Donahue v. Louisville N. R. Co.

118 S.W.2d 716, 274 Ky. 364, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 270
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 24, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 716 (Donahue v. Louisville N. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donahue v. Louisville N. R. Co., 118 S.W.2d 716, 274 Ky. 364, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 270 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

At about 3:30 o’clock A. M. on December 16, 1935, Robert W. Slater, alias Robert W. Donahue, who was about 25 years of age, was driving a 1935 Ford sedan automobile east on Main Street in the city of Louisville, and while doing so it collided with the tender of a freight engine that at the time was switching some freight cars across Main Street, traveling north on the most eastern of four railroad tracks running north and south through and upon 14th Street which crossed Main Street at right angles. The collision produced injuries to the driver of the automobile from the effects of which he died shortly thereafter. His mother, the appellant, Mabel Donahue, qualified as his administratrix and later filed this action in the Jefferson circuit court against appellees and defendants below, Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, and Pennsylvania Railroad Company (the latter owning the railroad tracks over which its lessee, Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company was at the time operating its switch train), to recover damages sustained by decedent’s estate because of his alleged negligently produced death, by which his estate was deprived of his power to earn money.

Plaintiff’s petition described the premises the movements of her decedent in driving the car, as well as that of the train with which it collided; the time of day the accident occurred; the direction in which the two involved transportation facilities were traveling, etc., and then charged as grounds for the right of recovery: “That defendants, Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company and Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and each of them, with gross negligence and carelessness, failed to use proper safeguards or to give timely warning of the approach of said train to said crossing at said time and place, thereby causing said train and plaintiff’s intestate’s automobile to collide, as a result *366 of which collision plaintiff's said intestate sustained injuries which caused the death of her said intestate within two hours after receiving said injuries.” The separate answers of defendant denied all guilty allegations of the petition, and interposed in a separate paragraph the defense of contributory negligence, which was denied by reply, thus forming the issues. At the trial defendants at the close of plaintiff’s testimony moved the court for a directed verdict in their behalf, which motion was sustained, followed by a verdict as directed, and the petition was dismissed. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled — followed by this appeal by her.

The only act of negligence to which plaintiff directed any of her testimony, and the only one argued on this appeal, was the alleged failure of the provided safeguard automatic gates across Main Street, to properly function, (or rather the one on the west side of the track to do so) upon the occasion of the accident, and which failure — according to counsels’ argument — was the proximate cause of the fatal collision. The proof heard, and the argument of counsel so made, narrowed the averments of the petition in charging that defendants “failed to use proper safeguards or to give timely warning of the approach of said train to said crossing.” (Our italics.) Not a breath of evidence is found throughout the record of any failure on the part of defendants to give warning of the approach of the train to the crossing. The only ground urged in support of the negligence charged in the petition, we repeat, was and is the failure of the safeguarding gate on the west side of the railroad tracks to be down at the time deceased approached the intersection on the occasion of the collision. No eye-witness testified in the case, and the only testimony heard at the trial was directed towards the proof of partially established facts from which the main guilty fact could, as insisted, be inferred, and which guilty fact was the failure of the west gates to be down.

The train with which the collision was made by the decedent’s automobile was traveling north on 14th Street; while he was traveling east on Main Street. There were four tracks in 14th Street and the train was upon the extreme east one, moving backwards with the tender of the engine in front, and the automobile *367 struck the side of it somewhere between its center and its front end next to the engine. The rear end of the tender had partially passed over Main Street with the coupling between it and the engine near the point where one traveling on the right side of Main Street, going in the direction that. decedent was moving, would collide with the train somewhere near that coupling. No obstructions of any kind prevented his seeing the approach of the train for a considerable distance, or its entry upon the intersection before he arrived at 14th Street, either in the way of houses, embankments, trees, shrubbery, or of any other kind or nature. No one who testified (none of the train crew being introduced) discovered the happening of the accident until sometime thereafter when it was found that the automobile was to a great extent demolished and that its driver was seriously injured beyond the possibility of recovery. At the time of such belated discovery the gates on both sides of 14th Street were up; but perhaps thirty minutes or more had elapsed since the accident.

Either the next morning or a day or two thereafter (it being immaterial which), witnesses examined the west gate supposed to automatically close Main Street on that side, and it was found to be intact. It consisted of two upright levers made of wood so constructed as that they would lower upon the approach of a train to the crossing, and their upper ends would practically meet when stretched longitudinally across the street. The lever on the south side of Main street appears to have been longer than the one on the north side, and it (the one on the south side), and perhaps, also the one on the north side, was composed of three separate pieces of timber. The first one (at the base) served as a guard across the sidewalk; the second one extended some distance out into the street and from thence forward there was a third piece of timber which it is claimed by defendants (and not denied by plaintiff) was made of cypress which was much thinner and narrower than the other pieces of timber making up the lever for one half of the gate, and which also is more pliable. "When lowered to their serving capacity the two levers occupied a longitudinal position five feet from the ground; while the automobile, from the ground to the highest part of its top, was five feet and seven inches. A picture of it introduced at the trial showed that its front part, containing the windshield and extending *368 from the inner end of the hood to the top of the automobile, was obliquely constructed at an angle of something like forty-five degrees; so that the two levers forming the gate would be, if down, contacted by the automobile upon that slanting surface at a point seven inches below the top of the automobile bed. It is also shown that the parts of the levers (forming the gate) that would be so contacted were the ones made of the more pliable and tough cypress timber. However, neither of the levers was broken, nor were any scratches found on the surface of any part of the automobile bed indicating a contact with any object.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 716, 274 Ky. 364, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donahue-v-louisville-n-r-co-kyctapphigh-1938.