Town of Spencer v. Mayfield

85 N.E. 23, 43 Ind. App. 134, 1908 Ind. App. LEXIS 229
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1908
DocketNo. 6,340
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 85 N.E. 23 (Town of Spencer v. Mayfield) 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
Town of Spencer v. Mayfield, 85 N.E. 23, 43 Ind. App. 134, 1908 Ind. App. LEXIS 229 (Ind. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Comstock, J.

The action was commenced in the Owen . Circuit Court and tided in the Putnam Circuit Court upon change of venue. Appellee recovered judgment below for $2,000 for personal injuries received in falling or step[136]*136ping off of a bridge or culvert at the intersection of AVolf and Meek streets in the town of Spencer. The jury assessed her damages at $3,800. Appellee remitted $1,800 of this amount, and appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendered for the amount first named. The cause was put at issue upon an amended complaint in one paragraph and an answer in general denial.

1. The complaint, in substance, and briefly stated, alleges that the town had constructed an open ditch in Meek street, which it left unguarded and unprotected in any manner; that a culvert had been built across this ditch at the intersection of Wolf and Meek streets, and that the east end of said culvert was without guard-rails to prevent persons from walking off of the same in the darkness of night, and the town had negligently failed so to guard the end of said culvert and had negligently failed to furnish light at the crossing to enable persons to see their way; that the town knew of this condition, and negligently suffered the same to remain for many months prior to October 25, 1908; that the plaintiff was without knowledge of the ditch and the culvert, and the fact that they were unguarded and unprotected, and was unaware of the danger in using the street at that point; that the ditch and culvert at the intersection of said two streets were dangerous, and that, by reason of the negligent failure of the town to guard and protect the culvert, and the ditch, the appellee, while walking eastward on Meek street, and being unable, on account of the darkness, to see her way, stepped off the end of said culvert, fell into said ditch, and was injured as alleged in the complaint. With the general verdict the jury returned answers to interrogatories.

The errors discussed are the action of the court in overruling defendant’s demurrer for want of facts to the amended complaint and in overruling its motions for judgment on the answers to interrogatories and for a new trial.

It is argued that the complaint is insufficient, in that it [137]*137does not allege that the ditch was not a necessary one for drainage, or that it was wider or deeper than was necessary, or that it was dug and maintained across the street or sidewalk so as to constitute a defect in either. It is insisted that the ditch described is not a defect in the street or sidewalk at all. So far as objections are pointed out to the complaint, it was sufficient to withstand a demurrer.

The evidence shows that plaintiff received her injury in stepping off of the culvert between the driveway and sidewalk at the intersection of Meek and Wolf streets in a new addition to the town of Spencer. Meek street runs east and west. The culvert is at the crossing of Wolf street running north and south. The ditch was found by the jury to be twenty-two inches deep in the deepest place at the east end of the culvert, and-four and one-half feet wide. The culvert was constructed on stone walls about three feet broad, and was of two-inch oak boards, spiked down and level with the top of the ground. The culvert was about thirty-eight feet long, covering the whole width of Wolf street, including sidewalks, and was about four feet wide. The ditch was an open one for two blocks east and for about two blocks west of the culvert. The street and sidewalk were unimproved, being in a new part of the town, sparsely settled. The sidewalk was eight feet wide and the driveway of the street was about the usual width. The ditch was an open one, entirely exposed to view, except that it had about four or five culverts across it. There were no guard-rails around the culvert or along the ditch. At the crossing where appellee was hurt, the town for six years or more had maintained a 2,000 candle power arc light, suspended at a height of about twenty feet immediately over the center of the crossing, and which lighted up the crossing, culvert and ditch. It was maintained by the Spencer Electric Light Company under a contract with the town to keep the streets lighted at all times on each and every night in the year from sunset until midnight (unavoidable accidents and the acts of God ex[138]*138cepted), except at such, times as there ivas unobstructed moonlight. The light had always been satisfactory, was in perfect condition on the night in question, and when lighted had been sufficient and satisfactory to make the culvert safe. The accident complained of occurred at about 7 o’clock on the evening of October 25, 1903. The lights had not been turned on by the light company at that hour, for the reason, as the light company claimed, that the moon was shining, and that the light was not necessary. Appellee and her daughter, who was with her at the time of the accident, testified that it was too dark to discern objects, without the light. Appellee had lived five blocks south of this crossing for thirty-five years. For a year before the accident one of her daughters, Mrs. Knight, had lived on the north side of Meek street, one block and the width of a street east of the crossing where appellee was hurt. Appellee occasionally visited her daughter during that year, crossing this ditch coming and going, usually crossing one block east and above the culvert where she was hurt, the ditch running in front of her daughter’s home. The ditch was open to view from Mrs. Knight’s house down to the culvert where appellee was hurt. About a month before the accident, appellee and her daughter walked down this street in the daytime, past the culvert in question, going to another daughter’s, who lived in that direction. On the evening of her injury appellee and her daughter Mrs. Crippen had gone to see her daughter Mrs. Knight, crossing this ditch that evening. About 5:30 o’clock p. m., and, as the jury find, while it was light enough that they could see the ditch and culvert, appellee and Mrs. Crippen walked clown this sidewalk to Mrs. Yandevanter’s, the second house below the crossing in question. Between 6:35 and 7 o’clock they'started from Yandevanter’s to go back to Mrs. Knight’s.

Mrs. Crippen testified that when they came out of Yandevanter’s house, they went to the walk and went down the walk to Wolf street and started south on Wolf street to go [139]*139to the middle of Meek street. She testified that about that time she had become somewhat accustomed to the darkness, could see the roadway, and thought she was in Meek street when she came on that-bridge across the street and started right down the bridge, thinking it was in the middle of Meek street, and until she stepped off did not know differently. She testified that her mother was on her left side. That she did not discern objects near by; did not know whether she could discern them or not; thought the bridge was the road; did not notice where the end of the bridge was; thought that when they reached Wolf street she could see there was a road; thought the street was not graveled until they came to Wolf street. It was graveled all the way over the bridge, and was level with the street. She further testified: “We just walked at an ordinary gait, talking as women do. I had no acquaintance with this point of Meek and Wolf streets; did not know there was a bridge or culvert there; had no knowledge of any danger there, and was on the sidewalk until we came to Wolf street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.E. 23, 43 Ind. App. 134, 1908 Ind. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-spencer-v-mayfield-indctapp-1908.