Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Mount

101 S.W. 1182, 125 Ky. 593, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 321
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 7, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 1182 (Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Mount) 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 & Nashville R. R. v. Mount, 101 S.W. 1182, 125 Ky. 593, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 321 (Ky. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

Appellee recovered in the court below a verdict and [595]*595judgment for $400 damages against appellant for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained in alighting from one of its trains. Having been refused, a new trial, it asks this court to review certain rulings of the lower court complained of and to reverse the judgment appealed from.

• The facts alleged in the petition as constituting the cause of aetion were, in substance, that when the train on which appellee was a passenger arrived at Lancaster, his place of residence, it stopped at the depot platform, and in attempting to step from the train to the platform appellee fell'and injured his leg; that his fall was caused by the negligence of. appellant in failing to provide him a safe way or means to alight from the train, it being dark and the steps of the ear at an unsafe and dangerous distance from the platform. Appellant’s answer denied-the negligence charged in the petition, and alleged that appellee’s injuries were caused wholly by his own negligence, and that his injuries were slight and would have been cured much sooner than they were but for the negligence of appellee in failing to obtain and have proper surgical treatment. The affirmative matter of the answer was controverted by reply. Numerous grounds for a new trial were urged by appellant in the court below, but we regard only two of them of sufficient importance to be considered. One of these is the complaint with respect to the admission of certain alleged incompetent testimony, and the other complaint as to the instructions given on the trial.

The testimony of appellee was to the effect that, when, the train reached Lancaster, it stopped at the usual place; that after it stopped he buttoned his overcoat, took his suit case in hand, walked out of the car and down the steps of the coach, and from [596]*596the last one stepped to the depot platform, which is made of crashed stone, and upon reaching the platform with his foot the leg gave way, causing his body to fall violently to the platform and thereby injure his leg, especially the knee. He further testified that his fall was caused by the unusual height of the lower step from the platform, which, he said, was 21 inches-; that it was dark, and the unusual distance of the car step from the platform was unknown, to him and could not be seen .by him, and, though the conductor was only a few yards from him when he left the car, he received from him no warning of the distance to be stepped, or of the danger attending his alighting, nor was he furnished by any employe of appellant a light for seeing the way, or stool or other appliance to assist him to the platform. Other witnesses testified for appellee as to a subsequent measuring of the distance between the lower steps of passenger cars to the platform at the place where .appellee fell, and their testimony, like his, fixed the distance at 20 or 21 inches. Appellee also introduced testimony that stools for assisting passengers to alight from cars, where the height of the steps from the station platform was unusual, were customarily used by appellant’s train employes at stations. The testimony of appellant conduced to. prove that at the place where appellee stepped from the car the distance from the last step of the car to the ground was not unusual, and that with ordinary care one leaving a car under circumstances similar to those surrounding appellee at the time of receiving his alleged injuries could step from the last step of the car to the platform without risk or danger. Several of appehant’s witnesses also testified that after appellee received his fall they, at the place of the accident, measured the [597]*597distance from the last step of the car in which he rode to the platform, and it was from 17 to 18 inches. Some of them also testified that appellee, only a few minutes after receiving his injuries, and again on a later occasion, said, with reference to the accident, that he hurriedly alighted from the car after it stopped, and upon reaching the platform stepped upon a piece of coal or other like substance which tunred under his foot and caused him to fall. Appellant’s testimony also showed that its trainmen had never furnished stools at the Lancaster depot for the use of passengers alighting from its trains, and that it was not customary for its trainmen to render personal assistance to male passengers of appellee’s vigor and strength in getting off the cars.

While the matter principally complained of in the petition was the unusual height of .the car steps from the platform, after all, the question of whether it was unsafe or dangerous for appellee to get off the .train depended upon the conditions then existing. Stepping from the car at the same place in the daytime doubtless would have been attended with no danger to appellee, notwithstanding the unsafe height of the car steps from the platform, but to do so at night, without a light to guide him or appliance to break the distance between the last ear step and the platform, might have made the act of alighting dangerous. For these reasons we think it was competent, under the averments of the petition, for appellee to prove, as he was permitted to do, the absence of a light or of any appliance appellant’s trainmen were accustomed to provide on that road for the use of passengers in alighting from its cars.

But we think the trial court erred in permitting appellee to prove that appellant’s station platform [598]*598at Lancaster is a greater distance from and below its car steps than at other places and by reason of that fact necessarily dangerous. The danger, if any, of alighting from appellant’s cars at Lancaster could not properly be established by comparison, but must be shown by the conditions that existed at the time* and place of the accident; that is, that the situation of the platform was such as to make the distance thereto from the steps of the cars not only unusual, but so great as to be dangerous for an ordinarily prudent person to attempt to alight thereon from the train under such circumstances as obtained at the time appellee received his injuries. "We cannot agree with counsel for appellant that there was no evidence whatever as to the danger of alighting from the train Under the circumstances attending the accident to appellee. Without expressing an opinion whether the weight of the evidence was for or against appellee, it is. sufficient to say there was some evidence that tended to support his contention. The jury were the sole judges of the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses, and it was for them to determine whether the conditions of appellant’s Making were such as to render it unsafe for appellee to get off the train, and whether, under the circumstances, he exercised such care as would be expected of an ordinarily prudent person. We‘ also think that, in order to make competent the proof of the measuring from the car steps to the platform made by appellee’s witnesses, it should also have been proved either that their measurement was made on the car fiom which appellee fell, or from others commonly used by appellant on its railroad passing Lancaster, and that its passenger ears on that road are supplied with steps t>f tmiform size and depth.

[599]*599But the most serious error presented by the record we find in the instructions. Instruction No. 1 does not correctly give the measure of damages.

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 1182, 125 Ky. 593, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-r-r-v-mount-kyctapp-1907.