Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Patrick

122 S.W. 820, 135 Ky. 506, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 313
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 23, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 820 (Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Patrick) 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. Patrick, 122 S.W. 820, 135 Ky. 506, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 313 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

[507]*507Opinion" op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Boyd circuit court, entered upon a verdict against the appellant, Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., in favor of the infant appellee, Wardie L. Patrick, for $2,000, in damages for injuries to his person from a collision with one of appellant’s trains, alleged to. have been caused by .the negligence of its agents and servants in charge .thereof. At the time of-receiving his injuries appellee was 16 years of age, and the action was instituted by himself and next friend. The facts were, that in December, 1905, appellee and a companion, Charles Picklesimer, a year his junior, went to the city of Ashland from their home in Magoffin county, seeking employment. After a few days’ search they found work at the mill of the .Herman Lumber Company. On account of a sleet and snow that fell, they were denied work one day at the mill, and upon again going to .the mill in the afternoon, about 1 o’clock, they were advised that there would be no work for them there that day. After stopping for a while on Twenty-Seventh street, where a school building was being erected, .they started to return to the house at which they were boarding on Thirty-Second street, going up what is known as Railroad alley, the usual and nearest route. On Railroad alley, which is a public street of Ashland, appellant has a double track, called the east-bound and westbound tracks. The former, lying next to the hill, is used by appellant’s trains running to Huntington, W. Va., and other points east, and the latter, lying next to the Ohio river, is used by its trains running to Cincinnati.

[508]*508Appellee and Ms companion, after passing Thirty-first street, and upon reacMng a point half way between that street and Thirty-Second street, saw approaching them on the west bound track ' a long freight train, running at considerable speed and making a loud noise. ' They thereupon swerved their course sufficiently to keep out of the way of the freight train on the west-bound track, and proceeded in the direction of the boarding house on Thirty-Second street to which they had started; ■Thirty-Second street being then about 20 feet distant. When they got to Thirty-Second street, the engine and a few cars of the freight train on the westbound track had passed them. Upon appellee and his companion reaching Thirty-Second street, and while they were yet facing the east and in the. act of turning to cross that street to get to the boarding house, a' half square' distant, an extra passenger train on the east-bound track, going at a high rate of speed, ran upon and against them, and dragged them under the engine tender some distance, thereby killing Picklesimer and permanently injuring appellee upon his head and other parts of the body.'

Appellant complams that the trial court improperly refused to peremptorily instruct the jury to find for it. We do. not understand, from the brief of its able counsel, that it is claimed the. peremptory instruction should have been given on the ground that appellee was a trespasser upon its track, for, when struck by the train, he and Picklesimer were on the crossing at Thirty-Second street, but because, it is insisted, he was guilty of contributory negligence'in being upon the crossing and east-bound track at the time of the collision. Upon the facts furnished by appellee’s testimony, the court could not, as a matter of law, [509]*509hold that he was guilty of ■ contributory negligence. Even before reaching the crossing at Thirty-Second street, he and his companion were walking along Railroad alley, a street or public way of the city, in constant use by its inhabitants, and when they got to Thirty-Second street, and on the crossing, they had, according to appellee’s testimony, to stop until the freight train on the west-bound track passed them and the crossing to enable them cross the west-bound track to get to the boarding house. They had barely stopped, and were in the act of turning toward the freight train, but without having gotten their faces in line to see the approaching passenger train, when it struck them.

Under the circumstances, the mere fact that he was momentarily standing, on the east-bound track was not of itself such evidence of contributory negligence on the part of appellee as would authorize the court to take the case from the jury. Whether, in thus situating himself, appellee exercised ordinary care for his own safety, was a matter to be determined by the jury. In view of the noise made by the freight train, to which his attention was particularly - directed, because it was passing between him and the house to which he was going, and of the fact that the passenger train was an extra train, and, therefore, not expected, and the further fact that it was running, according to the testimony of three witnesses near by, at from 20 to 30 miles an hour without ringing its bell or giving other signal of its approach," it is not difficult to understand why the jury reached the conclusion that in the matter of receiving his-injuries appellee was not guilty of such negligence as should defeat a recovery.

[510]*510We do not overlook the fact that appellant’s train crew, and other witnesses introduced in its behalf, furnished much evidence conducing to prove contributory negligence on the part of appellee, that he suddenly and unexpectedly to the engineer and fireman of the passenger train got upon the track in front of it, that the train was running at a moderate and reasonable rate of speed when the accident occurred, and that its approach was signaled by the usual and constant ringing of the bell; hut, however contradictory this evidence may have been of appellee’s, it all, with his, went to the jury, and we have no right to say that they should have given it more weight than appellee’s was entitled to receive, or to direct that the verdict be set aside because they gave appellee and his witnesses the greater credence. Although repeatedly urged to do so, this court has never given its approval to the doctrine that one having a right to cross or go upon a railroad track shall, before doing so, stop, look, or listen, to discover whether a train is approaching or is so near at hand as to make it unsafe to himself to do so; for, as said in Ramsey v. Louisville, Cincinnati & Lexington Railway, 89 Ky. 104, 20 S. W. 163, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 559:

“It would he unreasonable to require of persons passing daily on foot or in vehicles along a public street in a populous, busy city or town, to stop at a railroad crossing in order to listen or look up and down a track, sometimes visible hut a short distance, to ascertain whether a train' is approaching, when they can without doing so have comparative security against inconvenience and injury by a reduction of the speed of trains, and easily and certainly warned of its approach by the hell or whistle. ” L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Lucas, 98 S. W. 308, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 359; Ky. [511]*511Central Ry. Co. v. Smith, 93 Ky. 449, 20 S. W. 392, 14 Ky. Law Rep. 455, 18 L. R. A. 63; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Price’s Adm’r, 76 S. W. 836, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1033.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 820, 135 Ky. 506, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-ry-co-v-patrick-kyctapp-1909.