Graham's Admr. v. Illinois Central Railroad

215 S.W. 60, 185 Ky. 370, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 60 (Graham's Admr. v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Graham's Admr. v. Illinois Central Railroad, 215 S.W. 60, 185 Ky. 370, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 302 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

August 9,1916, a collision occurred at a suburban public crossing in the city of Mayfield between a passenger train of the appellee, Illinois Central Railroad Company, operated by its engineer, Gerry Jennings, and an automobile owned and operated by Lance Fox, containing, besides Fox, Ruth Martin, Queenie McClure and Z. C. Graham. The collision resulted in the wrecking of the automobile, the death of Queenie McClure and Z. C. Graham and the infliction of severe bodily wounds upon Ruth Martin. Lance Fox escaped injury.

February 14,1917, these three actions to recover damages for the deaths and physical injuries mentioned were brought against the appellee and its engineer, Jennings, in the McCracken circuit court; two of them by the personal representatives, respectively, of the estates of the persons killed, and the third by Ruth Martin, the injured survivor of the collision. The three cases were tried together in the court below, resulting in a separate verdict and judgment in each case for the appellees. The appellants jointly and severally filed in that court motion and grounds for a new trial, the overruling of which resulted in the taking of an appeal by each of the latter, and the three appeals having been submitted and heard together in the appellate court, will be decided and disposed of by this single opinion.

It appears from the evidence that the decedent, Queenie McClure, prior to and at the time of her death, was the keeper of a house of ill fame in the city of Paducah of which the appellant, Ruth Martin, and other women were inmates; that the decedent, Z. C. Graham was the paramour of and and resided with Queenie McClure, and that Lance Fox, who is a married man, the father of four children, and then and now a resident of Obion, Tennessee, by appointment, met Ruth Martin at Fulton, Kentucky, on the morning of August 8, 1916, to which place she had gone from Paducah by train, and [372]*372that day carried her in his automobile to Paducah where they spent the night at the home of Queenie McClure. At 3 o’clock p. m., August 9th, Fox, Ruth Martin, Queenie McClure and Z. C. Graham started on a trip in the automobile of Fox to Mayfield, carrying with them iu the machine a case of beer and one or more bottles of whiskey. According to the testimony of Fox it was the intention of his companions to leave him at Mayfield and return to Paducah that night on a train, and his purpose to go on in his machine from Mayfield to Fulton, thence to his home in Tennessee. But according to all the evidence as to what occurred after they reached Mayfield, they passed through the city and toward the Fulton road, in doing which' they arrived at the crossing where the accident occurred, which is situated within but near the corporate limits of Mayfield and is known as the * Pryorsburg Crossing. ’ ’

It is apparent from the evidence that all the occupants of the automobile were more or less intoxicated at the time of the collision and during the ride from Paducah.

Indeed, several saloons were visited and numerous drinks of whiskey or beer taken by Fox and Graham before the party left Paducah and down to the time of their departure; and it was admitted by the former that they carried with them from Paducah a case or box of bottled beer. In addition, it was shown by the testimony of a witness who met them on the road between Paducah and Mayfield, that all the party were hilarious and noisy; some of them drinking beer and others waiving bottles as they passed him, and that their automobile was running in such a zizgag manner from one side of the road to the other, that the witness moved the automobile in which he was riding off the road to avoid a collision with it. Another witness driving a bull on the highway met the party near Mayfield, and according to his testimony their automobile continued unsteady in its occupancy of the road and they were still noisy from intoxication. Yet another witness who saw the party within a short distance of the crossing and immediately before the collision, testified as to their intoxication and was offered by one of them a bottle of beer. The foregoing evidence as to the intoxication of Fox and his associates is given strong support by the presence at the place of the accident and [373]*373under or about the wrecked automobile of the bottles of beer and whiskey, many of them broken, that were seen immediately after the accident by numerous witnesses whose testimony was given on the trial.

If further evidence of the intoxicated condition of Fox and Euth Martin at the time of the accident could be regarded necessary, it may be found in the testimony of the several persons who saw and talked with them after they were taken on the train following the accident.

The petitions rest appellants’ right to recover the damages claimed upon the ground that the collision resulting in the deaths and injuries complained of was caused by the alleged negligence of appellees’ servants in charge of the train in failing: (1) to warn the occupants of ihe automobile of the approach of the train by the giving of the usual signals for the crossing; (2) failing to keep a lookout for persons on the crossing, and in running the train at such unsafe and dangerous speed as prevented reasonable control thereof by those in charge of the train.

The negligence thus charged was put in issue in each case by appellees’ answer, as were the answers and averments of contributory negligence on the part of the two decedents and the appellant, Euth Martin, by the denials of the reply. The evidence introduced in appellants’ behalf tended to prove that the crossing in question is an unusually dangerous one; that for a distance of,two hundred or more feet before reaching the crossing the occupants of the automobile of Fox, on account of an intervening eminence of the ground beginning at and extending southward from the crossing, were unable to obtain a view of the train causing the collision before running the automobile upon the crossing; that before reaching the crossing the train either gave no signal, or was heard to give none, for the crossing by sounding its whistle or ringing its bell; that it ran at an unusual and dangerous rate of speed. ■ The appellant, Euth Martin, and also Fox, testified that just before going upon the crossing, the former fixing the distance at twenty and the latter at ten feet from' the crossing, the automobile was stopped by Fox for the purpose of ascertaining whether a train was coming; but it seems apparent from his testimony and that of. an onlooker several hundred [374]*374yards distant, that the stop was but for a moment and caused by the attempt of Fox by manipulation of its machinery to give such additional power to the oar as would enable it to pass up the sharply ascending grade to reach the crossing, rather than to give opportunity foi the occupants to hear the coming of a train. At any rate .it is quite probable that the noise caused by the putting on of the additional power for propelling the car up the grade was sufficient to drown any sound made by the coming of the train, and the testimony of the three witnesses referred to was to the further effect that immediately after its brief stop, the car ran rapidly to and upon the crossing but was unable to leave it before it was struck by the engine of the train.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mossbarger's Adm'x v. Louisville & N. R.
130 S.W.2d 54 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Byars
25 S.W.2d 733 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Louisville N. R. Co. v. Curtis' Administrator
25 S.W.2d 398 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Curtis' Administrator
233 Ky. 276 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1929)
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Foster
18 S.W.2d 983 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)
Black Star Coal Co. v. Slusher's Administrator
299 S.W. 732 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)
Farrar v. Hank
265 S.W. 487 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1924)
Barksdale's Administrator v. Southern Railway Co.
251 S.W. 656 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1923)
Waller v. Lee County
220 S.W. 1071 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 60, 185 Ky. 370, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grahams-admr-v-illinois-central-railroad-kyctapp-1919.