Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Co. v. Haskett , 72 Ind. App. 57 ( 1919 )


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  • McMahah, J.

    —Appellee Clarence Haskett was in possession of two horses which were struck and killed by a car operated by appellant. One of these horses was owned by him, and the other he owned jointly with the appellee Milton Miller. Appellee Haskett com*59menced this action against the appellant and Milton Miller to recover damages for the negligent killing by appellant of the two horses. The complaint alleged an ownership of one and the joint ownership with Miller of the other horse. Miller was made a defendant to the complaint in order that there might be a complete determination and settlement of the questions involved and to answer as to his interest. Appellee Miller filed a cross-complaint against the appellant and Haskett admitting that Haskett was the owner of the one horse and alleging that he and Haskett were the joint owners of the other, and asking damages from the appellant on account of the alleged negligent killing of the horse owned by the appellees jointly. Haskett-was made a defendant to the cross-complaint so that there might be a determination and settlement of- the question involved and to answer as to his interest. Haskett filed an answer to the cross-complaint, admitting the facts therein alleged, and appellant filed an answer of general denial to the Complaint and cross-complaint. There was a trial by jury. The jury returned a verdict reading as follows: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff, Clarence Haskett, against the defendant, Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company, and assess his damages at $285.00, and find for the cross-complainant, Milton Miller, upon his cross-complaint, against the defendant, ° Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company, and assess his damages at $95.00.”

    Later in the term, and after the discharge of the jury, appellant filed a motion for a venire de novo, for the reasons that the verdict does not pass upon all the issues, and that it failed to find upon the. issues be*60tween, the appellees, and leaves the question of the ownership of the horses undetermined. It also on the same day filed its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because: (1) The verdict is insufficient; (2) that a cause of action in favor of plaintiff' could not be joined with a cause of action in favor of plaintiff and Miller in the same paragraph of complaint; (3) that Miller was not a proper defendant except upon an averment that he refused to join as plaintiff; (4), the law did not authorize joint owners of property to split up a cause of action and recover several judgments. ' Appellant also on the same day filed its motion for a new trial, the specifications therein being that the verdict of the jury (1, 2,- 3) is not sustained by sufficient evidence; (4) is contrary to law; (-5) in refusing and in giving instructions; and (6) that the amount of recovery for plaintiff is too large. Each of said motions was overruled and exceptions saved.

    Appellant contends, that the verdict fails to find upon the issues between the appellees as to the ownership of the two horses, and that the motion for a venire de novo should have been sustained. If appellant was injured by reason of the fact that the jury failed to find upon any issue between the appellees, it must be because the verdict and judgment will be no bar to another suit brought for the same matter.

    1. *612-3. *60Appellee Hasket in his complaint alleged that he was the owner of one of the horses killed, and that he and appellee Miller each owned a one-half interest in the other. Miller in his cross-complaint alleged the same state of facts. The jury by their verdict found in favor of appellee Haskett and fixed his damages at $285. It also found in *61favor of appellee Miller against appellant, and fixed his damages at $95. It is clear both on principal and authority that neither appellee could hereafter main-, tain any action against appellant on account of the killing of the horses mentioned in the complaint and cross-complaint. If there is an undisposed of issue, it is an issue between the appellees in which appellant is not interested, and, not being interested, it is in no position to complain because of a failure of the jury to find upon such issue. Shaw v. Barnhart (1861), 17 Ind. 183. There was no error in overruling the motion for a venire de novo, nor was there any error in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment in its favor notwithstanding the verdict. The verdict was sufficient in form to authorize the court to render judgment for appellees. If appellant desired to raise any question relative to the improper joinder of parties or splitting the causes of action, it should have done so before verdict.

    Specifications 1, 2 and 3 of the motion for a new trial depend upon the weight of the evidence. We do not deem it necessary to extend this opinion by reviewing the evidence. It is sufficient to say that there is enough evidence in the record from which the jury might have reasonably drawn the conclusion that appellant, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have seen the perilous position of the horses in time to have stopped the car which killed them, but negligently failed to do so. There was also sufficient evidence to have warranted the jury in finding that the motorman in charge of the car actually saw the horses and their perilous position in time by the use of reasonable care to have stopped the car and thus prevented injuring them.

