Louisville & Interurban Railroad v. Roberts

228 S.W. 681, 190 Ky. 744, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 681 (Louisville & Interurban Railroad v. Roberts) 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
Louisville & Interurban Railroad v. Roberts, 228 S.W. 681, 190 Ky. 744, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 562 (Ky. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing the first case and affirming the second one.

The first case above is an appeal from a judgment in favor of appellee and plaintiff below, William C. Roberts, against the appellant and defendant below, Louisville & Interurban Railroad Company, for the sum of $3,166.00, which plaintiff recovered in a suit brought by him to obtain damages for personal injuries he sustained on May 7,1917, and which it is averred were produced by defendant’s negligence. The second appeal is from a judgment denying a new trial in a suit brought for that purpose by the defendant in the first case, after the first trial, upon the ground of newly discovered evidence.

Plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s cars running on Broadway in the city of Louisville, Kentucky, and the substance of his allegations in his petition is that as the car approached the intersection of Twelfth street with Broadway, he, desiring to leave the car at that place, and under the advice of the servants and employees of defendant, started to leave it and when he reached the steps preparatory to making his exit there was an unusual, unncessary and violent jerk of the car which threw him upon the street with such force as that he sustained his injuries, and that the jerk and sudden start of the car (being of the nature described) was the result of gross carelessness and negligence of the servants in charge of and operating it. The answer denied the negligence and in a second paragraph pleaded contributory negligence, which was controverted of record, thus completing the issues. The chief grounds relied on in this court for a reversal of the judgment in the original or first case above are: (1) erroneous instruction given over defendant’s objections, and (2) misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel in the examination of witnesses.

[746]*746.Before taking up' either of these grounds we deem it proper to make a brief statement of the facts. Plaintiff lived at La Grange and boarded one of defendant’s cars in the city of Louisville which he thought ran to his home but it proved to be one going in the opposite direction. After passing’ Tenth street on Broadway in the city the conductor on the ear discovered the mistake and notified plaintiff that he could leave the car at Twelfth'street and take a city car back to defendant’s station, where he could take one for his home. Plaintiff’s testimony as to what then occurred is: “I said, ‘I will get off and walk back again,’ I said 'AH right,’ he slowed down, I got up and got my grip and got on the step, and the man gave the car a lurch and threw me.” Pie said that the place where he fell was between sixty and seventy feet from Twelfth street, but this was merely his opinion, and his injuries rendered him unconscious so that he could make no observations after the accident, but the uncontradicted testimony of the witnesses for both sides is that the place where plaintiff fell was something like the middle of the square between Eleventh and Twelfth streets. The car in which plaintiff was riding was partitioned, one compartment being for white passengers and the other for colored passengers, and on this trip the colored compartment was in the rear and it was from the rear end that plaintiff fell. The conductor and two other witnesses who were passengers state (and their testimony on this point is uncontradictecl), that plaintiff took his seat at the rear of the white compartment and next to the colored comparment and that the conductor on discovering that he was on the wrong car informed him that he could get off at the next corner (.Twelfth street) and get a city car back to Third street, where he could take one for his home; that plaintiff, in both his actions and words, appeared to be intoxicated. The conductor then testified that: “At that time I was making change for one of my passengers, a Mr. McCampbell or Campbell, and this man (plaintiff) got up and started back; I was just giving him his change and I said, ‘I better go back after that fellow, he is drunk,’ and I started right back after bim, and just about the time he got to the rear platform to step off — the car was still moving — I grabbed at him and got hold of his coat like this (indicating), but he was a man that I guess weighed over two hundred pounds and with that hold I didn’t have sufficient hold to hold him, [747]*747but I hollered at him and grabbed him and he stepped off the car with his face toward the rear of the car — just deliberately stepped off that way, and he held to the handhold with his right hand and he had his grip in his left hand, and that t'hr'owed him bach — of course, naturally pulled him bach.” The testimony of the conductor, in the quoted portion of his testimony, is substantially corroborated by Mr. Campbell and Mr. Weller, both of whom were passengers in the car. The motorman knew nothing about the accident until after it happened and he stopped his car practically at Twelfth street. All of the witnesses for defendant, including the passengers on the car, testified that there was no jerk or lurching of it as testified to by plaintiff.

Turning now to the grounds urged for a reversal, the court gave to the jury five instructions and under ground (1) complaint is made chiefly of instruction number one, which, with number two, were the only ones touching the merits of the case, since numbers three, four and five related to the measure of damages and defined ordinary care and negligence and against which no objections could be urged. Instruction number one says:

“If the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiff exercised ordinary care for his own safety in leaving the ear and in taking a position upon the steps thereof, and while standing in that position, that he was thrown from the car by an unusual and unnecessary jerk of the car and injured the law is for the plaintiff and the jury should so find.”

This instruction is erroneous in at least two particulars. It did not even attempt to define the duty which defendant owed to plaintiff as a passenger and it permitted a recovery for only “an unusual and unnecessary jerk of the ear,” and left it for the jury to conjecture what was a negligent, unusual or unnecessary jerk. In the cases of Louisville Railway Company v. Wilder, 143 Ky. 436, Wilder v. Louisville Railway Company, 157 Ky. 17, Louisville Railway Company v. Osborne, 157 Ky. 341, South Covington & Cincinnati Street Railway Company v. Trowbridge, 163 Ky. 79, and Louisville Railway Company v. Osborne, 171 Ky. 348, this court held that to entitle a passenger to recover for injuries produced by a jerk or lurch of the car, assuming that the passenger was at a place on the car that he had a right to be under the facts of the particular case, the jerk must not only be un[748]*748necessary and nnnsnal but it must be “of sufficient violence as to indicate negligence in the operation of the car.” In the Trowbridge case the rule is thus stated:

“The rule in this state is that the passenger who is injured by reason of a jerk or lurch of the conveyance may not recover therefor unless the jerk or lurch was unusual, unnecessary and of such violence as to indicate a want of the required care in the operation of the conveyance.' Louisville Railway Company v. Osborne, 157 Ky. 341.”

And in the Osborne case, referred to in the quotation, in stating the rule the opinion says:

“It is not sufficient to constitute negligence in law that there may be an .unusual movement of the car or a sudden jerk of the car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 681, 190 Ky. 744, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-interurban-railroad-v-roberts-kyctapp-1920.