Conley v. Ennis' Administrator

185 S.W. 501, 170 Ky. 125, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 10, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 501 (Conley v. Ennis' Administrator) 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
Conley v. Ennis' Administrator, 185 S.W. 501, 170 Ky. 125, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 16 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Turner.

Reversing the first named and affirming the last named appeal.

On Friday afternoon, November 22nd, 1912, between half past five and six o’clock, John Ennis, a boy seven years old, was killed at his home on Western avenue in Covington, by the explosion of a dynamite cap. ;

This is an action by his father, as administrator, against Joseph Conley, J. J. Weaver, Charles P. Devon, Jacob Auer, and C. E. Harris wherein it is alleged that the defendants during the month of November, 1912, were engaged in the work of constructing and improving certain roadways and driveways in a park in the city of Covington near his residence, and that his said son, John Ennis, came to his death by reason of the gross negligence of the defendants in- the handling and transportation of dynamite caps, and in their negligent manner of keeping and storing the same, which were being used by them in such road construction work, by reason of which negligence the said cap came into the possession of the infant John Ennis, who was totally ignorant of its dangerous and deadly character, and which, without fault upon his part, exploded and killed him.

Conley, Weaver and Harris each .filed separate answers, and Devon and Auer, filed their joint answer, in each of which the material allegations of the petition were denied and contributory negligence pleaded.

[126]*126On the trial, at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the court, upon motion, directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendants Weaver, Harris, Devou and Auer, hut overruled a' similar motion made at the time by Conley, and again overruled Conley’s motion for a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence.

A verdict in favor of the plaintiff against Conley was returned upon which judgment was entered; Conley filed his motion and grounds for a new trial and the plaintiff filed his motion and grounds for a new trial as against Weaver, Devou and Auer, and both motions having been overruled, a judgment was entered on the verdict and Conley is prosecuting this appeal from the judgment against him, and the administrator is prosecuting an appeal from the action of the court in directing a verdict for Weaver, Devou and Auer.

First: Considering the Conley appeal, the plaintiff’s evidence showed that Conley had a contract for the construction of several miles of roadway through a park in the western portion of the city of Covington, the contract covering two roads through the park, one running north and south and the other east and west. The north and south roadway was first constructed and had been completed a few days prior to the 22nd of November; in its construction a stone-crusher was operated by means of an electric motor, and that motor was housed in what is referred to in the evidence as, a “motor house,” which was really a rough box twelve or fourteen feet long, five or six feet high and four or five feet wide, built on a wagon frame so that it might be removed from place to place. It was used not only for housing the motor but for the storing of tools and equipment used in the work, including explosives.

At the completion of the north and south roadway this motor house was at the north end of the roadway at the northern entrance to the park and it was necessary to remove it to the eastern entrance to the park to begin work on the east and west roadway, a distance of a mile or more from its then location. Although this motor house belonged to the city or park commissioners it was at the time under the control of Conley, and it was his duty to remove it to the desired point. One of his employes hitched a team to this portable motor house and removed it, not through the park, but around 'the park to the eastern entrance, and in doing so it was necessary to [127]*127drive some distance southward on Western avenne in the city of Covington, along which it had to pass the home of the Ennis boy, which was between 2nd and 3rd streets on that avenue, the eastern entrance, the objective point, being some distance further south at or near a point where 8th street would have intersected the park if it had gone through there. The evidence does not show the distance from the Ennis home or 2nd or 3rd streets to this eastern entrance of the park, but there are references in it to 2nd and 3rd streets and to 6th, 7th and 8th streets, or to the point where those streets, if extended, would intersect the park. Because, therefore, of this very unsatisfactory condition of the record, the exact distance cannot be stated, but it is apparent that from the Ennis home to the eastern entrance of the park is as much as three or four or more squares.

This motor house was driven along western avenue in the forenoon on the Tuesday preceding the death of the Ennis boy on Friday; in the rear end of this motor house was a door some two or three feet wide, and the whole theory of the plaintiff’s case is based upon the idea that that door was swinging open as it was driven by the Ennis home and that the dynamite caps, afterward found about opposite that home a few feet outside of the curbing in a vacant lot used as a dump for trash by persons in the neighborhood, had fallen out through this open door so carelessly permitted to swing open. In the motor house was a part of a box of dynamite and a part of a box of dynamite caps, together with the motor and certain other equipment and tools used in the work.

Whether the case should have been submitted to the jury as against Conley depends wholly upon the evidence of three witnesses, Harry Miller, James Dorsey and Mrs. Ida Kelly, for if their evidence does not sufficiently connect the death of the boy with the negligence of Conley there should have been a directed verdict.

Harry Miller testifies that in November, 1912, he was working for C. E. Harris on Western avenue about 7th street near the eastern entrance to the park; that on the Tuesday morning before the, death of the boy between eight and nine o’clock the motor house passed along where he was at work drawn by. a pair of horses; that it was stopped at about 7th street or 8th street, or where the latter street would have been if it ha.d extended through, and remained there that day, that night and [128]*128until the following: afternoon; that the rear’ door of the1 motor house, was open when' it passed where he was at work and that he saw through that door'the motor in it, some oil and belting, a part of a box' of dynamite, and a1 plart of a box of dynamite caps, some tools and old clothing in the motor house; that there, were twenty-five or more dynamite caps in the box which he saw and there; were some lying on the floor of the motor house; that he. reached in the motor house and picked up one of the dynamite caps and handed it to another workman, Dorsey,' who exploded it on the curbing; that when he left work, that evening the door to the motor house was still open;, that when the motor house passed where he was at work he walked behind it for about 100 feet to the point where, it was stopped and where it remained for the night, but, that he saw nothing fall out of it. On cross-examination' he' stated that the point where the motor house was left for the night was at a point where 8th street would be if it went through, and that the box containing the caps, which he saw in the motor house, was about four inches square and an inch high and had either'red paper or paint on it and had no top on it, and that an old man drove it up there with a sorrel team.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 501, 170 Ky. 125, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conley-v-ennis-administrator-kyctapp-1916.