    *62The appellant complains of the twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth instructions given by the court on its own motion. The objection to the twelfth is that it contradicts the eleventh instruction, that it is confusing and omits the element of due diligence. The objection to the thirteenth is that it ignores» the- question of contributory negligence; that it fixes appellant’s liability on the question whether the appellant’s employes saw or could- have seen the horses in time to have stopped without regard to their position or when they were seen. The objection to the fourteenth is that it assumes that appellant’s employes saw the horses, and placed upon them an absolute duty to stop regardless of all conditions of time, place or circumstances. The objection to the fifteenth is that it assumes that appellant’s employes operating the car indulged in the presumption that the horses would continue at a safe distance, without any evidence, and against the positive evidence of appellant’s witnesses, and that it erroneously applied the same rule to trespassing animals as applies to animals lawfully on the highway. rfhe objection to the sixteenth is that “it is peremptory, states no rule of law, or as to liability; that it leaves the jury to read and construe the complaint and cross-complaint, and to determine for themselves the acts of negligence therein alleged.” The objection to the seventeenth is that it ignores the condition of the lights and the condition of darkness existing at the time of the injury.

    Without setting out these instructions in full, it is sufficient to say that we have examined each and all *63of them and none of them are open to the objections urged against them.

    The appellant also contends that the court erred in refusing to give instructions Nos. 5 and 11 tendered by it.

    The fifth instruction tendered by appellant is as follows: “If the plaintiff’s horses with or without his consent escaped from his premises and became trespassers upon the public highway, the defendant owed them no duty except not to wantonly injure them after notice or knowledge that they were in a position of imminent danger.”

    The eleventh is as follows: “This case is to be determined by the best evidence, and while it is proper for the jury to infer one fact from other facts proven, yet when such inference is in conflict with the positive statement of a witness which the jury believes credible, such statement is the best evidence as against any inference to the contrary which may exist.”

    4. The complaint alleged that the appellant negligently killed the horses. The fifth instruction is erroneous in stating that the only duty appellant owed toward the horses was not to wantonly kill them, and was properly refused. The eleventh instruction tendered by appellant is covered by the ninth instruction given by the court.

    5. Appellant also contends that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is-contrary, to law. In support of this contention appellant says that: “When there is a failure of proof and the evidence is all one way, it is the duty of this court to give the evidence its legal effect”; and that: “In an action against an interurban traction *64company operating within the limits of a public high-. way where it cannot lawfully fence, its road, based upon common-law negligence in injuring animals, proof of injury to the animals shows no cause of action, and a verdict resting thereon should be set aside as being contrary to law and not sustained by sufficient evidence.” Appellant has 'made no attempt to apply these statements to the evidence. The simple fact that the horses were killed on the railroad track by appellant would not be sufficient to authorize a verdict, but, as heretofore stated in discussing the motion for a venire de novo, there was not an entire failure of proof, and the evidence was not all one way. The evidence showed that the horses were running along the side of, and between, the tracks of appellant for a distance of several hundred feet before they were struck and killed. Appellee- Miller testified that when the car passed him the horses were between 200 and 300 feet west of that point, that he could see them, and that he saw them running westward between appellant’s tracks until the car which struck and killed them was so close to them that it cut off his view. With this evidence before the jury, they were justified in finding that the employes of appellant saw the horses and negligently failed to stop the car, or that they were negligent in failing to see the horses in their perilous position, and in failing to stop the car.

    6. The .appellant also insists that the verdict is contrary to law for the reason that where a joint right of action exists in favor of two or more persons for a trespass to their property, all must be joined in an action for damages, and if all refuse to join, the remedy was lost with the exception *65that if a party refuse to join, he must be made a defendant, and his refusal averred in the complaint. . If appellant desired to present this question, it should have done so in the lower court. Appellant by its failure to present this question in the trial court has waived it. There was no error in overruling the motion for a new trial.

    Judgment affirmed.

Document Info

Docket Number: No. 10,134

Citation Numbers: 72 Ind. App. 57

Judges: McMahah

Filed Date: 12/19/1919

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/24/2022