Interstate Coal Co. v. Love

155 S.W. 746, 153 Ky. 323, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 841
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 22, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 746 (Interstate Coal Co. v. Love) 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
Interstate Coal Co. v. Love, 155 S.W. 746, 153 Ky. 323, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 841 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Turner

Reversing.

Appellant operates a coal mine in Knox County, and appellee, an infant, then seventeen years of age, employed hy it, was in September, 1911, injured, and instituted this action for damages, alleging that his injury was caused by the negligence of appellant.

Appellee had at the time of the injury for some months been employed in certain minor capacities in the mine; and upon a few occasions while so employed, he had in the absence of the regular motorman, operated one of appellant’s electric motor cars, which it used in the operation of its mines.

On the day of the accident the regular motorman of motor car number three, either having refused to further operate that car, or for some other reason not being in charge of it, the mine foreman directed appellee to take charge of it, run it through the mountain to the other side where appellant maintained a shop for the repair of its motors and cars, and there to have it examined, and if anything was wrong with it, to have it repaired, and then bring it back and go to work.

Following these instructions, appellee took the car through the mountain to the repair shops, and there the same was, as he says, examined, and he was told by the electrician in charge that there was nothing the matter with it, and to take it on back and go to work. He started back through the mountain operating the motor, two other workmen going with him; when they had gone 'some 400 or 500 yards, and while in the mine and running at a reasonable rate, there was 'a flash of fire at or near the motor, and near his feet, and a blaze emitted therefrom about three feet high which burned his clothes and legs. He attempted, as he says, to shut oft the power with the controller, but was unable to do so, and he then undertook to reach up and pull down the pole connected with the overhead wire and shut off the power in that way, but was unable to do that; in reaching up for the pole, he knocked off his cap, and the light from his miner’s [325]*325lamp was put ont. He then undertook to jump out of the car, and in doing so his foot was caught between the rail and the wheel of the motor car and run over, and his heel was cut off, and badly mashed and crushed.

On the trial he was awarded a verdict of $1,250 in 'damages, and the company appeals.

Some two or three months after the accident, one of appellant’s agents went to the home of appellee’s father, and there entered into" a written contract which was signed by the father, mother and the infant appellee, by the terms of which the company in consideration of $75 that day paid to the father released appellant from all further liability by reason of the injury.

The uncontradicted testimony showed that appellee was only seventeen years of age at the time he signed this writing, and that the whole consideration paid was to the father, and the court therefore properly directed the jury upon the trial that the infant was not bound by the contract, and not to consider the evidence which had been submitted on that question.

It is urged, however, .by appellant that it should at least have been entitled to a credit on the judgment for the amount of this payment; but it is sufficient to say that there was no pleading justifying this, and not even an instruction offered on that subject. And besides, the father to whom the payment was made had a right of action against appellant for the loss of his infant son’s services, and the money having been paid to him, this payment could only be properly pleaded in an action by him.

In his original petition appellee sets up the negligence upon which he relies for a recovery, as

(1) That he being an infant, and without experience in the use and operation of electric motor cars, it was the duty of the defendant’s agents superior in authority to him to give him instructions relative to the use and operation thereof, and warn him of the danger incident to its operation, and that they failed to do either of these things; and
(2) That the wires and devices attached thereto for the purpose of transmitting the electric power necessary to its operation were worn by long usage, and were out of repair, and not in proper condition for operation, and therefore, it was dangerous to operate the car in that condition, and these facts were known to the Company, or should have been, and were unknown to the plaintiff; [326]*326and that it was negligence for the mine foreman knowing this condition of the car to direct him, an infant, not knowing its condition, to operate it.

In an amended petition appellee alleges that “plaintiff hereby reiterates and adopts all the statements in the original petition necessary to make this amendment complete, and says that all the injuries sued upon in the original petition were caused through and by the gross negligence and carelessness of the defendant, its agents, servants and employees, superior in authority to this plaintiff in furnishing plaintiff with a car in which the motor was dangerous and unsafe, and in directing plaintiff to work at and on said car while the motor was in such an unsafe and dangerous condition as set out in the petition herein and such unsafe and dangerous- condition was known to the defendant or could have been known to it by the exercise of ordinary care, and such unsafe and dangerous condition was not known to the plaintiff and could not have been known to him by the exercise of ordinary care.”

It is insisted for appellant that the allegation in the amendment that all the injuries sued upon in the original petition were caused in the manner specifically set up in the amendment had the effect to withdraw all additional acts of negligence complained of in the original petition, and that appellee should have been confined on the trial to the introduction of evidence bearing only upon the specific charges of negligence set up in the amendment.

It is true that in actions for damges based upon the alleged negligence of the defendant where the plaintiff specifically in his pleading sets forth the negligence upon which he relies, he is confined to the negligence thus alleged, and evidence of any other negligence is inadmissible ; (Burch v. Louisville Car Wheel & Ry. Supply Co. 146 Ky., 272; Lexington Ry. Co. v. Britton 130 Ky., 676; W. A. Gaines & Co. v. Johnson, 32 Rep., 58), but in this case it was clearly not the purpose of the plaintiff in filing his amendment to abandon any of the allegations of negligence in his original petition, for in the amendment he specifically reiterates and adopts all the allegations in the original pleading; and the amendment must therefore be treated as intended to perfect the original cause of action, and for that reason the lower court properly permitted to go to the jury, all evidence bearing upon any of the acts of negligence alleged.

[327]*327The claim that the peremptory instruction should have been given because the uncontradicted evidence showed appellee was guilty of contributory negligence, and that he would not have been injured if he had held his place in the motor car and not jumped from it, cannot be sustained; the evidence shows that after the motor car was on fire he made two efforts in two different ways to shut off the power so as to stop the fire before he jumped, and only left the car after having made them.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 746, 153 Ky. 323, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-coal-co-v-love-kyctapp-1913.