his face, but I don’t know his name.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ind. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffersonville-railroad-v-swift-ind-1866.