Hartman v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

146 P. 335, 94 Kan. 184, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1915
DocketNo. 19,222
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 146 P. 335 (Hartman v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartman v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 146 P. 335, 94 Kan. 184, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 66 (kan 1915).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Marshall, J.:

The plaintiff, Alice Hartman, recovered a judgment in the district court of Harper county, Kansas, against the railway company, for $800 damages for personal injuries caused by being knocked down and run over by a cow which had escaped from a car broken open in a collision. The defendant appeals.

Through the negligence of the defendant, a collision between two freight trains occurred on its road running east and west through the city of Harper. The [185]*185eastbound train was a special, with sixty-three cars, loaded with cattle. As a result of the collision several of these cattle cars were torn open and a number of cattle escaped therefrom into the city of Harper. The defendant employed several residents of Harper to gather up the escaped cattle and put them in the stockyards. One of these men was O’Connell. While these employees were gathering .up the cattle, one of them, a cow, charged the plaintiff, knocking her down and injuring her. For this injury she brought this action.

A better understanding of how this cow acted, and of what those driving her did, can be had by quoting somewhat from appellant’s abstract.

Mr. O’Connell testified:

. . . Mr. Elder, the station agent, employed me to get some of the cattle in. It was about half-past one. ... I joined in there to help get the cattle back. To get the cattle back we were out there until about 6:30, as near as I could judge. As we got the cattle in we put them in the stockyards. Put seven head in there. The rest got away in different directions while we were taking this bunch out there. One of the cows laid down and kind of sulked and we went on with the balance and put them in the yards. Then I came back to see where the cow was. In the meantime she got up and started down the street. I followed her right up horseback, and she was going down the street, and I was not looking for anything to occur much. I was right after her horseback when this old lady was coming up the sidewalk. I was two or three rods behind the cow, riding along, and just as the cow got even with this old lady she whirled and made a run right towards her, and run over her, and knocked her down. The cow had shown a little bad disposition before that. She made two or three dives at the horse and me like any cow will when they get riled up and go to driving them — get warmed up. Most any cow will. The cow was supposed to be western bred. I could not say where she came from. . . . When I first came down to the stockyards she charged at me, and I got out of the way. . . . There were sidewalks along the street. I was thirty or forty feet behind at the time she made this rush for the old lady. [186]*186I saw Mrs. Hartman coming along. ... I was on horseback. The cow was walking. I was not expecting her to run. I do not know if the fact that she had made some passes at me and my horse had anything to do with my staying so far behind. I was not particularly afraid of her at that time. I did not want to crowd her on. I was waiting for help. I felt at this time that I should have had more help with the cow. At the time I first s$w Mrs. Hartman she was walking on the sidewalk. . . . When the cow came up near to Mrs. Hartman she turned and ran at her, tore down the street and ran for her and struck her. Threw Mrs. Hartman down and run over her. The cow went on through the fence, over the fence, turned a somersault right over the fence. Had some speed up. She had been walking quietly along just prior to that time. I was as close as twenty feet to her anyhow. After she turned before she struck Mrs. Hartman she had to travel 25 or 30 feet, or about half way across the street. There was a fence right against the sidewalk. The cow struck Mrs. Hartman and ran over her and turned a complete somersault over the fence. It was done so quickly I could not tell. I knew she went over it, turned right over. I thought she was going to get up and make for the old lady, and I run right across and told her to make for the house. Then I drove my horse right across the sidewalk and the cow got over the fence and turned and went down the street. I judge it was about five o’clock. I did not assist Mrs. Hartman at all. Went after the cow. The cow went down the street, and there were some children on the street. I went on down to get them out of the road. Hollered to the children to get out of the road, and saw Mrs. Hartman get up and go into the house . . . and I was trying to follow this cow up and do all I could. The cow went down on a vacant lot and laid down. I did not get the cow back up to the stockyards. I was running a livery barn, and about 6:30 I had to go back to the barn. The other boys came along with a rope, and had better saddle horses than I had to take hold of her. . . . Before she ran over the plaintiff I had been driving her with the other cattle. When she dropped from the bunch she laid down beside the road. She was pretty scrappy before that, fought the horse and fought us. A .man named Jack Munger and I were [187]*187driving. After she quieted down she acted like any other cow would under the circumstances. We run them a good deal and got them warmed up, and they got mad. . . . This cow showed fight before she laid down. That was before she struck Mrs. Hartman.”

Sam Row testified:

“The cattle liberated were western cattle, long-horn cattle. I would call them wild and scrappy cattle. They were wild and savage.”

The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Several special questions were submitted to the jury and answer's returned, the material ones of which are as follows:

“1. Q. What, if any negligence, was the defendant guilty of that caused the injury to the plaintiff, if any injury the plaintiff received? A. Neglect to perform their duty in failing to turn switch which caused wreck and liberated cattle.

“6. Q. If the defendant’s negligence caused the injuries complained of, give the name or position of the employee or employees guilty of such negligence. A. Conductor.

“8. Q. Had the animal that ran over the plaintiff been passing quietly down the highway in front of O’Connell for several blocks, just prior to the time plaintiff was run over by said animal? A. No.

“9. Q. Was said animal passing down the highway quietly and in an ordinary walk, just prior to the time it ran over the plaintiff? A. Yes.

“10. Q. After the animal in question ran over the plaintiff, was it driven for some distance by O’Connell in an ordinary walk to a lot where it lay down? A. Yes.

“11. Q. Were the cattle that escaped what is known as white-faced cattle, (at least in the main) ? A. Yes.

“12. Q. If the cow that ran over the plaintiff was wild and dangerous, when did any representative of the defendant learn that fact? A. When said cow charged O’Connell.

“18. Q. Who, if any one, learned said cow was dangerous? A. O’Connell and Sam Noel.

“14. Q. Did the animal that ran over the plaintiff [188]*188belong to the species known as white-faced cattle? A. No.

“17. Q. What was the direct and immediate cause of the cow running over the plaintiff ? A. Because of a vicious disposition.

“18. Q. How long was it from the time the cattle escaped until the plaintiff was run over by the cow in question? A. About four (4) hours.

“19. Q Are what is known as white-faced cattle-wild, unruly or dangerous as a class ? A. Yes.

“20. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P. 335, 94 Kan. 184, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartman-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-kan-1915.