Turner v. Buchanan

On Petition for a Rehearing.

Morris, C.

The appellees ask a rehearing in this case, on the ground that, as they contend, the opinion reversing the judgment below is contrary to the uniform rulings and decisions of this court upon the questions involved.

Upon the trial, the jury returned a general verdict in favor of the appellant, with answers to interrogatories submitted by the appellees. It is insisted that the answers returned by the jury to the interrogatories are irreconcilable with the genéral verdict, and must control it; that the answers to the interrogatories show that the appellant was guilty of negligence contributing to the injury of which he complained, and that the appellees were, therefore, entitled to judgment upon these findings, notwithstanding the general verdict.

The answers to the interrogatories, which are claimed to be inconsistent with the general verdict, are:

Had both of the horses that plaintiff was driving previously run off ? Answer. Yes.
“ Did the portable engine possess any qualities calculated to scare a team that was not disposed to frighten? Answer. Yes.
Did the plaintiff see the portable engine before he was near to it, and in time to have avoided the danger ? Answer.. Yes; but apprehended no danger.”

The answer to the first of the above interrogatories, obviously, is not in any way inconsistent with the general verdict, which found the appellant to be without fault and free from negligence. The answer does not find at what time, how many years before the accident, the horses had run off. They might have run off years before, and yet have been perfectly gentle and manageable at the time of the accident. And this-answer*, in connection with the general verdict, must be held to mean this and nothing more.

*153The answer that “ the portable engine had qualities calculated to scare a team not disposed to frighten,” is not only not inconsistent with, but confirmatory of, the general verdict.

If the engine had no qualities calculated to frighten teams, it would be difficult to support "a verdict which gives a party damages for the alleged fright of a team by such an engine. The general verdict implied just what the jury found in answer to this interrogatory. It can not, therefore, be said to be inconsistent with the general verdict.

The jury, in answer to the fourth interrogatory, say r

“ The plaintiff saw the portable engine before he was near to it, and in time to have avoided the danger, but he apprehended no danger.”

Is this answer irreconcilable with the general verdict ? and does it show that the appellant was guilty of contributory negligence ?

The jury, by this answer, do not find that the appellant saw or knew the danger to which he might be exposed in passing the engine, Avrongfully placed and maintained in the street by the appellees. On the contrary, it is expressly found that he did not — that he apprehended no danger. He saw the engine, .the obstruction, in the street — this was all — and apprehended no danger from passing it. It is of the very nature of an obstruction in a highway or street, which is calculated to frighten teams, to be visible. For anything that appears, teams had been driven daily past the engine, which had been wrongfully in the street for months. Teams may be driven past such an obstruction without taking fright. It could not be foreseen or predetermined whether the team would at all times, or this particular time, take fright at the obstruction, though calculated to frighten teams. The appellant was, therefore, not guilty of negligence in attempting to drive his team past the obstruction in question. It was a risk he might take without negligence on his part. The law upon this subject is well stated by Shearman and Eedfield on Negligence. They say, sec. 31 : Nor even where the plaintiff sees that the defendant has been *154negligent, is he bound to anticipate all the perils to which he may possibly be exposed by such negligence, or to refrain absolutely from pursuing his usual course on account of risks to which he is probably exposed by the defendant’s fault. Some risks are taken by the most prudent men; and the plaintiff is not debarred from recovery for his injury,.if he has adopted the course which most prudent men would take under similar circumstances.” This doctrine has often been applied, and is peculiarly applicable to cases like this. The obstruction is seen in the street; there is room to pass it; it is not known that it will cause fright, and the traveller, with due care, knowing the temper of his horses and having control of them, believing there is no danger, attempts to pass. In doing this, he is not guilty of negligence; he takes the risk which a prudent man \yould take, and nothing more. Such an assumption of risk affords no excuse for the wrong-doer — the party who wrongfully placed the obstruction in the street.

