Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Maggard's Administrator

235 S.W. 736, 193 Ky. 259, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 16, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 235 S.W. 736 (Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Maggard's 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
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Maggard's Administrator, 235 S.W. 736, 193 Ky. 259, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 220 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

[260]*260Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing the judgment in the first case, and affirming the one in the second case.

W. Harrison Maggard, a single man about 27' years of age, was employed by defendant, Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company, as night telegraph operator at its depot station in Prestonsburg, Ky. At about 8:45 o ’clock on the evening of March 8, 1916, which was nearly two hours after he had gone on duty for the night, he undertook to signal a passing freight train (which was a part of his duties) and in doing so he used a swinging electric light suspended from the ceiling and hanging over the desk or table at which he was at work, and after giving with it the necessary signals to the engineer, which the latter could observe through one of the windows at the end of the table (or while he was giving the signals, the evidence not being clear), he touched with his other hand an iron lever by the side of his seat in front of the table and received an electric shock of sufficient voltage to kill him almost instantly.

His father- qualified as his administrator and brought suit under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act to recover the pecuniary loss which he sustained as sole dependent of his deceased son, there being no other legal dependents surviving him. Later, another suit was filed by plaintiff against the Prestonsburg Electric Light Company, seeking to recover under our statute damages to the estate of the decedent for the destruction of his power to earn money, in which, of course, no question of dependents was involved. - The electric light company, under a contract with the railroad company, furnished the current with which the depot was lighted and also the current by which the signals on the semaphore were operated and which was done by the manipulations of a lever extending up from the floor of the depot by the side of the chair occupied by the agent whose duty it was to give the signals. That suit was settled before the trial of the one against the railroad company, by the terms of which the defendant therein paid to plaintiff the sum of $4,000.00, but it was expressly stipulated that it was only in settlement of the liability of the electric light company and did not “include or relate to any recovery sought by plaintiff for the statutory beneficiaries of said decedent against the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company.”'

Upon a trial of the' action against the railroad company there was a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum [261]*261of $12,000.00, to be credited by the $4,000.00 received by. plaintiff from the electric light company in settlement of the suit against it, making a net verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $8,000.00. A new trial of the case, given on motion of defendant, resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $8,000.00 credited by the same sum received from the light company, which was a net verdict in plaintiff’s, favor of $4,000.00. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled and it obtained leave until the 15th day of the next term of the court in which to prepare and file its bill of exceptions. The trial and the extension order referred to was during the February, 1919, term of the court. The next regular term convened on the third Monday in May of that year, and the last day upon which the bill of exceptions could be filed under the time given was on June 4, and the record shows that on that day defendant tendered, moved and offered to file its bill of exceptions, but time was given for the plaintiff’s attorney to examine it, and the motion to file it was passed for that purpose, and on a later day of the term it was sustained and the bill of exceptions was filed. After the adjournment of that term and at the next succeeding one, plaintiff gave notice and moved the court to expunge from the record the order of June 4, 1919, and the others following it relating to the filing, upon the ground that as a matter of fact there was no court in session at either of said times. Upon a hearing, at which evidence was introduced and which has been brought here, the court overruled the motion to expunge either of those orders, and the second appeal above questions the propriety of that ruling. A motion was also made in this court to strike the bill of exceptions from the transcript, which motion is based upon the same ground.

Without stopping to inquire whether the verity of the record could be impeached by extraneous testimony in the manner adopted, we are convinced that from other facts appearing in the record the court properly overruled plaintiff’s motion, and which conclusion also requires us to overrule the motion made for the same relief here. It appears from the record that for some cause, not clearly shown, the court, upon convening its May term, entered an order adjourning it until June 4, 3919, and that on that day there was an adjournment till June 17th, at which defendant again produced and offered to file its bill of exceptions, to which plaintiff objected and the court took time and did not act thereon [262]*262until June 20, when it was filed. According to the orders appearing, defendant tendered its bill of exceptions within the time given it, but plaintiff’s counsel insist that 'as a matter of fact the court was not in session from the third Monday in May until the 17th day of June, to which day the adjournment as they contend was actually made. But, if such was the fact, and it was so shown by the record, defendant had the right during the interim covered by the adjournment to lodge with the clerk of the court its bill of exceptions at any time within the leave given for that purpose and the filing with the clerk would have the same effect as if it was tendered in open court. City of Henderson v. Kentucky Peerless Distilling Co., 161 Ky. 1. Moreover, in the case of Eubanks v. Commonwealth, 184 Ky. 126, we held that an adjourning order to a time beyond that given within which to file a .bill of exceptions had the effect to automatically extend that time so that it could be filed after the court convened pursuant to the order of adjournment. It is therefore manifest that, treating the order involved in the second case above as one from which an independent appeal might be prosecuted, the court properly overruled the motion there involved, and-the same conclusion necessarily results in overruling the motion made in this court to strike the bill of exceptions from the record.

We come now to briefly consider the appeal upon the merits of the questions involved. That the testimony was amply sufficient to support the verdict of the jury finding defendant guilty of negligence toward deceased and which resulted in his death, clearly appears from the record. In the afternoon of the day upon which deceased met his death a traveling man by the name of Bently casually touched the. lever by which the semaphore signal was operated and when he touched a telephone over or near the desk with his other hand he received a severe shock, which- rendered him insensible for a while and it was some hours before he was sufficiently restored so that he could depart for his home. The regular station agent knew of this fact and one of defendant’s employes, whose duty it was to. look after such matters, soon appeared upon the scene, and after a time he discovered that the wiring of the building, through which flowed the current from the Pestonsburg Electric Light Company, was excessively overcharged, and that it was because of the overcharged wire conveying the current to the semaphore signal that the stranger was shocked in the after[263]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 S.W. 736, 193 Ky. 259, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-v-maggards-administrator-kyctapp-1921.