Saylor v. Union Traction Co.

81 N.E. 94, 40 Ind. App. 381, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 70
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 1907
DocketNo. 5,224
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 94 (Saylor v. Union Traction Co.) 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
Saylor v. Union Traction Co., 81 N.E. 94, 40 Ind. App. 381, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 70 (Ind. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Hadley, J.

This was an action brought by appellant against the appellee for damages for personal injuries sustained by the appellant by being struck by one of the appellee’s interurban cars on Washington street, in the city of Marion. The complaint is in four paragraphs. The first paragraph is a complaint for damages for wilful injury. The second paragraph is for damages on account of the negligence of appellee in running its car at a high rate of speed, and omitting, while approaching the crossing where said accident occurred, to give proper signals, by reason of which negligence appellant was injured. The third paragraph is for damages on the ground of negligence, measured by a different standard than by the ordinary rules, by reason of the provisions of appellee’s franchise and the ordinances of said city. The fourth paragraph is for damages on the grounds that appellee was a mere trespasser on the streets of said city, and therefore was a danger not to be apprehended by appellant, and that, being a trespasser and having no rights in the streets, it was its absolute duty to avoid injuring any person rightfully on said streets, in such case the doctrine of contributory negligence not applying. Issues were joined on these several paragraphs, the cause tried by jury, and a general verdict returned for appellees, together with answers to a number of interrogatories. Motion was made by appellee for judgment on the verdict. Appellant filed his motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and judgment rendered upon the verdict in favor of appellee. The errors relied upon for reversal are the giving of certain instructions at request of appellee, and the refusal to give other instructions asked by appellant.

The facts disclosed by the record, in brief, are as follows: Appellant was a man seventy-one years of age. His home [383]*383was on the east side of Washington street, about eighty feet south of the intersection of Washington street and Sixth street. Washington street runs north and south, and Sixth street east and west. In Washington street is a double line of street railway tracks. Cars passing north run on the east track, and cars passing south, on the west track. The crossing at Sixth,and Washington streets is in a populous part of the city, and much frequented by persons in vehicles and on foot. On the day of the injury, at about 11:15 o’clock a.m., appellant left home, and as he stepped off of the veranda he looked south down AYashington street two squares to Eighth street, but saw no car coming. He then walked on the sidewalk to the corner of Sixth and Washington streets, stepped off the curb into the street, and walked northwesterly towards the northwest corner of Sixth and Washington streets. When he was within three or four feet of the east track he turned his head towards the south and looked down said street forty or fifty feet, but he neither saw nor heard the car that struck him. At this time two cars were passing said crossing, on the west track, going towards the south. These cars were sounding their gongs, and his attention was directed to them. After glancing down the street, he stepped near the track, and was immediately struck by said interurban car and hurled high in the air, to a point twelve feet from the track, in a northeasterly direction. The interurban ear sounded no gong or whistle as it approached the crossing and as it was passing the cars going in the opposite direction.

The evidence clearly shows that it was going at a very high rate of speed, variously estimated from ten to twenty-five miles an hour, and, as some of the witnesses testified, hurling paper and leaves up over the top of the car. The jury found by its answer to an interrogatory that it was running at a speed from ten to twelve miles an hour. It was about one-half an hour behind its schedule time. Appellant knew that no interurban car was due to pass that crossing at the time he endeavored to cross.

[384]*384Appellant was very seriously injured. The motorman testified that he saw appellant when he left the curb and started diagonally across the street; that at that time the car was from 135 to 140 feet from appellant; that he observed that appellant was aged, and that he was looking towards the northwest, away from the approaching car; that, when it first became apparent to him that appellant was intending to pass in front of the car, he was ten or fifteen feet away, and before he could avoid the collision his car had struck appellant, although he applied the brakes and made an effort to stop the car after appellant’s danger thus became apparent to him, but he took none of these precautions when he first saw appellant approaching the track; that, after the collision, the car ran 135 feet before stopping. It was shown that appellant at the time was possessed of good eyesight'and good hearing; that a library building was being erected on the southwest comer of said Sixth and Washington streets, and a number of workmen were engaged there in dressing stone and otherwise engaged in constructing said building, making noise and confusion calculated to distract the attention of appellant.

1. The court, at the request of appellee, gave a number of instructions defining contributory negligence, also the law as it relates to wilful injury. The giving of these instructions was properly excepted to. All of these instructions were as strongly in the favor of appellee as they could well be drawn without directly contravening the law. Yet, while they were all of this nature, the giving of some of them was not error. Of these instructions, three, five, eleven, twelve, fourteen, and eighteen will here be considered. The third instruction advised the jury that “the plaintiff was bound to look and listen before stepping in such close proximity to the tracks of the defendant as to be struck by a passing car; and if, by the failure to take such precaution for his safety, he was injured, then such fail-[385]*385tire on his part would be negligence such as would prevent his recovery in this action, on either of the last three paragraphs of his complaint.” The eleventh instruction, after some general rules, charged the jury as follows: “The ordinary care required of the plaintiff in this case is, that if he had knowledge that the cars were running on both of said tracks, where Sixth street crosses said Washington street, and if he had knowledge that cars were running every few minutes of the day, and that it was a dangerous place to cross when cars were running on or approaching said crossing, then to be ordinarily careful and diligent he was required to look both ways upon said tracks, and to look, listen, and observe as to whether there were any ears approaching said crossing where he attempted to cross, and if he did not do so, but entered on or near said track without such ordinary care or caution, he cannot recover in this cause of action on account of the negligence of said defendant, as charged in the second, third, and fourth paragraphs of the complaint.” The twelfth instruction, in part, was as follows: “It is such person’s duty to look, listen, and observe in each direction up and down the track for the approach of cars, and one who walks thoughtlessly and heedlessly along or near a street-car track without such observation, and without such care and caution, and is injured, cannot recover on the ground of negligence, on account of his own contributory negligence.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 94, 40 Ind. App. 381, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saylor-v-union-traction-co-indctapp-1907.