Town of Elkhart v. Ritter

66 Ind. 136
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 66 Ind. 136 (Town of Elkhart v. Ritter) 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
Town of Elkhart v. Ritter, 66 Ind. 136 (Ind. 1879).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

Lydia Ritter sued the town of Elkhart, to recover damages occasioned to her by a fall into a pit in the sidewalk of one of the most public streets of said town, viz., Jackson street. She alleged that the town negligently permitted an excavation to be made in said sidewalk, about ten feet wide, eight feet deep and sixty feet* in length, “ and so situated as to prevent pedestrians from passing along the said sidewalk of said street without turning out into that portion of said street usually devoted to wheeled vehicles; that said excavation was upon one of the streets of said town most used by the public for ordinary business purposes; and was by the defendant so negligently and carelessly allowed to remain, several days prior to said accident, without any proper or sufficient guards, lights, notices or railings to warn people and prevent them falling there[138]*138in; that, at the date of said accident (about March 13th, 1873), the plaintiff resided in said town and was engaged in daily labor, by which she gained her support, and upon which she was dependent for such support; that, about seven o’clock in the evening of said day, it then being nearly or quite dark, she attempted to pass along the south side of said Jackson street, toward the comer of Main street, when, without fault or negligence on her part, she fell into said excavation, and was thereby greatly injured, both externally and internally, disabled to labor, put to great expense,” etc., and she claims damages in the sum of two thousand dollars.

Demurrer to the complaint, as not showing a cause of action, overruled, and exception entered.

Answer in four paragraphs :

1. That said defendant denies notice or knowledge of said excavation.

2. “ That said street and sidewalk were excavated and dug up by one McNaughton, without the knowledge and consent of this defendant, and that defendant had no means nor funds, nor the control of any, to repair said street and sidewalk, and no way to raise any means or funds, under the law, to make such repairs ; wherefore it did not and could not make them.

3. That, said defendant “admits'that there was an excavation made on a certain street, in the town of Elkhart, at the place mentioned in said complaint, and admits that said plaintiff fell into the same and was thereby injured as alleged; but the said town avers that she gave her consent to one John McNaughton to dig out a stair-way to the basement of the brick store on the south-west corner of Main and Jackson streets; that said McNaughton undertook and promised to make and protect said excavation carefully and skilfully; that said McNaughton caused and procured the said excavation to he covered up aud securely protected, hut, the frost unexpectedly coming out of the [139]*139ground and the earth thereby becoming loosened, the said walk, and the earth thereunder gave way and sunk, on the same day as that on which the alleged injury occurred, and the plaintiff fell into the said hole or excavation so made by said earth giving away, as aforesaid. 'Wherefore,” etc.

4. The general denial.

The plaintiff moved that the first, second and third paragraphs of answer be struck out, which motion was overruled as to the first and second and sustained as to the third; exceptions. A demurrer was then filed to the first and second paragraphs of the answer, which was sustained, and exception entered. Trial by jury. Verdict for plaintiff for five hundred dollars, and judgment, over a motion for a new trial, on the verdict. Exception. This was in April, 1875. On the 30th of April, 1877, the record on appeal to the Supreme Court was filed, on which errors as follows were assigned:

1. Overruling the demurrer to the complaint;

2. Sustaining the motion to strike out the third paragraph of the answer;

3. Overruling the motion for a new trial.

The complaint might have been subject to a motion for greater certainty, but it was sufficient on demurrer. 2 R. S. 1876, p. 79, sec. 90, and notes; Scudder v. Crossan, 43 Ind. 343 ; Wiles v. Lambert, post, p. 494.

The complaint is good under the decision in The City of Fort Wayne v. De Witt, 47 Ind. 391. See Higert v. The City of Greencastle, 43 Ind. 574. It states facts from which the clear inference is that the town had knowledge of the excavation and its condition, while no such inference can arise, as to knowledge on the part of the plaintiff. The town is alleged to have a population of about five thousand inhabitants, and, while it appears that the plaintiff was a resident of the town, it is not shown in what part of it she resided, and, being an employee at.daily labor, upon which she depended [140]*140for support, no inference arises that she had knowledge of the condition of the excavation or of the excavation itself; while the decisions are, that, where the averment is made, as in this case, that the plaintiff was without fault, the facts alleged must, to overcome that allegation, show very clearly its falsity. The City of Fort Wayne v. De Witt, supra.

As to the second error assigned, it may be said, that, if it was irregular to strike out the third paragraph of answer (Clark v. The Jeffersonville, etc., R. R. Co., 44 Ind. 248),still the action of the court was harmless, as all the matters of defence alleged in said third paragraph were admissible in evidence under the general denial. Besides, that paragraph did not deny notice to the defendant of the caving in of the earth.

The grounds for a new trial will all be presented in considering and deciding upon the instructions given and refused on the trial of the cause.

Counsel, in their brief, make no objection to the instructions given by the court of its own motion. They complain of the refusal of the court to give the second, third, ninth, tenth and eleventh instructions asked by the defendant.

The third instruction asked was properly refused. It asked the court to say to the jury that the complaint did not show notice of the excavation to the city. "We have already decided that it did.

We need not set out the ninth, tenth and eleventh in full. What we shall say in the remaining part of this opinion will dispose of them all.

There was evidence in the cause that the plaintiff fell into an excavation in the sidewalk mentioned in the complaint, near eight o’clock, on a dark evening; that said excavation was about five feet wide, forty feet long and four feet deep ; that it was in a dangerous condition and known to the officers of the town to be so; that they had actual no[141]*141tice of the caving in of earth mentioned, by two or three o’clock p. m., on the day of the evening the accident happened, but caused no guards or protection from danger to be placed over or about it, and there was no evidence that the plaintiff had any notice of the character or condition of the excavation; there was evidence that the fall caused a badly sprained ankle aud internal injury; that the appellee vomited blood on the night of the injury after the injury occurred; that she suffered from the sprained ankle and the internal injury continuously for months, etc.

We now state some legal propositions :

1. “ The complaint charged that the plaintiff was grievously bruised, hurt, and injured” (internally and externally).

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Bluebook (online)
66 Ind. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-elkhart-v-ritter-ind-1879.