DocketNumber: No. 11,600.
Citation Numbers: 144 N.E. 620, 82 Ind. App. 134, 1923 Ind. App. LEXIS 247
Judges: REMY, J.
Filed Date: 11/13/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 5/4/2017
Action to recover damages for personal injuries. The complaint avers, in substance, that on the day appellee was injured, appellant was operating an electric street railway in a certain narrow and paved street in a thickly populated part of the city of Terre Haute, and over a point or place in the street which, as appellant knew, was, and for many months prior thereto had been, in general use by the public including small children who would, at such place, frequently congregate and cross over the street and the street car tracks laid therein; that at the time and place in question appellee, who "was a small boy of immature age, to wit, six years" was on the street with other small children, and "was going along and crossing" the street, at which time a street car operated by appellant's motorman was approaching the place, which street car was being operated "at a careless and negligent rate of speed, to wit, about fifteen miles an hour"; that the motorman at the time, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have seen appellee and the other children in the street at a distance of 400 or 500 feet before he reached them, and did see appellee when appellee "was at or *Page 137 near" the street car tracks, and when the motorman was at "a distance of from seventy-five to one hundred feet" from the place where appellee was crossing the street, and in time to have stopped the car before striking appellee; that as the motorman with the street car approached the point in the street where appellee was crossing, he negligently failed to keep a proper lookout for children and others upon the tracks, and negligently failed to have his car under control, or to check the speed thereof, but "ran said car up to and against" appellee, thereby so injuring him that he lost his right leg; that the injury to appellee "was the proximate result of the negligence" and "each act of negligence" of appellant as averred.
Appellant unsuccessfully moved the court to require plaintiff to make his complaint more specific, to strike from the complaint certain surplusage, to set out in separate paragraphs of complaint each act of negligence relied on for recovery, and to require plaintiff to elect upon what theory of negligence he would try the cause. A demurrer to the complaint for want of sufficient facts having been overruled, the cause was put at issue, and a trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee.
It is unnecessary to set forth in this opinion appellant's motion to require appellee to make his complaint more specific. The motion for the most part called for matters of 1. evidence, and not issuable facts. Under the Code of Procedure of this state, a plaintiff is required to plead the facts constituting his cause of action "in plain and concise language," but he is not required to plead in detail the evidentiary facts. The Code also provides that — "In the construction of a pleading for the purpose of determining its effect, its allegations shall be liberally construed; with a view to substantial justice between the parties." § 385 Burns 1914, § 376 R.S. 1881. *Page 138
It is only where the precise nature of the charge is not apparent that, as the Code provides, "the court may require the pleading to be made definite and certain by amendment." §§ 2. 84, 126, Code Civil Proc., §§ 343, 385 Burns 1914, §§ 338, 376 R.S. 1881. Even if a motion to require a pleading to be made more specific might properly be sustained, the action of the court in overruling the motion is not always reversible error. As was said by the Supreme Court in an opinion by Judge Mitchell, inPhoenix Ins. Co. v. Rowe (1889),
If the motion to make more specific had been sustained and the complaint amended accordingly, the evidence admissible thereunder would have been the same as under the complaint as it now stands. On the trial, appellant did not complain of surprise; no continuance was asked; and it does not appear from the record that appellant was in any way misled as to the issues presented, or that it was in any way prevented from making preparations for its defense. While the motion might with propriety have been sustained in part, *Page 139
an examination of the whole record discloses that appellant was in no way harmed by the action of the court in overruling the motion. It follows that the error, if any, is not a cause for reversal. See, Leimgruber v. Leimgruber (1908),
The action of the trial court in refusing to strike out parts of a complaint is not reversible error. Fidelity, etc., Ins. Co. v. Purlee (1922),
It has been held by this court, in an opinion which was approved by the Supreme Court on petition to transfer, that, under the practice authorized by the Civil Code of this 4. State, it is not reversible error, in an action for damages for negligence, to overrule a motion by defendant to require plaintiff to elect on which of two theories presented by the complaint he would try the cause. Nordyke Marmon Co. v.Hilborg (1915),
It is urged that the facts averred in the complaint are 5. not sufficient to show actionable negligence. We cannot concur in this view. *Page 140
In passing upon the sufficiency of the complaint, it is important that we keep in mind the averment that appellee at the time he received the injury complained of was a small boy, 6. but six years of age, and that "there were other small boys of about the same age of plaintiff in said street and crossing said street at said time." Although the law does not fix the age at which children are of sufficient intelligence to have imposed upon them the degree of care incumbent upon persons of mature age, it is well settled that "contributory negligence cannot be imputed to a child when of such tender years that it is, by legal presumption, incapable of judgment or discretion"; and many courts have held that children under the age of seven years are incapable of contributory negligence. Elwood St. R.Co. v. Ross (1900),
In the operation of a street car in a thickly populated part of a city, it is the duty of the person having charge of the car to exercise ordinary care to keep the car under control, and 7. as to its speed, and a like care to keep a lookout for persons on or near the tracks ahead of the car.Indianapolis Traction, etc., Co. v. Kidd (1906),
The allegations in the complaint that appellee was crossing the street at the time he was injured at a point other than a street intersection, would not render the complaint demurrable. If, as averred, the street was a narrow paved street in a populous part of the city, it was the duty of appellant in the operation of its car whether at street intersections or not, to exercise such care as a reasonably prudent person would exercise under like circumstances. Denver City Tramway Co. v. Brown (1914), 57 Col. 484, 497, 142 P. 364, 369; Ivy v. Marx (1920),
The theory of the complaint adopted by the court and the parties at the trial is not that of last clear chance. The theory upon which the complaint must be tested is the negligent 8. operation of a street car in a populous part of a city by a motorman in the line of his duty, who at the time had constructive knowledge of the presence of small children in the street at a point over which he was about to pass; and actual knowledge of the presence of plaintiff, a six year old child, at or near the tracks at such point. To hold the complaint sufficient, it is not necessary, as contended by appellant, that the acts of negligence averred therein, including the alleged negligence as to the speed of the car, should be violations of a *Page 142
statutory duty, or of a duty created by ordinance. It is sufficient if the acts of negligence pleaded show a duty owing from appellant to appellee, and that the failure to perform such duty resulted in the injuries of which complaint is made. If appellant's motorman was operating the car at a speed of fifteen miles an hour, that was 660 feet every thirty seconds. How appellee received the injuries of which he complains, and the acts of negligence relied upon for recovery, are set forth in the complaint with sufficient certainty to apprise a person of common understanding as to what was intended, and, as we have already stated in our discussion of the alleged error of the court in its ruling on the motion to make the complaint more specific, that is the standard fixed by the Code. Besides, it affirmatively appears from the record that appellant knew from the complaint the charge it was called upon to meet. The trial court did not err in overruling the demurrer. See, Carter v. Richart (1916),
Error is predicated upon the action of the court in the giving of certain instructions, and in the refusal to give certain others tendered by appellant. We have examined all of the 9. instructions of which complaint is made; also all instructions tendered by appellant, and which were refused by the court. The requested instructions which stated the law correctly were covered by other instructions given. The instructions given by the court when taken as a whole *Page 143 fairly state the law of the case. There is evidence to sustain the verdict. Appellant makes no claim that the damages assessed are excessive.
Affirmed.