Bowling Green Railway Co. v. Lewis' Administrator

163 S.W. 759, 157 Ky. 575, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 340
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 759 (Bowling Green Railway Co. v. Lewis' Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowling Green Railway Co. v. Lewis' Administrator, 163 S.W. 759, 157 Ky. 575, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 340 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Hannah

Affirming.

On the night of October 31, 1910, Hallowe’en, a number of boys were abroad on the streets of the city of [576]*576Bowling Green, engaged in the perpetration of those pranks which unfortunately-have come to characterize the modlem celebration of this anniversary. One of the forms of mischief indulged in by them on that occasion was the lubrication with soap of the tracks of the street railway company.

One of appellant’s street cars, being operated on State street, encountered one of these lubricated places, and was unable to proceed until the motorman alighted and sanded the track, by which means he was enabled to pass it. The car reached the corner of State and Twelfth streets, and as it turned up Twelfth street, some boys pulled the trolley pole from the overhead wire. There were no passengers on the car and it was being operated by a motorman alone, there being no conductor; and at his request, a stranger named Igleheart, rode upon the rear platform of the car to prevent further interference of that kind until the head of Twelfth street was reached. There the car again encountered one of the “soaped” places and was unable to proceed.

In the meantime, a social gathering was being held in a private residence near where the car stopped; and there had been displayed in one of the windows of said residence the traditional “pumpkin-head” with a light in it. Some one had thrown a missile and knocked this object out of the window, whereupon a couple of the male guests ran out into the street in search of the perpetrators of this act. They encountered a number of boys engaged in the “soaping” of the street railway tracks. The boys fled at the approach of the two men, Brownfield and Meyers, who thereupon continued in the direction taken by the boys, and again came upon them engaged in the same act. The boys again fled; but one boy, Herman Lewis, was captured by the men, and was taken by them to the place where the street car heretofore mentioned was still standing, the motorman being engaged in putting sand on the rails. They informed the motorman that they had captured one of the boys who had “soaped” the tracks, saying, “You can have him; now take him on and turn him up. ” The motorman asked the boy for his name. He replied that his name was George Lawrence, whereupon a passer-by declared that he was acquainted with the boy whose name was given, and that this boy was not he whom he claimed to be. The motorman then asked the Lewis boy for the names of-[577]*577bis companions, and being refused this information, he took tbe Lewis boy’s cap and placed it upon bis own bead. He then changed tbe trolley pole so that tbe car could be run back down Twelfth street, being compelled to abandon any further attempt to proceed on account of tbe condition of tbe tracks. One of tbe men who bad tbe boy in charge placed him on tbe rear platform of tbe car, and tbe motorman told him be would take him down town to a policeman and “turn him over.” He led tbe Lewis boy through tbe car and out on tbe front platform thereof, tbe boy crying and begging to be released. After tbe car bad proceeded about two blocks down Twelfth street, tbe Lewis boy in some manner fell under tbe wheel of tbe car, and was so badly crushed that be died soon thereafter.

An action was thereupon instituted in the Warren Circuit Court by bis administrator for damages against appellant, and tbe court sustained a demurrer to the petition; On appeal, tbe judgment was reversed. See Lewis’ Admr. v. Bowling Green Railroad Company, 147 Ky., 460, 144 S. W., 377.

A trial of tbe action was thereafter bad on November 8, 1912, and tbe jury returned tbe following verdict: “We, the jury, find for tbe plaintiff tbe sum of six thousand dollars compensatory damages. We, tbe jury, find for plaintiff in tbe sum of three thousand dollars punitive damages.”

On motion of tbe defendant, that verdict was set aside, and upon a second trial of tbe case, on February 19, 1913, tbe jury returned tbe following verdict: “We, the jury, find for tbe plaintiff, six thousand dollars, compensatory damages.” Tbe Street Railway Company appeals.

It is tbe contention of appellee that the motorman continued bis bold on tbe boy after conducting him to tbe front platform of tbe car, operating tbe car with one band and bolding tbe boy with tbe other; and that tbe boy endeavored to jump off tbe front platform of tbe car; and that tbe motorman in trying to prevent bis escape drew him under tbe wheels of tbe car and caused bis death. However, tbe evidence fails to bear out this contention.

One of appellee’s witnesses says that be saw tbe boy on tbe platform with tbe motorman; that tbe motorman bad bold of tbe boy’s arm or shoulder with bis left band, [578]*578and was operating the car with his right hand. And ‘ ‘ after the car had got by, we got ont in the street to see what he was going to do with him, and the boy jumped off or fell off or was pushed off or something. He came out face first and one foot went under the front wheel on the left side. He screamed the first time a short scream, and it drug him along under the car, and he screamed then one long scream, and I started to run to him, and when I got there he was wedged up under the wheels beneath the rear wheel and the thing or beam that holds the car up, and he was so tightly wedged in there that they had to back the car so we could pull him out.”

The motorman testified that “I taken hold of Ms coat sleeve and walked through the car with him, and we got out on the platform. The best of my remembrance, it was his left hand, and when I walked out on the platform I might have held his coat sleeve a little, but not very far, I know, before I turned him loose and run my car.” He also stated that the boy stood behind him, and that the first he knew of the boy being hurt was when he heard him scream, and that he got off the car and backed it and took the boy out.

1. It is appellant’s principal contention that the plaintiff cannot recover because the act of the motorman in taking the boy on the car with him was an assault, and not within the scope of the servant’s employment. But, this action is not founded upon an assault. It is true that the act of the motorman in forcibly leading the boy through the car and out on the front platform thereof amounted to an assault; but that assault was not the proximate cause of the injury, nor the basis of the recovery against appellant.

As held in the -former opinion in this case, when the motorman took this boy on to the car, the boy thereby became a passenger and entitled to the same care and protection as any other passenger, as much so as if he had paid his fare and was riding to his destination. It is true, he was not a willing passenger, nor had he given his destination; but the motorman knew his destination better than the boy did as the motorman had selected it for him, and the act of the motorman in requiring the boy to remain on the car, despite the boy’s request to be allowed to leave it, created the relation of [579]*579Barrier and passenger between appellant and the boy; and that relation continued to exist np to the time of his injury. It was upon the failure of the carrier to do and perform its duty as such carrier to him as its passenger that this action was founded — upon the negligence of the motorman in failing to care for this boy whom he had required to ride upon the platform of the car.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 759, 157 Ky. 575, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowling-green-railway-co-v-lewis-administrator-kyctapp-1914.