City of Cold Spring v. Ross

358 S.W.2d 507, 1962 Ky. LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 15, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 358 S.W.2d 507 (City of Cold Spring v. Ross) 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
City of Cold Spring v. Ross, 358 S.W.2d 507, 1962 Ky. LEXIS 184 (Ky. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

The City of Cold Spring appeals from a judgment entered against it pursuant to a jury verdict awarding the appellee, Ralph Ross, $30,000 for personal injuries and damages arising out of an accident in which his right foot was run over and crushed by a backhoe, a heavy piece of earth-moving equipment which was being used to dig through frozen ground to a broken water main. Though several errors are alleged, we have found it necessary to consider only the question of whether the city was entitled to a directed verdict.

Our decision calls for a detailed statement of the facts.

U. S. Highway 27 as it passes through the City of Cold Spring is four lanes wide and runs in a north-south direction. It is paralleled on the west side by a concrete sidewalk separated from the curb of the highway by a narrow grass plot. Also parallel with the highway and sidewalk, and located underground within the grass plot between them, is a water main owned by the city. During subzero weather on February 18, 1958, the ground became frozen to a depth of 16 or 18 inches and a break developed in the water line at a point some 300 feet north of Fahrenholtz [508]*508Cafe, a tavern on the west side of the highway. During the afternoon, efforts were made to dig through the frozen ground and reach the break by use of an ordinary farm-type tractor equipped with a boom and bucket, but they proved inadequate to the task, and toward the end of the day the city officials called for the services of a backhoe owned by Carlisle Construction Company, an excavating contractor.

This backhoe was a large diesel-powered machine weighing about 25 tons and operating on steel tracks, or caterpillar treads. The cab and • tracks were some 12 feet wide by 13 feet long with a boom and bucket attachment mounted forward, extensible to a length of approximately 18 feet from the cab. The normal method of operation with this type of equipment is to drop the bucket, which bites into the ground, and then pull it toward the cab, in the fashion of a man with a hoe. The cab can be rotated so that the bucket may be filled or emptied anywhere within the radius of the boom as extended by the arm of the bucket. From his seat in the cab of the particular unit in question the operator could see forward and to the sides, but had no means to see behind the cab unless he put his head out of the window to his left and looked back. There were two lights on the front side of the machine but none on the back.

Carlisle’s operator, Shields, arrived on the scene and began digging at about 9:30 or 9:45 P.M. After working for a few minutes from the north side of the excavation, and upon its being discovered that the break in the water main lay southward of the hole that had been dug, he switched the backhoe to the south side, with the boom pointing north. The tracks of the machine were positioned astraddle the grass plot and parallel with the highway, one in the westernmost vehicular traffic lane and the other on the sidewalk, partially blocking it but leaving open a narrow strip of the pavement bordered on the west by a sloping, terrace-like bank rising to an open field some 5 or 6 feet above street level. At approximately 10:45 P.M., while the digging operation continued in progess, the appellee, Ross, walking northward along the sidewalk from the tavern, encountered the backhoe in the dark and was injured. But before proceeding to describe the accident let us complete the physical setting and fill in the preliminary circumstances.

By the time the Carlisle equipment arrived one of the city officials in charge of the situation had placed a “Men Working” sign and barricade at the west edge of the highway about 100 yards north of the break in the water main. Another barricade was set a little farther south in the westernmost traffic lane. 10 or 12 kerosene lamps of the type known as “smudge pots” or “pot lamps” were arranged around these barricades and along the line between the first and second southbound lanes of the highway so as to direct the traffic on that side into a single lane and safely around the emergency work area. The line of lighted smudge pots extended southward to a point abreast or just beyond the location of the backhoe. Immediately behind and south of the backhoe a city truck was parked beside the west curb of the highway, facing south toward the tavern. On the bed of this truck was an air compressor providing the power to operate a jackhammer which, a few minutes before the accident, had been used to break up the frozen ground at the point of excavation and an adjacent portion of sidewalk.

Illumination for the work being done was furnished by three 500-watt portable lights powered by a gasoline motor and generator unit. One of these was used manually in front of the backhoe so as. to direct its beam into the excavation. The other two were separately placed several feet west of the sidewalk at an elevation of about 6 feet above the street level in the open field and were beamed toward the backhoe. (There was some confusion in the evidence- as to the exact [509]*509arrangement of these two lights, but the version adopted here seems least disadvantageous to the plaintiff’s case.) Also in the field, some 10 or 12 feet west of the sidewalk at a point opposite the boom of the backhoe, a fire had been kindled in a metal drum or barrel, around which the various observers and supervising officials on the scene gathered from time to time for warmth.

It is conceded that there were no lights, barriers or warning signals on the sidewalk to the south of the backhoe toward Fahrenholtz Cafe, nor was there a watchman or lookout to intercept an approaching pedestrian. The city did not have any street lights. There was, however, what must have been an appreciable amount of noise from the simultaneously running motors of the air compressor idling on the bed of the city truck, the gasoline-driven generator unit in the field, and the diesel-powered backhoe itself.

The appellee, Ross, was 32 years old and had 12 years of experience in construction work. He had been employed as a bulldozer operator on and off for 3 years preceding the date of the accident, but was unemployed at the time. He resided in the vicinity of Cold Spring somewhere to the south of Fahrenholtz Cafe. Having learned of the break in the water main, he and a friend, Dick Fehler, came to the cafe at about 1:00 P.M. hoping to obtain temporary employment in connection with the emergency. He left his car in the tavern parking lot and proceeded to watch the unsuccessful operations of the farm tractor all afternoon, retiring to the tavern 2 or 3 times in order to get warm. He did not, however, drink any alcoholic beverages during this time. Ross’s last trip to the tavern was made at about 5:30 P.M., just after the efforts to excavate with the tractor were given up as useless. At 6:00 P.M, Elmer Schultz, the mayor of Cold Spring, entered the tavern to use the telephone, and Ross asked about the possibility of helping with the work but was told that Carlisle had been called. On this occasion the mayor bought him the first three beers he admits having consumed over the course of the evening prior to the accident. Though he was “broke” and had no means to buy food or drink, Ross nevertheless .remained in the cafe steadily, and without again visiting the area of the broken main until about 10:30 P.M., when he decided it was time to go home. The evidence as to whether he was sober at this time being in conflict, the presumption here is that he was.

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358 S.W.2d 507, 1962 Ky. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cold-spring-v-ross-kyctapp-1962.