Kentucky Traction & Terminal Co. v. Soper

286 S.W. 776, 215 Ky. 536, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 759
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 18, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 776 (Kentucky Traction & Terminal Co. v. Soper) 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
Kentucky Traction & Terminal Co. v. Soper, 286 S.W. 776, 215 Ky. 536, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 759 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Sampson

Reversing.

As appellee, Ruth. Soper, alighted -from an interurban car of appellant company in Paris, at night time, she stepped upon something that rolled and moved causing her foot to creel and she fell upon the pavement, injuring her foot and ankle and dislocating some of her internal organs in such way as to cause her excruciating pain and disable her for many weeks to pursue her regular employment as stenographer and bookkeeper. She was awarded $5,000.00 damages by a jury, upon which verdict judgment was entered, and the traction company appeals.

Appellant company insists that its motion for a directed verdict made at the conclusion of appellee’s evidence should have been sustained and that the trial court erred to its great prejudice in overruling the motion for the reasons (a) that there was no showing of negligence on the part of the company; (b) that appellee knew of the condition of the street-at the point where the accident occurred, and voluntarily assumed the risk of injury by reason of the condition of the street; and (c) the testimony conclusively shows that the street at the point where the accident occurred was not inherently dangerous, or at all dangerous. A brief statement of the evidence will lead to a better understanding of the questions presented. Appellee, Miss Soper, and her sister, Mrs. Harrison, who resided in Paris, had spent the day shopping at Lexington, returning on a late car to Paris. Her home was on Fifteenth street, which was crossed by Main street, upon which the interurban ran. As the car approached Fifteenth street and soon after it passed Sixteenth street, Mrs. Harrison, who sat with Miss Soper, rang for Fifteenth street. About that time a man passenger got up and went forward as if to alight from the car. There was no halt of the car as it approached Fifteenth street, and appellee and her sister, observing this, rang again just as the car was entering the intersection *538 of Fifteenth street. Hearing this the motorman-conductor turned and asked the man passenger if that was his ring, and received information that the ladies desired to get off at Fifteenth street; he thereupon applied the brakes and brought the car to a stop some sixty steps or more beyond the intersection of Fifteenth street. When the ear was at a standstill the man passenger immediately alighted and went his way; then came appellee, who put her foot down to the step and then stepped to the pavement. She says it was dark and she held on to the car with her right hand; that as she put her foot down on the pavement it rested upon something that moved or rolled causing her foot to twist and her to fall on the pavement, causing her injuries. When she fell the conductor and other persons came to her assistance and she was carried home. The car was left standing until the conductor returned; it was then discovered that the step of the car was about 59 feet from the nearest street light; that the lights were on in the car, as was also the headlight. In addition to the foregoing there was a bright electric light on the door of thé car immediately over the step which came on with the opening of the door and shut off when the door was closed; that this light reflected upon the step and pavement immediately below the door. It was further shown that the street at the point of the accident was newly paved with cement and was reasonably smooth and had no defect as a pavement; 'but appellee proved it had on or over it a slight bit of dirt, sand, gravel, or other substance or object which rolled or moved. Appellee testified, as did her sister, that the conductor did not warn them of the dangerous condition of the street, which had been torn up along near that place for repairs, and that she did not know of the dangerous condition of the street at that point or know that the street was being repaired along at that point. In testifying about how the accident happened .Miss Soper said:

“He stopped the ear, opened the door and Mr. Sprake got out'first. I followed; looked out and saw that it was dark; then when I put my first foot down on the steps I saw that I could not see. I put my left foot down and fell. Whatever I stepped on rolled or gave way and twisted my ankle. This turning of my ankle put me in a twist and I fell to the street.
*539 “Q. Tell the jury whether or not you had ever gotten on and off an interurban car at that place at night? A. Never had. . . .
“Q. As you stepped off the car, could you see where you stepped? A. I could not.
“Q. Did you know the conditions there at that particular point? A. I did not.
‘ ‘ Q. After stepping off and • after your ankle turned, did you discover what you stepped on? A. Well, I knew that I had stepped on something unstable.
“•Q. Describe the condition as you discovered it after you stepped off? A. I stepped on .something that was unstable. I’knew it wasn’t concrete, for the concrete is stable.
“Q. You mean it wasn’t hard like concrete? A. No, sir; it moved.
“Q. And did you at that time step on the concrete? A. No; if I did there was something over the concrete. . . .
‘ ‘ Q. Dad you ever noticed the condition of Main street at that particular point, or did you know the condition at that particular point? A. I did not.
“ Q. Or had you' ever paid any attention to it before? A. No special attention, . . .
‘-Q. Did he say anything to you or point out the danger? (Objection by defendant; sustained; exceptions.)
“Q. Did he say anything at all to you, Miss Soper, at that time? A. De did not.
“Q. Or at any time? A. Never. . . .
“Immediately after I put my foot down, I began to suffer great pain in my foot and I was in great anguish all over. They picked.me up and I screamed all the way home. I continued in great pain. The doctor was called. I suffered great pain all over my body and went into a chill. The doctor came and bandaged my ankle and knee and put on a lotion. Then I was in such pain that they gave me a narcotic, but. I continued to suffer. I finally dropped off to sleep, but could not sleep except spasmodically; that was for several nights; could only sleep under the influence of narcotics, and suffered great pain with my ankle and body.”

*540 On cross-examination appellee was asked what kind of shoes she wore on the evening of the accident, and if she still had them, and she answered, in substance, that she wore suede black satin pumps and that she still had them. She was then asked if she would bring them down to court on the next day and she answered that she would. Further questions elicited the fact that they were high-heel slippers with one strap; the heels were even higher than those on the ones she wore at the trial. The slippers were later presented in court axid are before us no w. They are dainty little black satin one-strap slippers, built on very high French heels.

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Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 776, 215 Ky. 536, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-traction-terminal-co-v-soper-kyctapphigh-1926.