Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Peebles

287 S.W. 574, 216 Ky. 9, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 880
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 25, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 574 (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Peebles) 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
Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Peebles, 287 S.W. 574, 216 Ky. 9, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 880 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

Appellee, Katy Peebles, was a guest in the automobile of John R. Summers as it was driven by him over *10 and across the tracks of the appellant railroad company at the Filmore crossing near Wickliffe, Carlisle county, on August 2, 1924, when the car was struck by a passen- ■ ger train of appellant company causing the injury of apu pellee, Peebles, which is the basis of this action by her for damages. A jury returned a verdict in her favor for $2,000.00, and the railroad company appeals.

Many grounds are relied upon by the company for a reversal of the judgment, among them (a) there was no negligence on the part of the company, but the appellee and those with whom she was traveling were guilty of negligence resulting in her injury; (b) the' evidence does not show the crossing to have been extrahazardous and it was in the country far from buildings or other obstructions, hence no extra precautionary duty was required of it; and (c) appellant company was entitled to a directed verdict in its favor, and the instructions given by the court to the jury were erroneous in several particulars. Appellee and her friends were traveling by automobile from Cairo to Wickliffe. Appellant company operates a line of railroad between these two points, and it parallels the highway. About midway between Wickliffe and East Cairo is a crossing at grade known in the record as “Filmore crossing.” The country generally is level, and the railroad is upon. an embankment, some twenty feet or more above the surrounding country. The highway runs on the east side of the railroad tracks from East Cairo to Filmore .crossing, and there crosses the tracks and continues southward parallel with the railroad tracks, but on the west side thereof. The train which struck the automobile and injured appellee was running north at the rate of about fifty miles per hour, and it was on time. It is appellee Peebles’ contention that Filmore crossing was an unusually dangerous one, made .so by reason of the surrounding trees, shrubbery, weeds and other vegetation, which had grown up near and along the railroad track on the embankment so as to obstruct the view of the traveler upon the highway approaching the crossing, and much of her evidence is directed to proving that the crossing was an extrahazardous one, while the evidence for the railroad company tends to prove that the 'crossing was nothing more than an ordinary country crossing, free from obstructions and not extrahazardous; that there were no trees, shrubs, weeds or vegetation upon the railroad embankment which obstructed the view of the *11 traveler upon the highway or which cut oft her view of a train approaching' the crossing. It is also the contention of appellee, Peebles, that the highway at the crossing was a much frequented one both by pedestrians and persons traveling by automobile, and that it was the duty of the railroad company under such circumstances and surrounding conditions to exercise a higher degree of care at the crossing to prevent injury to travelers upon the highway. The railroad company undertakes to minimize the travel upon the highway and spiritedly challenges the correctness of appellee Peebles’ contention that the crossing was extrahazardous, or that the company was under a duty, to exercise added care commensurate with the extrahazardous conditions to'avoid injuring persons upon the highway at the crossing. Appellee, Peebles, in substance testified that when the automobile was 140 feet from the crossing, and just as it was about to start up the grade over the railroad embankment, stopped and she and other occupants in the car looked both ways, up and down the railroad track, as far as they could see for intervening trees and vegetation and listened for the noise of an approaching train 'and for signals but saw no train1 or smoke from a train or heard any signal or noise of an approaching train, and that she and others in the car continued to look out the windows of the car to see if a train was approaching and to listen for signals and other noises of the approach of a train, but that she neither saw nor heard a train approaching nor was aware that a train was about to reach the crossing until the automobile passed inside of the right of way fence and was within two or three feet of the rails of the track when, for the first time, an alarm signal -was given by the -whistle of the train approaching the crossing and only about fifty feet therefrom, which signal caused the driver of the automobile to suddenly stop his car before it went on to the tracks, and at a distance far enough away from the tracks that the engine passed the automobile without touching it, but the automobile was struck by the steps and air holes of the tender, thrown around and damaged, causing the painful injury of appellee, Peebles. She is supported in her evidence by that of Mr. Summers, the driver of the car, and other persons in the car, all testifying that they heard no signal of the approach of the train although they stopped and listened and kept a sharp lookout for trains as they went up the grade of the railroad embankment towards the crossing. *12 These same witnesses testified unequivocally that the railroad company had allowed the wire fence along its right of way to become covered with vines, weeds and other vegetation and the right of way along and near the crossing to become overgrown with trees and shrubs to such an extent as to obstruct the view of the traveler upon the highway looking south for on-coming trains and that a train approaching from the south could not be seen from the highway at that time by one occupying an automobile, as was appellee, until within a very few feet of the rails of the railroad track on the crossing. The engineer in charge of the train testified that he gave the statutory crossing signals fifty (50) reds back from the crossing and set the automatic bell ringer in operation, and that the bell rang continuously for fifty rods as it approached the crossing and was ringing at the time the train collided with the automobile. In this evidence he was supported by other trainmen and persons upon the train. He also testified that he could plainly see the automobile as - it came along the highway and as it turned up the incline to the crossing, but he did not think the -automobile was coming on to the track. The evidence given by the trainmen indicated that the crossing was'not and is not an extrahazardous one, but merely an ordinary country crossing. Upon this point the evidence was in great conflict, making it a question of fact for the jury.

It is well settled in this jurisdiction that a grade crossing which is unusually dangerous by reason of obstruction to sight or hearing, even though in the country, places-upon both the railroad company and the highway traveler the duty of exercising care .commensurate with the danger of the crossing. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Locker’s Admr., 182 Ky. 578. At a public crossing the railroad company and the highway traveler.are under mutual and reciprocal duties- of exercising care to avoid giving or receiviiig injury, and where the crossing is extrahazardous, an increased duty devolves upon each to protect himself and the other from harm in exact .proportion to the increase of the danger. Piersall, Admr. v. C. & O. R. Co., 180 Ky. 659.

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 574, 216 Ky. 9, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-co-v-peebles-kyctapphigh-1926.