Kentucky & Tennessee Railway Co. v. Ball

194 S.W. 785, 175 Ky. 630, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 357
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 785 (Kentucky & Tennessee Railway Co. v. Ball) 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
Kentucky & Tennessee Railway Co. v. Ball, 194 S.W. 785, 175 Ky. 630, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 357 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing'.

The appellee, Mary Ball, claiming that she was injured while riding as a passenger in a passenger coach, which was a part of a mixed freight and passenger train owned and operated by the appellant railway company, when the train came to a sudden and violent stop, brought this suit to recover damages.

After the pleadings had been made up, there was a trial before a jury, resulting in a verdict for three thousand dollars in favor of Mrs. Ball. The judgment on this verdict we are asked to reverse for reasons that will be stated in the course of the opinion.

Mrs. Ball testified, in substance, that on the 26th day of August, 1914, she and her six little children were rid[631]*631ing in a passenger coach, attached to a freight train. Asked what happened that caused her to be injured, she answered: “Just an unusual and unnecessary' stop. Q. Was it a quick, sudden stop? A. Yes, sir.” She said that when the train stopped she was thrown against the arm of the seat and one of her ribs and her abdomen and kidneys were seriously injured. That her little baby was pitched out in the aisle of the car about six feet from where he was sitting. That she went that day to her sister’s, where she was sick for a few days. That after-wards she went home and in November was overcome with a sudden illness that resulted in a miscarriage. That from the effects of the injury and the miscarriage her health was seriously impaired. That shortly after the accident happened the conductor came to where she was in the train and picked up her baby which had been thrown out on the flooi. That she was in bed from the 14th of' November until the last of December. That she had a ease of chickenpox before her miscarriage and was confined to her bed several days with it.

Bill Miller, a witness for Mrs. Ball, was a passenger on the train, and said it made “a little bit of a sudden stop. That is all I know. It stopped pretty tolerably quick.” The witness did not know ,what caused it to make the stop, nor did he notice Mrs. Ball, who was in the same coach, or know that she had been in any way hurt, although he heard one of the children crying after the train stopped.

Mrs. Sellers and Mrs. Shelton, the latter being the mother of Mrs. Ball, testified as to her illness and inability to work, but did not know anything about the alleged accident on the train or what caused Mrs. Ball to be in ill health.

Dr. Seviers, a witness for Mrs. Ball, was called to see her in November or December, 1914, and found her suffering from a hemorrhage of the womb. He expressed the opinion that she had had a miscarriage and that one of her ribs was fractured, but was not sure of that, although Mrs. Ball said she suffered from it. This witness was also asked if the train on which Mrs. Ball was riding in August had come to a sudden and unusual stop, in consequence of which she was thrown over the arm of the seat in which she was riding, being at the time pregnant, would that have caused a miscarriage? And he said: “Well, of course a blow could cause a miscarriage.” He [632]*632also said that a had ease of chiekenpox would have a tendency to bring on a miscarriage if the person, was not well taken care of. This was all the evidence for Mrs. Ball.

On behalf of the railway company Mrs. Phillips, a next-door neighbor of Mrs. Ball, testified that some time after Mrs. Ball claims to have been hurt on this train, she talked with her frequently and never heard her make any complaint about being hurt on the train, and further said that up until the time she had the chiekenpox she did her own household work, including the washing and scrubbing. That she had a very severe case of chiekenpox, followed by a miscarriage. That Mrs. Ball did not attribute her miscarriage to any injury she received on the train, or mention any train accident, but did tell her about her baby being thrown out of the seat.

Dr. Fitzpatrick testified that he was called in to treat Mrs. Ball for chiekenpox, and said she had as severe a case as he ever saw, being confined to her bed from ten days to two weeks. That about the time, or after she recovered from the chiekenpox, he was called to see her one night and found her in a serious condition from flooding, and was informed that she. had miscarried, but said he was not present when the miscarriage took place. He expressed the opinion that the chiekenpox was the cause of her miscarriage, and also said that Mrs. Ball did not say anything to him about any injury she received on the train.

Dr. Smith, who was called in by Dr. Fitzpatrick to assist him in stopping the flooding, was also of the opinion that she had'a miscarriage, and attributed it to the chiekenpox from which she had lately suffered. He said she discussed with him the chiekenpox, but did not say anything about having been injured in the railroad accident or on any railroad train.

Miss Keith testified that Mrs. Ball told her that her baby was thrown out of her lap on account of a jerk of a train on which she was riding in August, but did not mention receiving any injury or hurt herself.

Henry Keith testified that Mrs. Ball told him about her baby being thrown out of her lap by a jerk of the train, but said she did not say anything to him about being hurt herself.

These and other witnesses also testified that Mrs. Ball did a good deal of hard work up until the time she was stricken with chiekenpox.

[633]*633Brack Foster, who was conductor on the train on the day Mrs. Ball claims to have been injured, said there was no sudden or unusual stop of the train. That he did not hear Mrs. Ball, or anyone else, complain of being hurt, nor did he take her child off the floor, or see her child on the floor, or know that any child had. been thrown on the floor or out of its seat.

Dr. Cundiff, who waited on some of the children of Mrs. Ball in a professional capacity in the fall of 1914, testified that he did not prescribe for Mrs. Ball in any way, nor did she ever say to him that she had received any injuries on the train.

This is the substance of all the evidence, and it will be observed that no witness or indeed substantial circumstance corroborates the statement of Mrs. Ball that she was injured by an “unusual and unnecessary” stop of the train. Counsel for the .railway company comment with some severity on the manner in which Mrs. Ball describes the character of the stop, but we may pass the insinuations against the truthfulness of her description with the observation that while her evidence does not disclose any knowledge of legal phraseology, she appears to have been sufficiently familiar with railroad law to enable her to describe with technical exactness the nature of the stop; and we know of no legal obstacle in the way of a witness acquiring information that will qualify him to tell just what happened in such a way as to make out his case, although his testimony may occasion some surprise to opposing counsel.

"We may also here observe that it was not incumbent upon Mrs. Ball to show what caused the unusual and unnecessary stop that, according to her statement, produced her injury.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 785, 175 Ky. 630, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-tennessee-railway-co-v-ball-kyctapp-1917.