Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Conley

124 S.W. 861, 136 Ky. 601, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 861 (Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Conley) 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 Ry. Co. v. Conley, 124 S.W. 861, 136 Ky. 601, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 519 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge O’Rear —

Affirming.

Appellee was employed by a shipper in loading railroad cross-ties at Soldier Station on cars of apjoellant’s railroad. A flat car had been set in on the side track to be loaded with the ties. A local freight train in shifting cars in the siding had moved the one on which appellee was to work. The cars were started back to their proper position, and as they came to a stop, or.as they were coming to a stop at the place, appellee mounted the car to begin his work. His first effort was to set the brake so as to hold the car in position; the track being on an incline grade. The crew of the freight train had in the meantime turned into that siding three flat cars loaded with steel T-rails. These latter cars were started into the [604]*604downgrade siding without any one on them to set the brakes, and without any control over the cars. They ran against the flat car which appellee had climbed, striking it with such force as to throw him with great violence against the end of the car, fracturing his ribs and otherwise injuring him, as he claims. He was unaware of the fact that the loaded cars were turned into the siding, and no notice of their movement was given to him. He did not see them coming in time to get out of the way. He brought this suit to recover damages for his injury. The verdict and judgment were for $900 in his favor.

Appellant assigns as errors .of the trial court (1) its action in allowing an amended petition to be filed after the issue had been joined; (2) that the instructions were erroneous in several particulars; and (3) that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence and is excessive.

The petition charged that appellee was ordered to get upon the car by the conductor of the freight train. The amendment withdrew that charge, claiming that it had been made by counsel who drew the pleading before a conference with the plaintiff, but that the true state of the ease was that appellee was engaged as a laborer for a shipper in loading the car when injured. The petition seems to have been framed upon the theory that appellee was an employe of the railroad company at the time he received his injury, and the amendment upon the idea that he was a licensee. The subject of the action was the alleged negligent injury of the plaintiff by the defendant’s agents in the operation of their train. The capacity in which the plaintiff was related to the situation was an incident merely. It is true, it was a material incident. But amendment of pleading is [605]*605favored by our Code of Practice! The office of all' pleading is to arrive at an issue on the real matter in dispute. It is not the policy of the practice in this state to encourage the trapping of the unwary or unskillful in the art of pleading. On the contrary, it is to present for the court or jury the true issue in dispute, the question of merit about which the parties disagree. Section 134, Civ. Code Prac., authorizes the trial court to “at any time,” “ in furtherance of justice, and on such terms as may be proper, allow or cause a pleading to be amended” by correcting a mistake in any respect or “by inserting other allegations material to the case.” In addition, even after the case has been partially heard on the trial, the court may, “if the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense,” allow an amendment conforming the pleading to the facts proved. The distinction made between allowing the amendment to be filed before and after trial has begun is evidently rested upon the notion that, before the trial has begun, the court by putting the pleader on terms may protect the opposite party, although tbe nature of the claim or defense may be changed by the amendment; but after the trial has begun, or perchance after the proof is in, to allow such an amendment — that is, one that would change the claim or defense even to conform to the facts proved — ■ might, and frequently would, operate to the surprise of the opposing party, presenting a new issue of fact, one of which he had not before been apprised by his adversary, and to meet which he has not prepared himself. It would also tend to encourage speculative trials, relieving them of all danger from loose practice. But before the trial has begun, if the amendment even change the nature of the claim or defense, [606]*606the opposite party- may be fully protected, and should be, by the trial court’s putting the pleader on such terms as to costs and continuance as will be just. But the law is more concerned with bringing the real dispute to final issue and trial, in which justice may be meted out to the parties as the law is, than with the matter of mere convenience, or even neglectful or artful preparation of a cause, or in determining it otherwise than upon its merits. Hence the liberal provision of that section of the Code, made positively manifest by its concluding clause that “the court must, in every stage' of an action, disregard any error or defect in the proceeding which does not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party.”

Our Codes of Practice adopted the 1st day of August, 1851, and changed but little since 1854 (although revised in 1877), were fashioned after the New York Code. Kentucky was among the first of the states to adopt the code system of practice, which was promulgated about 1848 in this country. It was brought about largely, it -is supposed, upon the spirited and heroic writings of Jeremy Bentham, challenging the common-law practice as archaic, disproportioned to the growing body of substantive law, and as tending to hinder and embarrass the administration of justice, rather than promote it. Under the common-law system, the forms of procedure took precedence often times of the substance of the controversy. Both . common-law and equity judges had attempted, and had in a manner accom■plished,.something in the way of relief from the ancient iron-rules by judicial legislation in the form of rules of court, by the adoption of expedients, some of which were subterfuges, called fictions, which but emphasized the necessity for legislation that would [607]*607bring the adjective law abreast with the development of substantive law. Section 134 of our Civil Code is yet looked upon askance by some lawyers, particularly by skilled pleaders, as something unscientific and inharmonious, as a breach in the edifice of exact and finished forms erected by the learned pleaders of the day of Chitty and Stephens. But it is not. In its exact language it is found in the Codes of all but two or three of the states of the American Union which have adopted the code system, and is substantially the same as the English rules, under the judicature act'. “Both seek to give effect to the prin- • ciple that courts exist not for the sake of discipline, but for the sake of deciding matters in controversy. ’ ’ Cropper v. Smith, C. A. 26 Ch. D. 700-710; Becker v. Walworth, 45 O. S. 169; Bohlen v. Metropolitan Ry., 121 N. Y. 546, 24 N. E. 932; Cook v. Croisan, 25 Or. 475, 36 Pac. 532. It was first charged and is yet occasionally echoed that the section gives the trial judge the authority of the “Autocrat of Russia.” Nash, PI. & Pr. 109. But it has not been found to be so. Por more than half a century this liberal departure has been applied by the judges in its right spirit, and to the “furtherance of justice” — the end of all ^heading. Rarely has it been abused, and, when it has been, more instances are found in which it was too rigorously interpreted than too freely allowed.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 861, 136 Ky. 601, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-ry-co-v-conley-kyctapp-1910.