Ken-Ten Coach Co. v. Davis

158 S.W.2d 624, 289 Ky. 329, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 541
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 30, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 158 S.W.2d 624 (Ken-Ten Coach Co. v. Davis) 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
Ken-Ten Coach Co. v. Davis, 158 S.W.2d 624, 289 Ky. 329, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 541 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

At the dates here involved the appellant and defendant below, Ken-Ten Coach Company, was a corporation operating as a common carrier of passengers by motor vehicle on the state highway between Williamsburg, Kentucky, and Corbin, Kentucky. On the 10th day of January, 1940, the appellee and plaintiff below, Maggie Davis, *330 purchased a ticket for transportation of herself from Williamsburg, Kentucky, to Brummett, which appears to be a suburban settlement of the city of Corbin. The motor vehicle was not the ordinary and usual one employed generally by motor vehicle carriers, but it was one known as a “shot gun” type vehicle, which in turn means that it was constructed after the fashion, type and style of an ordinary automobile, but with its body longer and containing more seats than the ordinary one, with doors on both sides opening on the outside at the end of each seat for the admission and exist of passengers at their destination, but plaintiff’s exit was not at that point.

Plaintiff on entering the vehicle of defendant, which was traveling north, seated herself on the middle seat of the vehicle and next to the outside, with two or three other passengers on the same seat to the left of her. The passenger sitting next to her was destined for Rockhold, Kentucky, through which the defendant’s vehicle passed on its route to Corbin and to plaintiff’s destination. When the vehicle stopped at, Rockhold to let off passengers and take on others at that stopping place, plaintiff attempted to open the door on her immediate right at the end of the middle seat she was occupying and to get out of the vehicle to enable the passenger destined for that place sitting next to her to himself alight. She says that she herself opened the door and stepped out on the ground from the running board of the vehicle; but the overwhelming proof in the case shows that a young man by the name of Longsworth, who boarded the vehicle at that point, after he had entered it from the door opposite its last rear seat, himself opened the door, liavingseen plaintiff trying to do so, and that after the passenger destined for that place had left the car he (Longs-worth) then closed the door. However, plaintiff states that she does not know who closed the door after she got back into the vehicle, but that in its closing it caught one of her feet at the bottom and injured it, perhaps crushing some of the bones on her instep or ankle, causing* considerable pain and damage — to recover for which she filed this action in the Whitley circuit court against defendant on the 8th of the following February, and in her petition she alleged that she had been damaged in the general sum of $5,000, and sustained special damages of $100 for medical and hospital bills. Defendant’s answer denied the material averments of the petition, with an *331 additional plea of contributory negligence, which was controverted, and upon trial the jury, under the instructions of the court, returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $250 upon which judgment was rendered. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and it has filed a transcript of the record in this court with a motion for an appeal, which is now sustained.

After the record was filed in this court counsel for plaintiff entered motion to strike appellant’s “motion for an appeal, ’ ’ but no grounds are advanced for the sustaining of such a motion so made and designated. It is, however, argued that the stenographer’s transcript of the evidence was not filed in accordance with the prescribed practice, but that what plaintiff’s counsel is really trying to accomplish by the motion is to strike the bill of evidence. The motion was passed to the merits of the case and will now be disposed of. Waiving the impropriety of the character of motion to reach the matter complained of, and treating it as if properly made for that purpose, we have examined the record and find that the bill of evidence was filed during the next term of the court within the time allowed for that purpose, and that it was then filed by the clerk’s endorsement thereon, as well as on the record, “in open court.” The filing of it, therefore, met the requirement of the practice, and the motion of plaintiff herein is overruled.

One hundred and fourteen typewritten pages of testimony are contained in the bill of evidence filed by the stenographer, but the great bulk of it is devoted to the extent of plaintiff’s injuries and to the collateral issue of whether or not the conditions of which she complains were the result of any injuries sustained at the time and in the manner complained of, or whether by a prior injury to her foot of several years’ duration so as to cause it to swell and enlarge after a certain amount of use; but none of which issues will be discussed in this opinion, since in the motion for a new trial no error is alleged except the claimed one that defendant’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor made at the close of plaintiff’s testimony and at the close of all of the testimony should have been sustained, and that the court erred in overruling it. That ground is the sole one discussed in appellant’s brief and is, of course, the sole one submitted to us on this appeal.

In her original petition plaintiff, in alleging the neg *332 ligence of defendant, stated that “when the said bns stopped at Rockhold, Kentucky, she was asked by the driver in charge of the said bus to get off of said bus to let other passengers get into the hallway of the said bus, and after all the passengers and parties had gotten on said bus, that she did get back on the steps at the open door of the bus and started to go inside, and that the door of said bus was open and that Arnold Evans, driver of said' bus, the agent, and servant of the defendant, suddenly, without notice to her negligently and carelessly closed the door as she stepped in, and broke her right foot and dislocated her right ankle.” However, after the evidence was heard and after it was overwhelmingly proven (and even admitted by plaintiff in her testimony) that the charges in her petition were untrue, she filed an amended petition withdrawing all allegations of her original pleading inconsistent with the amendment, and in which she averred: “That it was necessary for this plaintiff to get out of her seat so that other passengers could get out of the bus and that it was the duty of the defendant to see that its passengers on the bus were safely discharged and to use the highest degree of care when it discharged its' passengers from the bus and that the defendant, its agents and servants by their failure and neglect to use the highest degree of care for its passengers on said bus thereby permitted the said door of the bus to be closed with great force and violence before this, plaintiff had securely gotten into her seat and at a time when her foot was near the door and by the negligence of the defendant its servants and agents the door was slammed with great force and violence and produced injuries to the foot, leg, and ankle of this plaintiff, ’ ’ etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.W.2d 624, 289 Ky. 329, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ken-ten-coach-co-v-davis-kyctapphigh-1942.