Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Hurst's Administrator

295 S.W. 458, 220 Ky. 402, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 561
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 25, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 458 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Hurst's Administrator) 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 & Nashville Railroad v. Hurst's Administrator, 295 S.W. 458, 220 Ky. 402, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 561 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner—

Reversing.

On the 29th of April, 1912, at about 4:12 in the afternoon, appellant’s passenger train running north from Middlesboro toward Pineville, collided at a grade crossr ing a mile or two north of Middlesboro, with a truck going south on the highway toward Middlesboro, and appellee’s intestate, the driver of that truck, was killed, and_ this is an action by his personal representative against appellant for damages because of his death, as alleged, brought about by the negligence of its agents in ■control of the train.

On the trial a verdict for the plaintiff of $10,000' in damages was returned, and from a judgment on that verdict this appeal is prosecuted, there having been previously one mistrial.

Appellees have entered a motion in this court to strike the bill of evidence and the bill of exceptions from the transcript, and the grounds are: (1) that while both were tendered within the time allowed by the order of the court, neither of them was actually filed by order of the court until more than two terms thereof had intervened, and (2) that the bill of exceptions actually filed on the tenth day of November, 1925, was not the same bill of exceptions, tendered by appellant within the time allowed by the court’s order.

These motions were passed to a hearing on the merits.

The facts disclosed by the record are that the verdict was returned and judgment entered thereon the 29th of January, 1925, and that on the 30th of January, 1925, defendant filed its motion and grounds for a new trial. Then on the 31st of January, •1925, the motion and grounds were overruled, the official reporter ordered to transcribe the proceedings on the trial and a carbon copy thereof, and tender same for filing on or before the *404 tenth day of the next term; and in the same order defendant was “given until and including'' the tenth day of the next regular term of this court in which to prepare and tender for filing its bill of exceptions herein.” Then on the second day of the February term, 1925, and on the 24th day of that month a transcript and carbon copy .of the evidence was tendered, as well as a bill of exceptions, and the court took them both under advisement. At the succeeding September term of the court, there evidently being some contention as to the correctness of the bill of exceptions as tendered, the defendant offered to file an affidavit as to certain'things occurring on the trial, and the court declined to permit the same to be filed, but two days threafter at the same term entered an order filing and approving the transcript of the testimony, but in its order recited that further time was taken for the com sideration of the bill of exceptions. Thereafter at the same term and on the tenth day of November an order was entered approving the bill so tendered on February 24th, and filing the same. It appears, however, from affidavits on file that before approving the bill of exceptions the court made such corrections in the subject matter thereof on the last page of the bill tendered on the 24th of February that it became necessary to rewrite or retranscribe the whole of that last page, and this is the basis of appellee’s contention that the bill as tendered in time- was not the bill finally approved and filed by the court on the tenth of November.

It is the very general custom in trial courts, where a bill of exceptions is tendered in time, for the judge to< take time to examine the same before approving it, and if appellee’s second,contention should be sustained it would always be necessary for the trial court to approve a tendered bill of exceptions before the expiration of the time fixed for its filing in the original order. If after the expiration- of such time the trial judge in the interest of accuracy and in the -administration of justice should strike out a clause in the bill as tendered, or even a word, then he would have no power to approve and file the bill because it was not the precise bill tendered within the time. Obviously such a ruling would defeat the administration of justice, and in many oases would practically deprive a party of the right of appeal granted by law.

If the bill as tendered is not accurate the trial judge has it within his power to correct the same and file it as *405 'so corrected even after the expiration of the original time fixed for its tender, where the tender itself was made within the time.

Obviously in such cases the delay is that of the court, and when a party has tendered within the time his hill he has done all that can be required of him, for he has no power to compel the court to act upon it. In this case, as we gather from the record and the affidavits on file, there was much contention between the attorneys as to the correctness of certain features of the bill, and it was not the duty of the Rourt to correct and approve the bill, until satisfied as to the alterations to be made. The bill was tendered in time, and there is nothing to disclose that appellant and its counsel were more responsible for the delay in approving it than appellee and his counsel. '

Under the provisions of section 337, subsection 3, Civil Code, it is the duty of a trial judge to correct a bill of exceptions tendered before approving the same, and when he does correct it and order it filed, even though it be at a subsequent term and after the time granted in the order for the filing, such order relates hack to the day of the tender and the filing is as of that date. Smalling v. Shaw, 144 Ky. 454; Toner v. R. R. Co., 109 Ky. 41; Meaux v. Meaux, 81 Ky. 475; White v. Allen, 10 R. 1025; Striger v. Carter, 190 Ky. 319:

The motions to strike the bill of exceptions and bill of evidence are each overruled.

A number of errors are assigned as ground for reversal, none of which will be passed upon or considered except that refusing the motion of defendant for a directed verdict after the evidence had all been heard, the court having reached the conclusion from the whole evidence that plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

The train was a light passenger train consisting of two coaches and the engine, was running on time and at about the rate of 25 miles an hour as it approached the crossing. Going north it was running on a straight track for approximately 1,000 or more feet before reaching the crossing. There is some negative evidence by witnesses showing they did not hear the train signal for the crossing

Decedent was the driver of a truck for a soft drink manufacturing establishment at Middlesboro, and had been such for several years. Upon the occasion in ques *406 tion lie and another were returning to Middlesboro from Pineville in the truck, decedent driving, and as they .approached the crossing were traveling at the rate of twelve or fifteen miles an hour. Going south from Pine-ville to Middlesboro on the highway for several hundred feet before the approach to the crossing, the highway runs approximately parallel with the railroad, but about 300 feet from the crossing a curve begins and from then until within 100 or 150 feet of the crossing the curve continues, so that the actual crossing is a diagonal one, the railroad running approximately north»and south, and the highway approximately north-east and south-west.

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295 S.W. 458, 220 Ky. 402, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-hursts-administrator-kyctapphigh-1927.