Louisville N. R. Co. v. Foust

118 S.W.2d 771, 274 Ky. 435, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 288
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 24, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 771 (Louisville N. R. Co. v. Foust) 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. Foust, 118 S.W.2d 771, 274 Ky. 435, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 288 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

On the afternoon of February 16, 1935, the appellee, Wesley Foust, was struck and seriously injured by one of appellant’s trains as he was using its railway track, near the “Old Shepherd” railroad crossing, as a. footpath when returning from the post office at Happy, some four hundred feet below, to his home, some half mile above it, at Defiance, Perry County, Kentucky.

Appellee filed suit in the Perry circuit court against the railroad company for damages for his injuries sustained in this collision accident, wherein he recovered judgment against it in the sum of $3,000. *436 Seeking a reversal of this judgment, this appeal is prosecuted.

The plaintiff, Wesley Foust, by his petition alleged that his injuries were caused by the general gross negligence of appellant’s agents and servants in so recklessly operating its train and engine as to run same into and against him, thereby breaking his leg and otherwise seriously injuring him; that he was thereby caused to be confined in the hospital for weeks, to incur hospital and physician’s bills, to suffer loss of time, and was permanently disabled, for which he prayed judgment for damages in the sum of $15,000 and $500 for expenses incurred.

Appellant answered, traversing the alleged negligence and setting up the plaintiff’s charged contributory negligence in bar of the action. By a further paragraph, it affirmatively pleaded that on April 5, 1935, it made a full and final settlement with the appellee of all claims for damages, suffered by reason of the injuries sustained by him, in consideration of the sum of $150 paid him as an accord and satisfaction thereof.

Plaintiff replied, denying that he was guilty of contributory negligence upon the occasion of his injury, and further charged that the pleaded settlement made with him was procured by the fraud of the appellant’s claim agent, Davis, and asked that the $150, pleaded as paid him in settlement of his cause of action, be held for naught, except as a credit on the amount of damages he might be adjudged to recover.

By an amended reply, he alleged that he did not read the release or writing, pleaded as a compromise settlement of his claim for damages made by appellant with him, when he signed same (which he admitted), but that it was read to him by appellant’s claim agent, who had then prepared it; but that he did not read the whole of it to him, but, on the contrary, so read it as to mislead him, by concealing its real character, and to practice a fraud upon him, in that he relied upon Davis * having properly read the release; that had he known the true import and effect of the writing, as one providing for a release of his claim against appellant for his injuries sustained, he would not have signed it, but that he had signed it because he thought and believed "that the writing, as it was read to him, only provided *437 for a settlement of his claim for loss of time caused by his injuries sustained.

"With his filing of this pleading, appellee tendered back to appellant the $150 so paid Mm, which appellant declined to accept.

Appellant then filed its rejoinder, traversing the allegations of the reply and reply as amended, and further alleging that appellee did not make proper tender of the money paid him in settlement of his claim, in that he did not tender it prior to or contemporaneously with the institution of his suit for damages.

It is disclosed by the record that this collision accident, in which plaintiff sustained his injuries, occurred near the'point known as “Shepherd’s Crossing,”' where the appellant’s railroad track, extending along Carr’s Fork, Perry County, Kentucky, crosses the Lexington-Jenkins highway.

A number of plaintiff’s witnesses live near this crossing and the railroad bridge, which is some 368 feet below the crossing. Near the bridge there is situated the mining camp of the Happy Coal Company, where there is maintained a railroad station, a post office and a company commissary. On the other side of this crossing, about a quarter of a mile above it, is located the Defiance mining settlement, near which the Marlowe Coal Company operates its mine. At the time plaintiff was injured, he was living at Defiance and employed in the Marlowe mines as a “coal shooter.”

The testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses, as to the extent and character of the public’s use as a passway of this section of the railroad track running between these two mining camps at Happy and Defiance, something like a half mile apart, is that some of the miners’ houses were located at Happy and some fifty or more around and above “Shepherd’s” crossing, from where they extended on up the railroad track to the camp of the Marlowe Coal Company at Defiance.

The evidence shows that the company’s railroad track, which connects these two mining camps, runs through a sparsely settled country, populated by small mining communities grouped here and there along its course; that a majority of those living in these communities get their mail at Happy post office and that a majority of that majority, it is testified, habitually and *438 daily use the appellant’s track, extending between the crossing and Happy, as a footpath in going to and from the post office at Happy for their mail.

No one of these witnesses, however, attempted to state definitely the number or that a large number habitually used this section of the appellant’s track as a public passway or what was the extent or daily number of those so using it. .

The plaintiff stated that these people usually travelled the railroad track in going to and from “Shepherd’s” crossing over to the Happy commissary and post office, because it was a nearer way between such points than was the highway, which runs nearby and parallel with the track between these points. Also he stated that people could be seen “about any time travelling the railroad track,” but that he did not know what number so used the track daily.

Another of plaintiff’s witnesses stated that he believed there were about ten houses and a store house between the Defiance mining camp and the crossing; that a majority of the people living in them got their mail at Happy and that a majority of that majority used the railroad track most of the time. Also, the plaintiff’s witness, Combs, who lives at the Happy camp, and some three or four hundred yards from the railroad crossing, stated that from where he lived, up to and including the Marlowe Camp settlement, there were from fifty to seventy bouses; that a majority of their occupants got their mail at Happy; that in going to and from the Happy post office they usually used the highway to the crossing and then followed the railroad track to Happy.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 771, 274 Ky. 435, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-co-v-foust-kyctapphigh-1938.