In the case of Judd v. Fargo, 107 Mass. 264, where a farmer had left a sled with tubs upon it in the highway, calculated to frighten horses, at which the plaintiff’s horse took fright in being driven'past it, and was killed, it was not pretended, or even claimed, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, though the obstruction could be seen for a considerable distance.

In the case of Jones v. Housatonic R. R. Co., 107 Mass. 261, the same doctrine is held. It appeared in this case that the railroad company, at the crossing of the highway, maintained a derrick for the purpose of loading and unloading freight. The derrick had an upright shaft twelve feet high, and a horizontal arm fourteen feet long, so-Ideated that the arm might be swung north, and then the freight suspended from it would hang about four feet within the located limits of the road, but ten or twelve feet from the travelled track of the same. There was conflicting testimony as to how far the derrick could be seen, some of the witnesses said ten or twelve rods; others that it could be-seen only for a short distance. The *155evidence showed that the plaintiff’s horse had shied at a box car some distance from the derrick; that, shying, the horse turned south, and was then frightened by the derrick.. The court held the plaintiff entitled to recover.

In the case of Foshay v. Town of Glen Haven, 25 Wis. 288, it was held that the defendant was liable for an injury resulting from the fright of a horse at a large black log left in the highway by the defendant, though not in the travelled path of the road. The horse was frightened as the defendant drove past. Though the obstruction was visible, it was not claimed that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence in driving past it, with due care. Morse v. Richmond, 41 Vt. 288; Johnson v. Belden, 2 Lans. N. Y. 433. In this case the court quote the rule as laid down by Sheannan and Redfield above, and say that it is fully sustained by the case of Clayards v. Dethick, 12 Q. B. 439.

The appellees say, that the question in Wisconsin and the' New England States is governed by the statutes of those States. True, in most of those States there are statutes making towns liable for the non-repair of highways, but there is no statute in any of them upon the subject of contributory negligence. The law upon that subject, the only question here involved, is the common law, the same law that is in force in Indiana.

It is said that the decision of this court, in the case of Thompson v. Cincinnati, etc., R. R. Co., 54 Ind. 197, is opposed to the ruling in this case. The decision in the former case rests upon the fact that the danger was not only apparent, but believed and known to exist, by the plaintiff, at the time the accident occurred; that, with such knowledge, and believing the passage of the street to be dangerous, he ordered his servant to get out of the -wagon and take the horse across the street. The court very properly held that, under such circumstances, the plaintiff assumed the risk and proceeded at his peril. In this case, though the engine was seen, the danger was not apprehended or believed to exist. The facts *156upon which the decision rests in the case cited are absent in the case now before us.

It is also said that the case of President, etc., v. Dusouchett, 2 Ind. 586, is opposed to the conclusion reached in this case. In that case it was held that, where the plaintiffs alleged in their declaration that they knew the location and situation of a boiler before the rise of the river, and that, after the rise of the river, they could not see it and ran their boat upon it, they were shown to have been guilty of negligence, which would defeat a recovery. The court simply held that, where a party runs his boat voluntarily upon a known obstruction, he can not recover for the injury sustained by the collision. There is nothing in this decision inconsistent with the opinion in this case.

There are many cases holding, that where a party carelessly drives upon a known obstruction, wrongfully placed in the highway, or against a vehicle wrongfully occupying the wrong side of the street, he can not recover for an injury sustained by such collision, because of his own negligence. But this class of cases, which may be found in the reports of every State, and in all the text-books, has no application to this case, for the reason that here the danger was not foreseen; the appellant did not know that his team would take fright, but believed the contrary, and, so believing, with due care, attempted to pass the obstruction. He was, as the general verdict finds, free from fault.

In the case of Thomas v. Western U. T. Co., 100 Mass. 156, the court say: “Because there is an obstacle to proceeding” on a highway, “ it does not follow that it is not consistent with reasonable care to attempt to proceed.” In Horton v. Ipswich, 12 Cush. 488, it was held that, if a party knew that a road was obstructed, but not so as to indicate to him "that he could not pass it with safety, and he met with injury while proceeding with due care, he might recover.

The petition for a rehearing is overruled.