Lapp v. Louisville, Henderson & St. Louis Railway Co.

199 S.W. 798, 178 Ky. 647, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 441
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 798 (Lapp v. Louisville, Henderson & St. Louis Railway Co.) 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
Lapp v. Louisville, Henderson & St. Louis Railway Co., 199 S.W. 798, 178 Ky. 647, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 441 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

Allen Taylor, an intelligent and sober colored boy •about 16 years old, while traveling as a trespasser on a trestle on-the appellee’s line of railway, was killed by a freight train, and in this suit by his administrator to recover damages for his death, the trial court directed a verdict in favor of the railway company, and this appeal is prosecuted by the administrator.

At a place called Otter Creek the railway company has a trestle something over 500 feet long, varying in height from 25 to 9 feet from the ground, at the point' where Allen Taylor was killed being about 9 feet.

It appears from the evidence that about noon on the day of the accident Taylor, while walking on the track east of the trestle on his way towards Brandenburg, which was west of the trestle, was passed by two men, who were also on the track going on their way west. They had some conversation with Taylor, who they testified was sober and intelligent, in the course of which he told them he was trying to catch a freight train to get a ride. After walking together some little* distance they proceeded [649]*649ahead of him and had crossed the trestle and were some yards beyond the west end when he reached the east end.

It is further shown that on account of some new work that had been done on the track immediately east of the trestle the' company had stationed near the east end one of its. employes named Marcum to observe the condition of the track and give such notice or warning as might be necessary to passing trains. Marcum was -probably a hundred feet east of the trestle when the whistle of a freight train going west was heard about half a mile away. About the time the train whistled Marcum told Taylor, who had stopped a moment to talk with him, and who had started towards the trestle, that there was a good road under the trestle and he had better walk there; that a train was coming, and he had better look out for it,- and Taylor said he would look out. Marcum says that he did not after that pay any more attention to the boy, nor did he give the engineer as he passed any warning or notice that Taylor was on the trestle.

It is also shown by the evidence that the bents in the trestle were six feet apart and that at each bent on each side of the track there was a timber from 12 to 14 inches wide which projected about 2% feet beyond the ends of the ties. And in addition to this there was a platform on. the side of the track on which persons could stand to ■escape passing trains at or close to the point where Taylor was struck by the train when he had gotten nearly to the west end of the trestle.

The evidence also discloses that the track for about 1,300 feet east of the trestle was straight, and that the engineer of the train, which was running when it approached the trestle about twenty miles an hour, if he had been looking could have- seen Taylor on the trestle before the engine came to the point, where Marcum was standing about a hundred feet east of the trestle. .And there is further evidence tending to show that -this train • could have been stopped before striking Taylor if the engineer had made an effort to do so before the engine reached the east end of the trestle. -•

The engineer testified, in substance, that, when the. engine passed Marcum he was about a hundred feet east of the east end of the trestle, but that he did not give him any signal to stop or lessen the speed of his train, or any signal that would indicate that there, was any reason for either stopping or slowing downthat he .saw Mar-cum several hundred feet before-he passed him,, and kept,. [650]*650his.eye on him and the track until he passed him; that when he first saw Taylor the engine was at the east end of the trestle and he judged Taylor was about the middle of the trestle; that when he first- observed him ho-sounded the alarm whistle and applied his air-brakes, the speed of the train at the time being about twenty miles, an hour; that Taylor was struck by the engine when he-was about 150 feet from the west end of the trestle, and that when the train was stopped the body of Taylor was-found under .the car nest to the engine; that when he first saw Taylor he was walking on the trestle with his back to the engine, and he observed him start to run; that Taylor for some reason fell on the track when the engine was 30 or 40 feet from him; that when he first noticed his presence he was about 340 feet ahead of him; that he first sounded the alarm whistle and then applied the emergency brakes, bringing his train to a stop in less-than 300 feet after the brakes were applied; that his train was well equipped in every way and he stopped it as soon as it was possible to do so; that when he first saw Taylor he thought he was one of the men that had been working on the bridge and was of this impression when he sounded the alarm whistle, and believing the person he saw to be one of the bridge men, he anticipated that when his attention was called by the alarm whistle to the-coming train he would get out of the way at one of the bents, but that when the man commenced to run he knew he was not one of the bridge men.

; Without further relating it, we may say that the-evidence shows without contradiction: (a) That Taylor was a trespasser; (b) that he was warned the train was-coming and not to go on the trestle; (c) that every sis feet there were caps on which he could have stood in safety while the train passed; (d) that he could have jumped from the trestle to the ground, - a distance of not over nine feet, and escaped injury; (e) that as soon as the engineer saw Taylor on the trestle, or at least as soon as he discovered that he was not one of the bridge men, he-exercised all possible care to stop the train before striking him.

• But, notwithstanding these facts, and the reckless negligence exhibited by Taylor in undertaking to walk across, the trestle under the circumstances, it w.as, nevertheless, the duty of the engineer, after he actually discovered his-per-i-l,. to exercise ordinary care with all the means at his command; tó-stop his train or lessen its speed so as to-[651]*651avoid striking him. This is the full measure of duty persons in charge of. a train owe to trespassers, as has been announced by this court in numbers of cases; and tested solely by this rule, there would seem to be no doubt about the correctness of the ruling of the trial court in directing a verdict, as the undisputed evidence shows that the ■engineer, after he actually discovered the presence of Taylor, did exercise ordinary care with all the means at his command,- and in fact did everything that could he done to prevent injury to him.

But it is said that there are two features in this case that take it out of the ordinary rule relating to trespassers: (1) That as Marcum knew Taylor was going on the trestle, it was his duty to signal the- engineer to stop his train, or at least to slacken its speed, neither of which he did: (2) that a person on a trestle when a train is approaching is necessarily in a position of peril, and there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury on the theory that the engineer saw, or could have seen, Taylor on the trestle in ample time to have stopped his train before striking him.

In support of the first proposition the case of Glenn’s Admr. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 28 Ky. L. R. 949, is relied on. Glenn was killed by one of the trains of the railroad company while wandering on the track in a state of helpless intoxication.

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 798, 178 Ky. 647, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lapp-v-louisville-henderson-st-louis-railway-co-kyctapp-1918.