Claxton's Administrator v. Lexington & Big Sandy R. R.

76 Ky. 636, 13 Bush 636, 1878 Ky. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 26, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 76 Ky. 636 (Claxton's Administrator v. Lexington & Big Sandy R. R.) 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
Claxton's Administrator v. Lexington & Big Sandy R. R., 76 Ky. 636, 13 Bush 636, 1878 Ky. LEXIS 13 (Ky. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE LINDSAY

delivered the opinion oe the court.

The Lexington & Big Sandy Railroad Company (Eastern Division), in addition to its corporate right to construct and operate a line of railway, has special authority to hold and own real estate, and to mine coal and other minerals, and to transport the products of its mines over branch roads, switches, inclines, and connections to its main line for shipment. Pursuant to this special authority the company opened, and has for some years been working, a coal-mine at Kilgore’s, in Boyd County. The entrance to this mine is two hundred and sixty-eight feet from the line of railway, and is connected with it by an inclined tramway of two tracks. The incline is one hundred and sixty-four feet in length, and the descent is at the rate of thirty-five feet in one hundred. There is a stretch of level track at the lower end of the tramway ninety-four feet in length. The elevation at the lower terminus is twenty-three feet above the bed of the main line of railway. Directly opposite the lower terminus, and sixty feet distant, there stands a small tenement-house, the property of the company, which, at the time of the injury herein complained of, was occupied as a residence by one Robert Claxton and family. Claxton was an employee of the company, and. occupied this house as its tenant.

In the year 1875 a car loaded with coal became detached from its fastenings, (by the breaking of an iron hook) when on the incline, and but a few feet from the entrance to the mine. It ran down the incline, and along the tramway to its lower terminus, and was precipitated over the twenty-three-[639]*639feet “tip" and then ran against the house of Claxton and killed instantaneously his wife and one of his children, who were at the time in the doorway fronting the railroad. The appellant was appointed the administrator of the deceased child, a boy six years of age. He instituted this action against the company to recover damages under the provisions of sections 1 and 3, chapter 57, General Statutes. He avers that his intestate was killed by appellee while pursuing its business as the proprietor of a railroad, and that the death was the direct result of the willful neglect of its servants and agents.

An issue on the question of negligence was formed by the pleadings, and after the evidence offered by the appellant had been heard, the court below instructed the jury to find for the company. The propriety of that ruling is now before this court for revision.

In Case’s adm’r v. the Railroad Co. (9 Bush, 728), in the construction of sections 1 and 3 of the act of March 10,1854, which were substantially the same with sections 1 and 3, chapter 57/General Statutes, it was held that the allegation of willful neglect, in an action pf this character, includes all inferior degrees of negligence, and that if the complainant fails to establish his right to punitive damages by proving willful neglect, he may, nevertheless, upon proof of culpable neglect, recover compensatory damages, if the defendant be the proprietor of a railroad, and the deceased was not at the time of the injury in his'or its employ. But we are satisfied the 1st section does not apply to the facts of this case. It is true the appellee is the proprietor of a railroad, and it is also true that the deceased was not in its employ at the time he was killed. But the proof shows that the work being carried on by the appellee, at the time and place the accident or killing occurred, was not in its nature or character incident to or part of the regular and usual business of the proprietor of a railroad.

[640]*640The legislature has seen proper to invest this company with a two-folcl character. For the purpose of constructing and operating a line of railway, it is a railroad company; but for the purpose of mining, and of delivering the products of its mines on the line of the railway for shipment, it is a mining company; and the tramway and cars in useaat the time the alleged negligent killing was done, are the usual and necessary attachments to mining operations, and were in no sense incidents to the railroad owned by the appellee. The agents and servants in charge of the tramway were engaged in mining operations, and not in managing, controlling, or operating the company’s railway. It follows, therefore, that while the appellant is able to bring his case within the letter of the section in question, it is evidently a case not contemplated by its provisions. There is no more reason why the appellee should be compelled to answer, as the proprietor of a railroad, for an injury caused by the negligent management of a tramway attached to its mines, than that it should be required to answer for the death of a party, resulting from the negligence of its agents or servants while engaged in prospecting for coal, iron, or other minerals on some of its lands wholly disconnected from and not even bordering on its line of railway.

But the third section of the act does not confine the right of recovery to cases in which the death results from the negligence of the servants or agents of proprietors of railroads. It provides, that if the life be lost or destroyed by the willful neglect of another person or persons, company or companies, corporation or corporations, their agents or servants, the widow, heir, or personal representative of the deceased shall have the right to sue and recover punitive damages for the loss or destruction of the life aforesaid.

This branch of the case presents two questions: Whether from the evidence, treating it all as true, and giving the appellant the benefit of every inference which can be fairly drawn [641]*641from the circumstances in proof, the jury could reasonably have found that the agents or servants of the company were guilty of willful neglect? and if so, whether it can escape liability under the statute, on the ground that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence?

The fixtures and attachments of the tramway in use by the •company were not of the most modern and approved character. The wire rope intended to control the movements of the car, which broke loose at the time of the killing, was coiled on a drum that ought to have been and was not placed in or opposite to the center of the track. The consequence of this defective arrangement was that the wire did not uncoil in a direct line, and that the strain on the iron hook by which it was fastened to the car was much increased, and the hook thereby rendered more liable to be broken. There were no flanges or “elects” on the rim of the drum to prevent the wire rope from falling over its edge.

We are not prepared to say that, considering all these facts, the jury might not, with some show of reason, have concluded that the rope did fall over the edge of the drum, and that the iron hook was broken by the sudden strain or jerk resulting from the check thus given to the speed of the rapidly-descending car. Under ordinary circumstances the proof in question would establish nothing more than simple neglect by the company to use proper precautions to guard against injuries to persons who might be casually exposed to possible danger, and would fail to establish the degree of culpability mentioned in the statute. But it was further in proof that the company had made no provision whatever to arrest the progress of a car that might become detached from the wire ropes intended to control its movements, and that it was not only possible but usual to provide against such accidents by the.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Ky. 636, 13 Bush 636, 1878 Ky. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claxtons-administrator-v-lexington-big-sandy-r-r-kyctapp-1878.