Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Henry

56 P. 486, 60 Kan. 322, 1899 Kan. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 11, 1899
DocketNo. 11131
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 P. 486 (Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Henry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Henry, 56 P. 486, 60 Kan. 322, 1899 Kan. LEXIS 75 (kan 1899).

Opinions

[323]*323The opinion of the court was delivered by

Doster, C. J. :

This was an action for damages brought by Allie May Henry, widow of Frank B. Henry, against the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company for negligently causing her husband’s death by its failure to maintain a highway-crossing suitable for the passing of a harvesting-machine over it, whereby the machine became stuck upon the track, and the engine and train collided with it. The case has been reviewed by this court before (Railroad Co. v. Henry, 57 Kan. 154, 45 Pac. 576), and the substantial facts are stated in the report of the former decision. It was reversed because of misdirection of the jury. Upon the second trial the plaintiff again recovered a verdict and judgment, from which error has been prosecuted to this court. The alleged defects in the highway-crossing were insufficiency of width to accommodate the harvesting-machine, and the failure to lay the planks composing it to correspond with the angle made by the railroad and the highway. The railroad company’s defense to the action was that the crossing maintained by it was at a proper angle and of sufficient width to accommodate all the ordinary travel over it; that the harvesting-machine was of an unusual width, and that it had no knowledge that a machine of such width and requiring such highway accommodations was in use. The jury made special findings of fact, of which those material for reference are as follows :

“Q,. 2. Did Edmund Stredder know the condition, of the crossing in question at the time he attempted, to cross over it with the binding-machine on the day of the accident? A. Yes.
“ Q,. 3. Could Edmund Stredder have passed over [324]*324the crossing in safety had not one of his horses shied and crowded the others so as to cause the wheel at the end of the sickle-bar to run off at the end of the plank crossing'and catch on the rail of the track? A. No.
“Q,. 4. Did Edmund Stredder before attempting to p>ass over the crossing with his binder know what the width of the crossing was, and believe it was of sufficient width to admit of the binding-machine passing over it? A. He believed it was of sufficient width.
“Q,. 5. Was there a plank crossing of the railroad track at the place where Edmund Stredder attempted to cross with his binding-machine on the day of the accident? A. Yes.
“Q,. 6. If you answer the last question in the affirmative, then state how many planks there were between the rails, and how many on the outside of each rail. A. Four between and one on outside of each rail.
“ Q,. 7. If you answer that there was a plank crossing at that place, then state the length of the planks at that crossing. A. Fourteen feet.
“ Q. 8. If you answer that there was a plank crossing at the point in question, then state the thickness and width of the planks. A. Two and one-half inches thick by eleven inches wide.
“ Q,. 9. If you answer that the space between the Tails at the crossing was not all planked, then state what part or portion of it was not planked. A. None except room for flanges on wheels.
“ Q,. 10. If you answer that there were planks at the outside of each rail of the crossing in question, then state the width and thickness of such planks. A. Two and one-half inches thick by eleven and one-,'half inches wide.
“ Q,. 11.. How many horses did Edmund Stredder .have drawing the binder at the time he attempted to pass over the crossing in question? A. Three.
“ Q,. 12. Of what make or manufacture was the binding-machine in question? A. Déering binder, seven-feet cut.
“ Q,. 13. How many wheels were there that carried the binder or on which it ran? A. Two.
[325]*325“Q. 14. What was the distance from the outside of the main or drive-wheel and the outside of the small wheel that carries the sickle? A. Ten feet and four inches.
“ Q,. 15. Could the binding-machine in question have been taken over the crossing where the accident occurred with safety if drawn by two horses, and with the exercise of ordinary care and prudence on the part of the driver? A. No.
Q,. 16. If you answer 15 in the negative, then state why it could not. A. The surface on the approach was too narrow.
“ Q,. 17. Could the binder in question have been driven over the crossing in question, if drawn by three horses abreast, without getting caught or stuck upon the rail, if the outside horses had traveled outside of the planks and between the ties? A. No.
“Q,. 18. Was there anything to prevent a horse from walking over the track outside of the planks at the crossing in question? A. Yes.
“ Q,. 19. If you answer the last question in the affirmative then state what there was to prevent' a horse crossing the track at the end and off the planking. A. The ties and rails.
“Q,. 20. Did the outside horse, called ‘ Old Bony/ crowd the other horses so as to cause the small wheel carrying the sickle-bar to run off the planking and get caught upon the rails of the track? A. Yes.
“Q,. 21. When Edmund Stredder drove upon the crossing just before the accident, with the machine in question, did both the drive-wheel and the small wheel carrying the sickle-bar run upon the planking of the crossing? A. No.
“ Q,. 46. Had Edmund Stredder, whose binder was stuck on the crossing, the day before that crossed the same kind of a crossing on defendant’s track with the same machine without any difficulty or trouble? A. Similar crossing.
“ Q. 47. What was there to prevent Edmund Stredder from leading the third horse so as to have his machine pulled by the team only over the crossing, [326]*326outside of the extra trouble or care? A. Inconvenience.
“ Q. 48. At the time of the accident in question, could Edmund Stredder have crossed over this crossing with the machine with a team of two horses easily, and without any trouble or danger of getting off from the crossing? A. No.
“ Q,. 49. If you answer the last question in the negative, then state why he could not have driven it over the crossing with a team of two horses in safety at that time. A. The approach was too narrow.
“ Q. 50. Gould the binder in question have gone over the crossing so as to have left a foot and a half from the outside of its wheels on each side of the ends of the plank on each side? A. No.
“Q,. 51. If you answer the last question in the negative, then state how much room would have been left on the outside of each of the wheels on the plank crossing. A. One inch on each end.
“ Q. 52. At what angle did the railroad cross the alleged public road at the time of its construction? A. Seventy degrees and twenty-eight minutes.
“ Q. 54.

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Bluebook (online)
56 P. 486, 60 Kan. 322, 1899 Kan. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railroad-v-henry-kan-1899.