Louisville N. R. Co. v. Bush's Adm'x

148 S.W.2d 1050, 285 Ky. 645, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 443
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 7, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 1050 (Louisville N. R. Co. v. Bush's Adm'x) 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 N. R. Co. v. Bush's Adm'x, 148 S.W.2d 1050, 285 Ky. 645, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 443 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

Just after dark on the evening of December 7, 1938, James Busk was killed in the northern outskirts of the corporate limits of the town of Cumberland, in Harlan County, while walking on the track of appellant and defendant below, Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company — his death being produced by collision with a freight train composed of the engine, tender and about forty coal cars. It occurred at a point some one hundred yards north of a grade crossing known in the record as “Green Cornett” crossing — the name being derived from the fact that a Mr. Cornett conducted a merchandise business at or some point near that crossing. Not far from the place of the collision was the office of Dr. Kauffman, to which Bush was carried after the collision, he not having been instantly killed. Some emergency treatment was given him by Dr. Kauffman and he was thence immediately removed to a hospital at Lynch, where he later died.

His wife was appointed and qualified as his personal representative, and she filed this action against appellant and defendant below to recover damages sustained by the estate of the deceased on account of his *647 death, which she averred was due to the negligence of its agents and servants in charge of the colliding train, it being averred that the point of the collision was in a thickly settled community and wherein great numbers of people used the track as a passway in sufficient quantities to clothe the users with the rights of licensees to whom the operators of trains on the track at that point owed a lookout duty and the exercise of other precautionary measures for the safety of those who might be using the track under such acquiescing privilege. The doctrine has become a settled one in the law, and especially in this jurisdiction, but as to when it should or should not be applied is by no means certainly ascertained by any fixed and definite standard. However, it has been so judicially determined by this court in a number of cases, some of which are Henson’s Adm’r v. Hines, 193 Ky. 198, 235 S. W. 359; Howard v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 189 Ky. 60, 224 S. W. 635; and Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Stidham’s Adm’x, 194 Ky. 220, 238 S. W. 756. The cases point out that the extensiveness of the use of the track by pedestrians in the manner indicated must exceed more than one hundred and fifty persons each day and that in any event such use by a less number of persons will not create the right to maintain the action upon the ground relied on. The foundation of the right is, of course, bottomed upon the humane purpose óf safeguarding thoughtless members of the public from injury or death growing out of their acknowledged and admitted carelessness in walking upon the railroad track with the knowledge and acquiescence of the railroad company, or where the practice has been continued for a sufficient length of time to justify the inference that it was aware thereof and acquiesced therein. In such circumstances it is concluded, and so announced as a sound principle of law, that operatqrs of trains over portions of tracks thus encumbered with pedestrian traffic, acquiesced in by the carrier operators, must anticipate the presence of persons on the track at such places and exercise the necessary and prescribed precautions for their protection, notwithstanding they would otherwise be treated and regarded as unqualified trespassers. The principle, therefore, sprouted from a humane purpose to furnish protection to such thoughtless travelers at places and under the circumstances we have described.

The answer of defendant denied the material aver- *648 merits of the petition, coupled with a plea of contributory negligence on the part of the decedent, which in turn was denied by plaintiff. At the trial there was a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $4,500, upon which the court pronounced judgment after overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial, to reverse which it prosecutes this appeal. The motion for a new trial contains twelve separately designated grounds, some óf which are duplicates of others, and many of which we regard as without merit, but among them are (1) error of the court in overruling defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction, made both at the close of plaintiff’s testimony and at the close of all of the testimony, and (2) erroneous instructions given by the court upon motion of plaintiff, and refusal to give instructions offered by defendant. After a careful and most painstaking study of the record, we have concluded that the determination of the appeal hinges upon a proper determination of the two stated grounds, each of which will be considered and determined in the order named.

In considering ground (1) we are met at the threshold with the extremely doubtful sufficiency of the proof to show that the place where the fatal collision occurred was one within the principle of law above outlined. There was but one witness who testified positively as to the extent of the pedestrian use requisite to create the right of action upon the ground stated, if indeed he did so. All of our prior cases upholding and sustaining the right of action upon the ground relied on by plaintiff not only say that there must be more than one hundred and fifty persons per day who use the track for pedestrian travel, but also that the place must be in a thickly settled community and that the travel must be upon the railroad track, or sufficiently near to it as to expose the traveler to danger from passing trains. Such travel over a passway located on the right of way a sufficient distance from the track as not to endanger travelers over it from collision by passing trains would not create the right of action under the principle of law under consideration, since in that event there would be no danger to travelers which operators of railroad trains are required to anticipate and guard against. In this case it is shown by the express testimony of the witnesses, and by photographs of the track as it existed at the time of the collision, that there was a well-beaten *649 path beyond the ends of the crossties of the track, sufficiently distant therefrom as to make travel in it free from possible collision with passing trains, and if decedent had been within that path, which the photograph shows had a smoother and better surface upon which to walk, he would not have been in the wake of the train that collided with him. Instead, however, he saw proper to appropriate the space between the rails of the track and thus place himself where a collision would be inevitable, unless relief from his perilous situation was voluntarily made by himself, or by some appropriate action on the part of the operators of the colliding train.

A similar situation was presented to this court in the case of Cumberland Railroad Company v. Walton, 166 Ky. 371, 179 S. W. 245, in which we denied the benefit of the principle upon which this action is based to a pedestrian traveler in like circumstances, and who stepped from the pathway on to the track so near an approaching train as to prevent avoidance of the collision with him. But, however that may be, the testimony in this case shows that only one person saw deceased and his location at the time of and immediately before the collision, and that witness was the engineer of the train.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 1050, 285 Ky. 645, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-co-v-bushs-admx-kyctapphigh-1941.