Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Allnutt

151 S.W. 14, 150 Ky. 831, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 999
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 3, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 14 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Allnutt) 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 Railroad v. Allnutt, 151 S.W. 14, 150 Ky. 831, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 999 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll —

Affirming’.

In November, 1908, tbé appellee, Allie Allimtt, then about eight years old, was run over by one of the cars of the appellant cpmpany, and, as a result, lost both of his legs. To recover damages for the injury thus sustained he brought this suit against the appellant company, and on the first trial of the case the damages in his favor were assessed by the jury at $19,000, but a motion for a new trial on behalf of the railroad company was sustained, and this verdict set aside.

[833]*833On the second trial there was a verdict in favor of appellee for $5,000, and this verdict, on his motion, was set aside. On the trial from which this appeal is prosecuted there was a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for $11,750. To the ruling of the court in setting aside the first judgment the appellee excepted and prepared, in regular form, a bill of exceptions and transcript of the evidence. To the ruling of the court in setting aside the second judgment the appellant excepted and prepared, in due form, a bill of exceptions and transcript of the evidence. So that the record on this appeal consists of the record made up on each of the three trials, and we are asked by appellant to reverse the judgment on the last trial and direct the entry of a judgment on the verdict on the second trial, upon the ground that the trial court improperly set aside the verdict on that trial.

On the other hand, we are asked by appellee to direct the lower court to enter a judgment for the amount of the vérdict on the first trial, upon the theory .that the court improperly set aside that verdict, but if this can not be done, that the judgment on the last’trial be affirmed. As .we have concluded to affirm the judgment on the last trial, it does not seem necessary to notice the arguments of counsel in respect to the preceding trials, but we may say that the discrepancy between the amount of the verdict on the first and second trials is largely accounted for by,the fact that on the second trial the court refused to instruct the jury that they might award punitive damages.

Except in one particular, there is little controversy about the facts of this case. Latonia is a city of several thousand people, and one of the principal, if not indeed the principal street in the city is Southern avenue, which is crossed by the tracks of the appellant railroad company. At the point where the railroad crosses this avenue there were, when the accident happened, seventeen separate tracks in use by the railroad company, covering a space of some 200 feet in width across the avenue. At virtually all hours of the day there were trains, sometimes two or three of them at the same time, moving on the tracks across the avenue, and hundreds of people, in using this avenue each day, on foot and in vehicles, had to cross all of these tracks.

Including the public who made use of this street and who were required to cross these tracks, were a large [834]*834number of school children who lived on the west side of the railroad and .attended two schools that were situated on the east side of the railroad, and when these children were going to school in the morning and returning in the afternoon this avenue, where it crosses the railroad tracks, was crowded with children, romping, running and playing, as school children usually do.

On the day Allie Allnutt was injured he was returning about four o’clock in the afternoon from school on the east side of the tracks to his home on the west side, in company with a crowd of children. The evidence in his behalf shows that when he got to the eastern track Blackburn, the crossing watchman for the railroad company, was standing about the middle of the crossing, and between the tracks, not engaged at the time in warning the children that there was danger from moving trains — merely standing at his post. That appellee and other children, who were in his immediate company, walked or ran by Blackburn, without any- notice or warning from him, and that when appellee had passed Blackburn and gotten to the last track on the west side, Blackburn halloed at him, when he turned around, and as he did so, stumped his toe and fell on the track, and about that time Blackburn, who had discovered that the child was going on the track in front of the moving train, made an effort to rescue him, and in the attempt fell on him, and just as appellee fell on the track a freight car, pushed by an engine, ran over his legs.

The evidence for the railroad company is, in substance, that Blackburn, when he saw the children coming toward the track on the east side, went to meet them, for' the purpose of stopping them from crossing, as a train was switching on the western track; that some of the children stopped, in obedience to his request or order, and some of them, including Allie Allnutt, ran by him; that when his attention was called to the fact that some of the children had gone by him, and in the direction of the moving train, he ran after them and caught Allie Allnutt, just as he got on the track in front of the moving cars, and in his effort to save him came very near being run over himself.

The car that ran over the child was the front car of a cut of six cars being pushed by an engine, and-it had been uncoupled from the car behind it for the purpose of “kicking” it into a siding, towards which the engine was pushing it. ■ There was no brakeman or other em[835]*835ploye of the company on the car or cut of cars, nor was there any alarm or warning of the movement of the train by the ringing of the engine bell or other means. As the car had been disconnected from the engine and the car immediately behind it, of course the engineer could not control the movement of the car, and the condition was practically the same as if this car had been started by a movement of the engine across the avenue and was running without any person in control of it.

■The grounds relied on for a new trial are: (1) That the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the railroad company; (2) that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; (3) that error was committed in permitting witnesses Oliver, Neidlander, Braines and ITuff to testify as to customary conditions at the crossing; (4) that the court erred in refusing to permit Johnson to testify as to the distance in which the car could have been stopped; (5) that error was committed in the instruction.

Concerning the grounds that a peremptory instruction should have been given, or that the verdict should have been set aside as flagrantly against the evidence, little need be said. There was ample evidence to take the case to the jury and to sustain the verdict. According to the evidence for appellee, he did not discover the moving engine and cars until he was in the act of crossing the track on which they were running, and did not have any warning from Blackburn or anyone else of the movement of the train. It is true the car that ran over appellee was moving at a slow rate of speed and that if he had been careful he could have seen it, but a child of eight years is not charged with the same degree of care for his own safety as an adult would be. It is probable that a grown person in crossing these tracks woulddceep a sharp lookout for the movement of trains, and in view of the danger attending the crossing would have exercised unusual care for his own safety.

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Related

Coil's Administratrix v. Chicago, St. Louis & New Orleans Railroad
22 S.W.2d 428 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Treanor's Administrator
200 S.W. 634 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 14, 150 Ky. 831, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-allnutt-kyctapp-1912.