Louisville N. R. Co. v. Chas. S. and F. Mahoney

294 S.W. 777, 220 Ky. 30, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 464
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 777 (Louisville N. R. Co. v. Chas. S. and F. Mahoney) 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. Chas. S. and F. Mahoney, 294 S.W. 777, 220 Ky. 30, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 464 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of thf, Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

Appellees, Charles S. Mahoney, and his brother, Forest Mahoney, were riding in a Ford coupe driven by Dalton Mahoney along the public highway near New Haven, in Nelson county, on the night of December 26th, 1923, when the car in which they were riding came in collision with a train of appellant company at a road crossing, overturning the coupe and injuring both of appellees, Charles in his back, a vertebrae being crushed, and Forest in other parts of his body. The jury awarded Charles $12,500 and Forest $800 in damages. There was a verdict by the same jury and judgment in each case, and this appeal is from both judgments.

The instant case was an unusual one in that the train colliding with the automobile was a long freight composed of forty odd cars, the engine to which had passed the crossing some distance and had turned around a curve out of sight before the appellees in the coupe ran up to the crossing and came into collision with the last car next to the caboose of the train. There is a map and several *32 photographs showing the contour of the grounds around the crossing and the trees and building and other obstructions to view which are situated near the crossing as. well as the location of the highway to the railroad. Between the highway and the railroad for most of the distance from the station to the crossing, which is about a mile away, there is a slight hill or ridge, which prevents one riding in a car on the highway from seeing a train upon the tracks. The highway makes a, short abrupt turn around the point of the hill when it gets very near the crossing and a traveler upon the highway can not see the crossing until he gets within a.few feet of it.- The night of the accident was a dark and rainy one. The lights on the .Ford coupe were functioning, but, as light travels in a straight line in front of the car, it did not reflect upon the crossing or disclose that there was a train passing over the crossing until the car was turned around the bend at the crossing and had started in that direction going at the rate of 12 to 15 miles an hour, and was then so close to the railroad track that it was impossible for the driver to -stop the car before striking the train, and, in an effort to avoid striking the train, he turned his car to the left and ran along the side of the track a short distance 'but coming so near the side of the train that the steps on the caboose, which came along very quickly thereafter, struck the Ford coupe in the back, upsetting it and throwing it over an embankment, causing the injuries of appellees. Appellees and the driver, Dalton Mahoney, were well acquainted with the crossing and its surroundings and had been for several years next before the accident. They had lived in that community for a number of years and only a short distance from the crossing. At the crossing and on the side of the track te which the coupe was approaching stood a post on which there was an .electric wigwag alarm signal to warn travelers upon the highway of the approach or presence of a train upon the track, and appellees as well as Dalton Mahoney knew of the wigwag.bell and that it would ring and wigwag when a train approached the crossing and while a train was on the crossing. As appellees came to the crossing realizing the danger of the place and discussing the question of whether a train was coming, each having listened, therefor, they looked fpr and at the electrical signal bell to see .whether.,it was -showing, “red,” wigwagging and ringing, or either, and discovered that the sign was standing still, the bell not ringing and show *33 ing no red. This indicated to appellees that the track was clear, that there was no train in the block and that it was safe to pass. • This signal post could he seen for some distance before appellees arrived -at the turn in the road that led over the crossing, and when apppellees discovered that the wigwag was quiet and indicated that there was no train in the block, they proceeded at a moderate rate of speed around the curve, intending to go over the crossing, and when in only a few feet of the place discovered for the first time that the freight train’ was passing over the crossing and that the signal bell was not operating and was out of order, a fact that they did not theretofore know.

To reverse the judgment appellant railroad company insists that appellees alleged one case and undertook to prove another, for which reason it is urged (1) that appellant’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor should have been sustained; (2) a peremptory instruction for the railroad company should have been given because the failure, if any, of the signal at the crossing to work, of which appellees mainly complain, was not negligence as to appellees. The signal was not designed to light the highway so. as to enable appellees' or the driver of the automobile to see the train on the crossing in time to prevent running into it; (3) failure to give the statutory crossing signals was immaterial; (4) appellees were permitted to introduce and the jury was allowed to hear incompetent evidence very prejudicial to.appellant; (5) appellees were guilty of contributory negligence in that they did not have lights in their car of the statutory power by which they could see the highway and obstructions therein; (6) the damages are excessive; (7) the instructions are erroneous, and the court erroneously refused to give instructions offered by appellant.

Appellant’s complaint that the evidence established a ease different from that averred in the petition as amended, is based upon a theory that there is a variance between the averment which describes the accident thus, “and while attempting, to cross' defendant’s railroad track, at said crossing, .the defendant, its agents and servants and employes carelessly and negligently ran a ■ train of defendant’s against and upon the automobile in which this plaintiff was Traveling and thereby-and as a direct result thereof,-.injured this plaintiff by striking. *34 and bruising this plaintiff’s body and arms and legs and sides and cbest,” whereas the proof tends to show that the automobile ran into the side of the train. We are Unable to see the force of such an argument, although we are cognizant of the fact that the evidence shows that the coupe ran near or into the side of the train before the train and the car collided, the .train, or some part of it, striking the rear of the automobile after it had run up near the train and stopped and the-striking of the automobile by the train upset the automobile and caused it to go over an embankment 'Causing the injury of appellees. The averment that the defendant’s train ran against and upon the automobile in which the plaintiff was traveling was proven by the facts which we have recited, showing that the steps, or some part of the train, struck the automobile and caused the injury.

(2) Appellant’s next contention is that the wigwag signal, if out of order, did not amount to negligence on the part of the railroad company as to appellee because, as the company argues, the signal was not designed to light the highway so as to enable appellees and the driver of the automobile to see the train on the crossing.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 777, 220 Ky. 30, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-co-v-chas-s-and-f-mahoney-kyctapphigh-1927.