Old Folks And Orphan Childrens Home v. Roberts

Citation149 N.E. 188,83 Ind.App. 546
Decision Date28 October 1925
Docket Number12,154
PartiesOLD FOLKS AND ORPHAN CHILDRENS HOME v. ROBERTS
CourtIndiana Appellate Court

From Howard Circuit Court; John Marshall, Judge.

Action by William F. Roberts against the Old Folks and Orphan Childrens Home. From a judgment for plaintiff, the defendant appeals.

Reversed.

York & Rees and Overson & Manning, for appellant.

Arthur D. Saylor, Wolf & Barnes, C. W. Roll and George B. Shenk, for appellee.

OPINION

ENLOE, J.

This was an action by the appellee to recover damages on account of a personal injury sustained by him while an inmate of appellant home, which said injury was alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the appellant.

The cause was tried upon an amended complaint, in one paragraph to which the appellant had unsuccessfully demurred, and resulted in a verdict for the appellee. The errors assigned and presented upon this appeal are: (a) The overruling of said demurrer; and (b) the overruling of the motion for a new trial.

The appellee has first raised the question that the bill of exceptions containing the evidence is not in the record. This contention must be sustained. The said bill was not tendered to the judge during the term at which the motion for a new trial was overruled, nor was time then asked and given within which to file such bill. See Tozer, Admr., v. Hobbs' Estate (1923) 79 Ind.App. 258, 137 N.E. 715.

It appears from the record that the appellant is a private charitable corporation, duly organized under the laws of this state. The object of said corporation, as stated in its articles of incorporation is: "To better provide for and take care of poor and infirm members of said Church and Orphan Children of the same, as may be duly admitted to the benefits of said home; to train up and properly educate said orphan children and to prepare them for the proper and correct discharge of the duties of life."

It further appears from the record that the appellant was duly placed in said home as an inmate thereof by the order of the circuit court of Huntington county when he was about fourteen years of age; and that he had been an inmate of said home about six months at the time he received the injury complained of, the said injuries being caused by the clothing of the appellee catching in a fly-wheel which was unguarded. The negligence charged in the complaint was: (a) Failure to have a guard about said fly-wheel; (b) negligence in ordering and directing appellee, on account of his age and inexperience, to operate a certain switchboard, whereby he was brought into close proximity with said fly-wheel; and (c) negligence of appellant in employing a certain named person as business manager of said home, in the employing of another named person as matron of said home, and in the employing of another named person as caretaker of boys in said home, and in retaining each of said servants in its employ after the incompetence of each was or should have been known.

There was no motion to separate the several alleged causes of action, and if said complaint states a cause of action as to either of said alleged acts of negligence, reference being had to the memorandum of deficiencies filed with said demurrer, there was no error in overruling said demurrer. As to the said first charge of negligence, the complaint proceeds upon the theory, and it was so stated by counsel upon oral argument, that it was the positive duty of appellant, and which duty it owed to the appellee, to place a guard about said fly-wheel; that this duty was imposed upon it by statute (§ 9417 Burns 1926, § 8029 Burns 1914); that this duty was non-delegable; that, as to this duty, the appellant owed to the appellee the same duty which a master owes to his servant. With this contention, we cannot agree. The appellant was an eleemosynary corporation; it was assisting the state in carrying on a part of its work assisting in the performance of a governmental duty, a matter in which the people are directly interested, and such corporations have, therefore, always been favorites of the law. The appellee was not a servant of the appellant,...

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