Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Burkhart

157 S.W. 18, 154 Ky. 92, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 18 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Burkhart) 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. Burkhart, 157 S.W. 18, 154 Ky. 92, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 47 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Eeyersing.

The appellee, Fred A. Burkhart, a bridge carpenter, while in the employ o.f the appellant, Louisville & Nash-vile Eailroad Company,, and at work upon one of its railroad bridges in Vanderburgh County, Indiana, fell therefrom a distance of fourteen feet to the ground below, whereby his collar bone was broken and back sprained, resulting in serious and permanent injury to his person.

The accident occurred September 1, 1910, and on August 23, 1912, this action to recover damages therefor was brought by him against appellant in the Henderson Circuit Court; it being alleged in .the petition that both appellant and appellee are residents of Kentucky; appellee being a citizen of the city of Henderson and appellant having been incorporated under the laws of Kentucky, having its chief office in the city of Louisville and owning a railroad running from the city of Louisville through the county and city of Henderson to Evansville, [94]*94Indiana. It is alleged in the petition that appellee’s injuries were caused by the negligence of appellant and its bridge foreman in furnishing him a defective jack screw not reasonably safe for use, the rod of which slipped from its place while he was using it to raise a bridge timber, causing him to lose his equilibrium and fall to the ground.

The action was based upon a statute of Indiana which makes the employer liable in damages to the employe for an injury sustained by the latter by reason of the employer’s negligence in furnishing him a defective tool or machinery for use in work required of him. Yet another statute of that State, also pleaded by appellee, provides that an action to recover damages for personal injuries may be brought at any time within two years next after the cause of action accrues.

The answer traversed the affirmative matter of the petition, except its averments as to appellant and appellee 'being residents of Kentucky, alleged contributory negligence on the part of appellee and pleaded the statute of limitations-of Kentucky which "bars an action for the recovery of damages for a personal injury unless brought within a year after the injury is received. The issues were completed by the filing of a reply which controverted the pleas of contributory negligence and limitation. The trial resulted in a verdict awarding appellee $200 damages, and from the judgment entered thereon this appeal is prosecuted.

The record does not contain the evidence nor instructions and the single question presented for decision by the appeal is, dcs the pleadings support the judgment? In other words, does the limitation of two years prescribed by the statute of Indiana, or that of one year prescribed by the statute of Kentucky apply? If the latter statute should control, it is manifest that the trial court erred in refusing the peremptory instruction directing a verdict for appellant, which was asked by its counsel at the conclusion of appellee’s evidence and again after all the evidence was introduced.

It appears from the petition that the action was instituted only seventeen days short of two years after appellee’s injuries were received, and it is therein alleged that “the law of the State of Indiana also provides that a suit for damages resulting from said injury may be instituted at any time within two years from the date of said injury.”

[95]*95The answer of appellant denies the applicability of the Indiana Statute of two years, and, in the third para-' graph, pleads the Kentucky Statute of one year, therefore, the question of limitation was one upon which the evidence threw no light, but a question of law to be determined from the admitted facts presented by the pleadings.

Waiving the question whether the Indiana Statute of Limitations was sufficiently pleaded by appellee, it can have no' effect in this state. It is a well recognized rule that statutes of limitation are of state regulation and founded on state policy. Such statutes, therefore, have no ex-territorial force or operation, for which reason foreign jurisdictions are not bound by them; hence the doctrine in respect to limitations of actions is, that the law of the forum governs; and this is true whether the action is ex contractu or ex delicto. Minor’s Conflict of Laws, section 210; 25 Cyc., 1018.

The doctrine is thus stated in Lewis’ Sutherland’s Statutory Construction, section 668:

“And ordinarily courts disregard the limitation fixed in the contract or tort and enforce only the lex fori.”

Necessarily statutes of limitation affect the remedy and not the right; and, as argued by counsel for appellant, they are as much a part of the remedy as are our forms of pleading, our rules of evidence and our manner of conducting trials, hence the Indiana Statute of Limitations can have no more operation in this state upon the one than upon the other.

The rule to; which we refer has always been the law in Kentucky and, among the earlier cases approving it, is that of Graves v. Graves, 2 Bibb., 209, in the opinion of which it is said:

“The statute of limitations does not affect the validity of the contract, but the time of enforcing it; or, in other words, it does not destroy the right but withholds the remedy. It would seem to follow, therefore, that the lex fori, and not the lex loci was to prevail with respect to the time when the action should be commenced.”

The later eases show no departure from this rule, among these are the following: Bennett v. Delaim, 17 B. Mon., 358; Farmers, &c., Bank v. Lovel, 8 R., 261; Templeton v. Sharp, 10 R., 499; Shilleto v. Richardson, 102 Ky., 52; Lobatt v. Smith & Whitney, 82 Ky., 599; in each of which it was held that the statutory bar of‘the state where the remedy is sought to be enfqrced by action, and [96]*96not that of the state where the contract was made, governs. In a more recent case, L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Whitlow’s Admr., 114 Ky., 470, quoting with approval from Herrick v. Railway, 31 Minn., 16, we said:

“The statute of another state has, of course, no extraterritorial force, hut a right acquired under it will always, in comity, be enforced, if not against the public policy of the laws of the former. In such cases the law of the place where the right was acquired or the liability was incurred will govern as to the right of action, while all that pertains merely to the remedy'mil be controlled by the law of the state where the action is brought; and we think the principle is the same whether the right of action be ex contractu or ex delicto,”

In the still more recent case of Adams Express Co. v. Walker, 119 Ky., 126, we find this expression of the same conclusion:

“It is insisted for appellant that the contract here having been made in Wooster, Ohio, it must be governed by the laws of Ohio, and that by the laws of Ohio such a limitation is valid. Limitation is governed by the law of the forum in which the suit is brought, and tire courts of this state will not as a matter of comity, enforce a contract made in Ohio as to the time when the suit shall be brought, for this matter is regulated by our statutes.

Section 2516, Kentucky Statutes, fixes the limitation in such a case as the one at bar and is quite emphatic in its declaration that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 18, 154 Ky. 92, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-burkhart-kyctapp-1913.