Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Co. v. Padgett

173 S.W. 780, 163 Ky. 284, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 3, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 780 (Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Co. v. Padgett) 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
Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Co. v. Padgett, 173 S.W. 780, 163 Ky. 284, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 219 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

In this action the appellee, Alvin Padgett, recovered of the appellants, Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Eailway Company and L. E. Floyd, in the court below, a verdict and judgment in the sum of $5,000.00' damages for personal injuries received by him while in the service of the railroad company, from the explosion of a stick of dynamite alleged to have been left in a bucket of pitch by the negligence of the appellant, Floyd, the railroad company’s foreman in charge of a crew of workmen engaged in the construction of a concrete abutment in the city of Lexington.

On a previous trial of the case appellee recovered a verdict and judgment against appellants for $7,500.00 damages, but on the appeal of the latter the judgment was reversed for error in the instructions. The opinion on that appeal will be found in 158 Ky., page 301. As that opinion contains an elaborate statement of the facts respecting appellee’s injuries, only a brief outline of them will be necessary here. The evidence on the last trial does not materially differ from that of the first trial.

Appellee, with other workmen, was in the employ of the appellant railroad company in the summer of 1911 in the work of constructing concrete abutments for a bridge north of the depot in Lexington. • There were twenty or thirty men constituting the crew and they were under the control of the appellant Floyd as foreman. A number of these employes, including appellee, slept and ate in the railroad company’s “boarding cars,” which were kept on a sidetrack near the work. Twenty-five or thirty feet from the place of work was a building known as a “cement house,” in which were kept, under lock and key, the tools, cement and dynamite used in constructing the abutments, all, as was the cement house, in charge of Floyd. According to the evidence, inelud[286]*286ing Floyd’s own testimony, he was especially charged with the duty of keeping a vigilant watch care over the dynamite, because of its explosive and dangerous character. A part of this duty was to superintend the taking of dynamite from the cement house to where it was used in blasting, and of keeping account of the sticks as taken out of and returned to the cement house. It also appears from the evidence that there were several buckets used for dipping water, carrying sand and cement, pitch and tar from the cement house to the place where the work was under way, and in these buckets were also carried the sticks of dynamite from the cement house to the place of work. According to the evidence the appellant Floyd, as foreman, failed to have several sticks of dynamite returned to the cement house, and suffered some of them to become embedded in the pitch in two of the buckets. On one occasion, perhaps three weeks before receiving his injuries, appellee, while using one of these buckets in dipping water, discovered a fuse in the pitch, which he pulled out and threw the bucket in the weeds fifty yards from where the work was being done. On the fourth of July two other employes found and removed from one of the buckets two or three sticks of dynamite which they used for the purpose ,of making an explosion in celebrating that day. This, however, was not known to appellee, nor was- it any part of his duty to handle or use dynamite.

It further appears from the evidence that at the time of receiving his injuries appellee, with a fellow-workman, Daugherty, was returning about eight o’clock at night to the boarding cars for the purpose of retiring. Before they came in sight, however, the appellant Floyd had taken one of the buckets containing pitch from under the car, put some rags in it, set them on fire and put it in one of the boarding cars to drive out the mosquitoes. The bucket contained a stick of dynamite, of which Floyd was informed after he had fired the rags and placed the bucket in the car. Upon receiving this information he threw the bucket from the car to the ground. It fell a few feet from the car and was left there burning. When appellee and Daugherty got near the car in which they expected to retire they saw the burning bucket, and when, according to their testimony, they had g’otten within five or six feet of it they were told by Floyd or someone standing near that the bum[287]*287ing bucket contained dynamite; immediately upon the giving of this information, and before appellee had time to reach a place of safety, the dynamite exploded, blowing off his right leg and much of the flesh of the left. Floyd and some of the other employes with him testified that appellee and Daugherty were warned of the presence of the dynamite in the burning bucket when thirty-five feet distant therefrom, but that, instead of heeding the warning’, they carne on and got within four or five feet of the bucket, when the explosion occurred; and that the warning was. given in ample time to have prevented appellee’s injuries had it been heeded by him.

It is now contended by the appellants, as on the first appeal: (1) That the trial court should have peremptorily directed a verdict for them; (2) that it erred in instructing the jury. The first contention rests upon the grounds that the evidence failed to show that the appellant Floyd was guilty of negligence or that such negligence was the proximate cause of appellee’s, injuries, and that the injuries resulted from appellee’s own negligence. These several grounds of complaint were on the first appeal held to be lacking in merit, and, as the evidence on both trials was the same, no reason is now perceived for our reaching a different conclusion. In respect to the question of Floyd’s negligence we, in the former opinion, said:

“It is the duty of persons who keep in their possession or employ in their business that which, unless carefully guarded and cautiously used, is dangerous to others, to exercise such care to see that the dangerous agency is so kept and used as not to inflict injury upon others as an ordinarily prudent person would be expected to exercise in the use and keeping of such dangerous agency. See Merschel v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 121 Ky., 620, 85 S. W., 710, 27 R., 465; Pittsburg, etc. Ry. Co., v. Shields, 47 Ohio St., 387, 24 N. E., 658, 8 L. R. A., 464, 21 Am. St. Rep., 840; Rush v. Spokane Falls & Nor. R. Co., 23 Wash., 501; 26 Cyc., 1112. Floyd testified that he did not know the dynamite was in the bucket; but he was placed in charge of the dynamite supply, and he was, therefore, charged with the duty of using it with care and caution, as well as with’ the the duty of observing like care and caution in the custody of the dynamite when it was not in use. As was said in the Shields case, supra (speaking of railroad torpedoes), ‘The serv[288]*288ant’s custody of them when not in use was as much a part o-f his employment as was the use of them.’ The court is of the opinion, therefore, that the mere presence of this stick or portion of the dynamite imbedded and concealed in the pitch in the bucket in question was some evidence of negligence in the handling of the dynamite supply while not in use; at least sufficient evidence of negligence in that respect to authorize the submission to the jury of the issue as to the exercise of due care.”

In dealing with the question of proximate cause the opinion, after applying to the evidence the principles announced in Watson v. Ky. & Ind. Bridge & Ry. Co., 137 Ky., 619; 21 A. & E. Ency. of Law (2nd Ed.), 490; Louisville Home Tel. Co. v. Gasper, 123 Ky., 128; C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Young’s Admr., 146 Ky., 317; Bransom’s Admr. v.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 780, 163 Ky. 284, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-new-orleans-texas-pacific-railway-co-v-padgett-kyctapp-1915.