Louisville & Interurban Railway Co. v. Pulliam's Administratrix

82 S.W.2d 191, 259 Ky. 82, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 3, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 82 S.W.2d 191 (Louisville & Interurban Railway Co. v. Pulliam's Administratrix) 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
Louisville & Interurban Railway Co. v. Pulliam's Administratrix, 82 S.W.2d 191, 259 Ky. 82, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 274 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

*84 Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

'This appeal is prosecuted by the Louisville & Interurban Railway Company from a judgment rendered by the Jefferson circuit court (common pleas branch, third division) for $3,000 in favor of Carolyn K. Potts, as administratrix of the estate of Miller C. Pulliam, her deceased son, upon this second trial of an action she has brought to recover damages for his death, caused, it was alleged, "by the negligence of appellant’s motorman in the operation of one of its cars.

This action, it appears, grows out of an accident which occurred at about 11 o’clock on the evening of January 7, 1933, near the intersection of the Shelbyville road and Meridian avenue, in St. Mathews, an unincorporated and populous business suburb of Louisville, Ky., where it is admitted the deceased, Miller Pulliam, lost his life by being struck and run over by one of the cars of the appellant railway company.

The parties to the action will be referred to hereinafter as plaintiff and defendant respectively.

Seeking .compensation therefor, plaintiff sued for $50,000, alleging that by the gross negligence and carelessness of the defendant, one of its cars was caused to and did strike and run over the body of the plaintiff’s intestate, Miller C. Pulliam, as the result of which he died.

At the conclusion of the evidence offered by the appellee, and at the conclusion of all the evidence, the defendant moved the court for a directed verdict, which in each instance was overruled.

The trial resulted in a verdict for $3,000 for the plaintiff. Motions and grounds for a new trial were filed by each of the parties, and the plaintiff also filed a motion to reinstate the verdict and judgment for $10,000 obtained upon the first trial, in substitution for this smaller verdict for $3,000 recovered upon the second, which motions were each and all overruled and judgment rendered for $3,000.

■ The defendant has prosecuted this appeal, asking a reversal of the judgment upon the following grounds: (1) The trial court’s alleged error in overruling its motion for a directed verdict; and (2) alleged error in its instructions Nos. 1 and 2 given the jury. The plain *85 tiff has also filed a cross-appeal, 'asking that the verdict and judgment recovered upon the first trial be reinstated and substituted for the judgment here recovered.

The proof offered upon both trials was substantially the same. The evidence for the plaintiff very clearly established certain basic facts as supporting the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom that the decedent, upon the occasion in evidence, had been struck while walking on or near this public crossing by an automobile at the time driven by a young man named Richard Oschner, causing him to fall or be knocked upon the defendant’s track, where he laid in a helpless condition,, unable to remove himself therefrom, when he was run over by one of the defendant’s west-bound cars passing this intersection at about that time. The negligence relied upon by plaintiff for her cause of action is that the motorman in charge of this ear must have, or by the exercise of any ordinary care both could and would have, seen and discovered Pulliam lying upon the track had he at the time observed his duty of lookout in approaching this public street crossing. On the other hand, the defendant contends that the proof was wholly insufficient to establish negligence against the motorman, as the evidence was entirely of such circumstantial and indefinite character as to require the jury to guess as to the exact cause of the accident and manner of its occurrence and as to who was responsible for it.

An analysis of the evidence heard upon both trials had of this action, clarified by photographs and map of the place of the accident and of the surrounding grounds and railway track put in evidence, tends very clearly to establish the following basic facts and to support certain reasonable inferences to be deduced therefrom:

Through St. Mathews, the scene of this accident, there runs in an eastwardly direction Frankfort avenue, sometimes referred to as the Louisville-Shelbyville road, which is a main thoroughfare. Along this highway, for a distance of three or four blocks, is situated the town’s business section, near the eastern terminus of which the highway is intersected on its south side by Meridian street. The extensive use of the crossing makes it the congested center of the town’s traffic.

Paralleling Frankfort avenue on the south side and *86 crossing this street intersection are the tracks of the defendant railway company. There are a number of small business houses on both the north and south sides of this avenue, extending from the west up to the Meridian street intersection. On its south side a sidewalk extends eastwardly in front of these places of business up to Meridian street, where its eastward course terminates and it turns and extends southwardly out the west side of Meridian street, requiring those using the walk for reaching points farther east along the avenue to cross over to the north side' of the car track, or to the north sidewalk, which extends eastward beyond this Meridian street intersection. Also, in front of these business houses on the south side, there runs, within three feet, these street car tracks.

Lying between the street car track on the south and the metaled highway on the north there is an intervening neutral ground of some 21 feet, which is used both for parking cars and public travel.

On the night of the accident, and only a short time before it occurred, Miller Pulliam left the grocery where he worked, located in .St. Mathews on the south side of Frankfort avenue some two blocks west of the Meridian street intersection, for Ms home. On the way he stopped in a restaurant for a lunch and left about 11 o’clock, remarking that he was tired and was going home to bed, and was last seen going east along the south sidewalk towards Meridian street in the direction and usual course followed in going to his home.

Two witnesses, Carl Lotze and Stanley Lockhart, who were then standing nearby on the north side of the street, saw him as he left the restaurant and walked eastward along the sidewalk south of the track until he passed into the shadows beyond on his way home, which was situated on this avenue a block or two beyond the Meridian street intersection. He was not seen again until some minutes later, when he was found lying in a dying condition upon the track of the defendant company near this street intersection, where it was manifest he had been struck and run over by one of the defendant’s cars. His mangled body was found on the track some 45 or 50 feet west of the Meridian street intersection. He lived for some fifteen minutes after being found. A west-bound interurban car of the defendant had just shortly before crossed this street *87 intersection, which upon its arrival in Louisville was stopped and examined and found to bear indisputable evidence of having run over the body, flesh, blood, and bones being found on, its bumper and wheels. This physical evidence “without doubt showed that this car, if not the sole cause of Pulliam’s death, was an efficiently contributing cause to it.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W.2d 191, 259 Ky. 82, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-interurban-railway-co-v-pulliams-administratrix-kyctapphigh-1935.