Louisville & Southern Indiana Traction Co. v. Walker

97 N.E. 151, 177 Ind. 38, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 3
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1912
DocketNo. 22,096
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 97 N.E. 151 (Louisville & Southern Indiana Traction Co. v. Walker) 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
Louisville & Southern Indiana Traction Co. v. Walker, 97 N.E. 151, 177 Ind. 38, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 3 (Ind. 1912).

Opinion

Cox, J.

Appellee recovered a judgment against appellant in the court below, for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by her while a passenger on one of appellant’s street-cars.

A reversal of that judgment is asked by appellant on the ground that the trial court'erred in overruling a motion made by it for judgment in its favor on answers to special interrogatories, which the jury returned with a general verdict for appellee, and that error was also committed in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.

To the extent needed to be set out to intelligently exhibit and consider the questions involved in the appeal, the averments of the complaint are, in substance, that appellee entered one of appellant’s street-cars to be carried as a passenger on it, over the route and line regularly traversed by it, to her intended destination at the terminus of the line, and paid the usual fare therefor; that for the purpose of relaying its track and improving it, appellant had, at a certain point on the line, excavated and torn away that part of the street occupied by its track, and more than a foot on either side of it; that through appellant’s carelessness and neglect the space on each side of its track was excavated six inches below the grade of the street, was rough and uneven and filled with loose earth and loose stones, and was thereby rendered unsafe and wholly unfit as a place for passengers to alight; that, in consequence of the work being done, the distance from the lowest step of the car to the ground alongside of it, at the point where appellee was required by appellant to alight, as hereinafter stated, was not less than two feet, and too great for safety, as appellant well knew; [42]*42that while appellee was so being carried as such passenger, when the ear in which she was traveling arrived at the point above described on appellant’s line of road, which was near an intersecting street, the track was obstructed by ears of appellant, loaded with stone and other materials to be used on the street and track, which appellant had placed there, so that the car on which appellee was traveling could not proceed farther toward her destination; that by reason of this obstruction the car was stopped near the loaded ears, and appellee, with other passengers thereon, was wrongfully and negligently directed and required, by the agent and collector of appellant in charge of the ear, to leave and get off of it at the said dangerous and unsuitable place, and to walk northward along the street and track, past and beyond the loaded cars which obstructed the track, to another ear of appellant which was then standing and being held in waiting to carry the passengers to the end of their broken journey; that appellant, notwithstanding the conditions set forth, negligently failed to furnish any stool, step, or other means to enable appellee to safely get off and alight from the car, and its agents and employes in charge of the car wrongfully and negligently failed to offer and give to appellee any assistance in alighting therefrom; that in obedience to the wrongful and negligent command of appellant, made-by and through its agents in charge of the ear, appellee, desiring to complete her journey and to be carried to her destination by appellant, attempted to alight from said car onto the street, exercising due care in so doing, but in descending from said ear, and in alighting on said part of said street adjacent to said track, without fault on her part, appellee stepped on a loose stone or stones, negligently left by appellant along the side of said track, and thereby turned her foot, and violently wrenched and severely sprained her ankle.

A second paragraph of complaint was different from the first only in that it alleged that the street was being im[43]*43proved by the city, and that the excavations were made by it.

1. [44]*442. [43]*43The contention of counsel for appellant, in behalf of appellant’s right to judgment on the answer to interrogatories, has a double basis. The first is the claim that the facts specially found by the answers show contributory negligence on appellee’s part in alighting from the car. This claim we cannot sustain. The answers upon which reliance is placed by counsel may be summarized as follows: At the time of the accident the eyesight of appellee was good. The injury to her occurred about 4:30 o’clock of the afternoon of a clear day, and while the sun was shining. The street where she was injured was being improved, and there was earth and a lot of broken stone lying loosely on the ground in the street below the step, and covering the ground where she was compelled to step in alighting from the car. The distance from the step down to the broken stone on the ground was about two feet. There was nothing to prevent appellee from seeing the condition of the street, and she did see it before she stepped down, and also the distance from the step to the ground. She stepped down with a suitcase in her hand. 'We find none of these facts to be out of real harmony with the general verdict. The complaint alleged that appellee was required to leave the ear at a point where the excavated street was rough and uneven, and filled with loose dirt and stones. Not one of the above summarized facts is inconsistent with the conclusion which the jury might have and doubtless did reach by its general verdict for appellee; that, impelled to leave the •car by the direction of appellant’s employes, which unexpectedly broke her journey, she saw a place where she would have to alight which appeared to her to be safe, and which revealed to her nothing of its dangerous condition. The dirt may have, apparently to her, so embraced and been combined with the stones as to give her no suggestion or warning that it might be loose, and cause her foot to turn. She was [44]*44required to leave the car on its west side, with the sun shining directly in her eyes. The circumstances of her

alighting, and the conditions present, did not give time or opportunity for close inspection of the place where she must alight, and the rule of ordinary care, as applied to her conduct, did not require a close and critical study of the ground before she trusted herself upon it. She had not completed the passage of the trip on which appellant was carrying her, and she was still its passenger, to whom it owed a duty involving a high degree of care for her safety. And while she was not absolved from using ordinary care in getting off the car, such care is affected by the circumstances and conditions, and the fact that she was entitled to rely, to some extent, on the belief that she would not be required to alight at an unfit and dangerous place.

3. The second basis of appellant’s contention, that it should have had a judgment on the answers, is that the facts established by certain answers are fatally at variance with those alleged as constituting the cause of action. The complaint avers that appellee suffered her injuries in the act of getting off the car as she stepped therefrom upon the ground. It is earnestly contended by counsel for appellant that the answers show that appellee was injured by stepping on broken rock while walking after she had alighted from the car. The interrogatories and the answers thereto, which are relied on to sustain this contention, are as follows: “(22) Did the plaintiff then and there step off the car of the defendant traction company, on said Vincennes street, to the street below? A. Yes. (23) After so doing, did the plaintiff then and there step on the broken rock in the street? A.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.E. 151, 177 Ind. 38, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-southern-indiana-traction-co-v-walker-ind-1912.