Gray v. Golden

192 S.W.2d 371, 301 Ky. 477, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 751
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 18, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 192 S.W.2d 371 (Gray v. Golden) 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
Gray v. Golden, 192 S.W.2d 371, 301 Ky. 477, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 751 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Dawson

Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment in two consolidated cases for damages on account of personal injuries received by Betty Louise Golden, an infant six years of age, and medical and other expenses as a result of an accident in which Mrs. James H. Gray, wife of the appellant, ran over the little Golden girl.

On July 16, 1944, Mrs. Gray had driven her automobile to the grocery for the purpose of getting some sandwiches for the evening meal. The Grays and the Goldens live next door to each other on Kentucky Street in Bowling Green. There is a driveway between the two Louses which is owned by the Grays, the Golden driveway being on the far side of the Golden house. As Mrs. ■Gray was proceeding out the driveway she saw a large cardboard box, or carton, in the driveway, and stopped .and removed it, together with some pots and pans which biad been left there by some children who had been playing at that place. As she entered her driveway, when returning, she saw that the cardboard box, or carton, was again in the driveway, but instead of stopping and again removing it she proceeded to run over it. The little Golden girl was playing inside the box and the right wheels of Mrs. Gray’s automobile ran over the child, breaking her leg and pelvis bone and otherwise *479 injuring her. Mrs. Gray immediately telephoned her husband who came home and took the Golden child to the hospital where she remained eleven days. These injuries caused the child to be confined to her home some three or four weeks, and resulted in a shortening of one leg which the medical testimony shows to be permanent.

The trial resulted in a verdict of $1,500 on account of the injuries, and $243.70 on account of medical expenses. As grounds for reversal appellant urges that the petitions were defective and that demurrers to them should have been sustained; that the instructions were erroneous and that the court should have directed a verdict in his favor.

The petitions properly charge negligent operation of the automobile by Mrs. Gray and there is no merit in the contention that the demurrers should have been sustained.

It is vigorously contended that Betty' Louise Golden was a trespasser and that no duty was owed to her until after the discovery of her peril. It is true that trespassing children occupy the same position as trespassing adults, with the exception of the “attractive place” doctrine, and that the general rule is that no duty' is owed to a child trespasser until after discovery' of the pexll. See Ice Delivery Co. v. Thomas, 290 Ky. 230, 160 S. W. 2d 605. However, in detenninixxg the question as to whether or not the ixxstructioxxs given were prejudicial it is xxecessaxy that referexxce be xnade to the testimony introduced at the trial.

It appears from the evidence that Bettyr Louise Golden, lxer sister Shirley, and a xxeighborhood child, Marie Neighbors, had been playing “house” ixx the Gray driveway, using a large box, or cartoxx, as their “house.” They' had their supper about 6:30 and had beexx playing approximately one-lxalf hour at the time of the accidexxt. The plaintiff below offered all three of the childrexi as witnesses, but the court, after an examination of thexix, refused to permit Betty Louise axxd the Neighbors girl, who was also six years of age, to testify'. He properly' allowed Shirley Goldexx, who was eight years of age, to testify. She testified that she heard Mrs. Gray’s automdbile turn into the driveway and that she jumped xxp and “hollered” at Mrs. Gray and threw up her hands, *480 but that Mrs. Gray paid no attention and continued up the driveway.

Mrs. Gray denied that she saw the children before the accident or that Shirley Golden attempted to stop her before she ran over the box. However, we think that her testimony shows that she knew the children had been playing with the cardboard box in her driveway. This is indicated by the following excerpts:

‘ ‘ 118. These children had been accustomed to playing in that driveway, had they not? A. They had not.

“119. You say you had seen that paper carton before. Where was that? A. Just before I went out I cleaned my drive. That was the first time I had taken the things out of my drive. They had been playing out there.

“120. Did that cardboard carton belong to you? A. No.

“121. Where did it come from when you saw it before? A. The children had had it.

“122. You saw it when you went out. A. No, I didn’t.

“123. When did you see the carton? A. When I started to go out to the grocery. -They had been playing out there.

“124. In the driveway? A. Yes.

“125. When you went to the grocery? A. Yes.

“126. And they were playing with this same carton, weren’t they? A. They were not out there at the time.

“127. But they had been just before that, hadn’t they? A. The carton was out there and I removed it, see, as well as some pans and other things they had in the drive; but I didn’t see the children.

“128. But they had played in the drive shortly before you left, hadn’t they? A. From the evidence I saw they had been there, but I didn’t see them.

“129. Before you left? A. Before I left.

“130. So you knew at the time you drove out of the driveway that they had pulled this carton and some other things into the driveway before you left, because *481 you cleaned it out before you left, didn’t you? A. I did.

# # * # # &

“191. Did you -see this cardboard box when you ran into that driveway? A. I did.

“192. You knew, of course, that you had taken it out before you left? A. Yes.

“193. You knew that somebody, within that short period of time, just while you were gone, had brought it back out there, didn’t you? A. Sure.

“194. You knew it didn’t walk out there? A. Yes.

“195. You knew those children had been playing-out there immediately before you left, didn’t you? A. Well, I had evidence.

“196. I say, you knew it? A. Yes.

“206. Did you know there was nothing under that hox? A. If a cardboard box was laying there I thought, ‘Well, it won’t make any difference if the car runs over it.’

“207. But it wasn’t lying up there, was it? It was angled up, wasn’t it? A. Yes.

“208. Did you give any thought to the fact that there might be a child under it? A. No, I did not, because I had had no occasion to see a child under it.

“209. Did you even think that a dog might be under it? A. No.

“210. And you, knowing it was there, deliberately drove over it. Is that right? A. I saw it there and I ran over it.

“211. And you knew you were going to run over it? A. Sure.

“212. You could have stopped? A. Oh, sure.

“213. You could have stopped the car and taken it out just like you did before you left, couldn’t you? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.W.2d 371, 301 Ky. 477, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-golden-kyctapphigh-1945.