Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Comley

191 S.W. 96, 173 Ky. 469, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 96 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Comley) 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. Comley, 191 S.W. 96, 173 Ky. 469, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 462 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

Alleging that she received a serious injury to her person due to the back ringing of a signal bell maintained by appellant at a grade crossing, the appellee, Mrs. Kitty Comley instituted this action in the Franklin Circuit Court to recover damages. The injury of which she complains happened in May, 1913, at a point on the Glenn’s Creek pike where the defendant railroad company’s track crosses the same, at grade, about one mile east of the city of Frankfort. At this point, an admittedly dangerous crossing, the railroad company had theretofore erected and was maintaining an electric signal bell, which was intended to and did on the approach of trains from either side of the crossing, ring so as to warn travelers on the highway of the coming train. The bell is about 9 or 10 inches in diameter, and can be heard about 600 yards. The ringing would begin when a train approaching the crossing from either side, reached a point about two thousand (2,000) feet distant therefrom.

On either side of the crossing the track curves, and passes through a cut, which is such depth as to obstruct the view and prevent a traveler on the pike from seeing the oncoming train, as well as obstruct the view of the engine-men in charge of the trains. To warn the traveling public and thus avoid injury, the railroad company installed the electric signal bell, complained of in the petition.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Comley, and two neighbors were driving on the pike in an open top buggy, towards Frankfort. The vehicle was drawn by a single horse which Mrs. Comley had often driven on the same road and which she alleges was reasonably safe, gentle and a well broken animal. As they approached the crossing in question, the electric signal bell was ringing indicating the approach of a train to the said crossing, and in fact, said train was making such noise as to warn her that it was coming. To avoid injury she caused the [471]*471horse to be stopped about thirty feet before it reached the track, and there remain until the train passed, and the signal bell ceased to ring. Thereupon she directed the young man in the buggy to drive on, which he did. The signal bell was located on a post eight or ten feet high, situated near the edge of the highway,' and on the right-of-way of the railroad company. When the buggy had crossed the track, and the head of the horse was opposite and near the post, on and to which the signal bell was attached, the bell, without warning to plaintiff, again suddenly commenced to ring, which ringing frightened the horse, causing it to shy and whirl around, throwing1 or causing Mrs. Comley to fall from the buggy to the ground, and breaking her leg near her hip. This last ringing of the bell is called in the record “back ringing,” and this resulted from a defective condition of the mechanism operating the bell.

At this time she was a woman about 60 years of age, but in good health and of reasonable strength. From this injury she had not, at the time of the trial in the lower court, in September, 1915, • fully recovered, but was obliged to go about on crutches. The question is: Can the plaintiff recover for an injury occasioned her by unnecessary back ringing of a defective signal bell at a railroad crossing, frightening her horse and causing her to be thrown from the buggy to the ground? This question appears to be res integra in this jurisdiction.

The defendant company, prosecuting this appeal to reverse the judgment, relies upon the following five grounds:

First. The plaintiff’s petition does not support the verdict and judgment.

Second. It was defendant’s legal duty to have the electric bell at the crossing, and it is not, therefore, liable for the injury.

Third. There is no evidence that the defendant failed to exercise ordinary care in the construction and maintenance of the bell, therefore, the court should have told the jury, as a matter of law that plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

Fourth. The damages are excessive.

Fifth. The court gave the jury erroneous instructions on plaintiff’s motion.

These will be considered in the order named.

[472]*472The plaintiff in her petition, omitting the formal parts, alleges that this highway was much frequented by people going to and returning from the city of Frankfort and elsewhere, and “the plaintiff says that at the intersection of the said pike and railroad crossing, this defendant negligently placed, constructed, managed and operated an ' electric alarm or signal bell, which was originally so improperly and faultily constructed, or was suffered and permitted to be and remain out of repair — plaintiff does not know which — as that same would ring loudly, and make unusual and startling noises such as would and did frighten horses of ordinary gentleness.”

Continuing, plaintiff in substance alleges that the horse was of ordinary gentleness; that the bell suddenly and unnecessarily, when no train was approaching, began to ring loudly and make frightening noises, and did frighten her horse, and cause it to suddenly turn the buggy and throw the plaintiff to the ground, and cripple her, from which she has and will suffer great pain. The defendant company is charged with negli-' gence in the installation, maintenance and control of the signal bell; with having at the said crossing a defective signal bell that unnecessarily back rung, giving off loud noises, at an unexpected moment, and when to do so was reasonably calculated to frighten a horse of ordinary gentleness, at a time when the plaintiff was driving along the highway, as she had a right to do, which noise caused her horse to suddenly turn the buggy, with the resulting injury. When the train passed the plaintiff had the right to presume that the way was clear and to proceed on her way. The bell had ceased to ring. The crossing was clear and apparently safe. She was guilty of no wrong, or violation of duty in attempting to proceed. She could not forsee the back ringing of the bell or know of the defective condition of the device. Undoubtedly the allegations of the petition are sufficient to support the judgment.

It was the right of the defendant company-to have and maintain the signal bell at the crossing, but it was not required to do so. It might have placed there a flagman or gate to warn the public of approaching trains, but instead it chose to rely upon the signal bell. If the crossing was extra hazardous, as appears here to be the case, it was incumbent upon the defendant com-[473]*473party to exercise extra care; care commensurate with the extra clanger, and likewise it was the duty of the plaintiff and others using the said crossing to exercise care in keeping with the added danger. While the defendant company had the right to maintain the signal bell, it was its duty to do so in a manner' not calculated to bring injury to -a member of the public, having the right to and using the highway. The bell was exclusively under its control and management. The defendant having created at that crossing extraordinary danger, was required to exercise extraordinary care. C. & O. R. R. Co. v. Gunther, 108 Ky. 362.

There is some contrariety of evidence as to what care the defendant company employed to have the signal bell in condition to perform its functions, and defendant company asserts that there is no evidence for the plaintiff that the bell was not properly installed or maintained. .Thé wrong complained of is the back ringing of the bell.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 96, 173 Ky. 469, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-comley-kyctapp-1917.