Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Mulverhill

144 S.W. 83, 147 Ky. 360, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 261
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 7, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 144 S.W. 83 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Mulverhill) 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. Mulverhill, 144 S.W. 83, 147 Ky. 360, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 261 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll —

Affirming.

On January 13, 1910, Mulverhill was engaged as-a teamster in hauling tobacco stems to the Kentucky Products Company on Ninth street, between Broadway and York, in the city of Louisville. The team, he was driving consisted of four horses, and Mulverhill was riding the saddle horse in the team. While driving on the east side of Ninth street from the Products Company’s establishment to Broadway the horse Mulverhill was riding stumbled or slipped on some ice in the street, causing him to fall. He fell on Mulverhill’s, leg, and broke it. To recover damages for the injuries thus sustained, Mulverhill brought this suit against the Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Company and the City of Louisville, charging in his petition that about January 7th, the railroad company had removed from the roof of a large building called a freight shed, fronting on the west side of Ninth street, a large quantity of snow, and negligently piled the same in the carriage or roadway of Ninth street, and that it and the city negligently permitted the same to remain there until January 13th. That this mass of snow so piled in the street constituted a dangerous obstruction and made the street unsafe for travel.

[362]*362To this petition the railroad company and the city filed separate answers, traversing the averments of the petition, and pleading contributory negligence. After the pleadings were made up the case went to trial before a jury and a verdict was returned in favor of Mulverhill against the railroad company for three thousand dollars.

As reasons for a reversal of this, judgment, the railroad company insists, first, that although the snow was piled in the street, it left the street under all the circumstances in a reasonably safe condition for travel; second, that Mulverhill was guilty of such contributory negligence as should defeat a recovery; and third, that the damages awarded by the jury are excessive.

There is really not much dispute about the facts. It is shown by the evidence that on January 7th, the railroad company caused snow that had fallen to a depth of about ten inches on its large freight shed to be shoveled from the shed to the carriage way of the street, making a pile about eighteen feet wide, six feet high and probably one hundred feet long. The road or carriage way of the street at the place where the snow was piled was about sixty-seven feet wide; and between the pile of snoy and the curb on the east side of Ninth street there was a space of about twelve feet, and on the western side of Ninth street there was. a space between the snow and the curb of about thirty-five feet. Between the 7th and 13th of January, the pile of snow had melted until it was not over three feet high, but in the melting and thawing process it had become practically a solid mass of snow and ice, and this snow and ice had spread from the snow pile quite a distance out towards the curb on each side. That on the day of the accident the snow had practically disappeared from the streets in the city, except at this place on Ninth street.

Mulverhill in the performance of his duties passed in and out Ninth street several times each day from January 7th until January 13th. His custom was to come up Broadway and turn in Ninth street on the western side of this snow pile and drive out Ninth street to the Products Company’s establishment, which was located on the eastern side of Ninth street, and then drive the empty wagon out Ninth street to Broadway on the eastern side of Ninth street. On the day he received the injuries, as he was on his way out to Broad[363]*363way, he discovered a wagon standing near the curb on the eastern side of Ninth street, and it was necessary in order to pass this wagon with his team that he should pull his horses over closer to this pile of snow and ice than he had been in the habit of doing; and, it was while in the act of passing this wagon in this manner that his horse slipped and fell.

Mnlverhill, who was forty-one years old when the accident occurred, testifies that his leg was broke, and that he was “laid up” on this account for about six months. That previous to the injury he had been working regularly at a salary of ten dollars a week. That his leg was permanently injured, and he could not bend the ankle at all, and did not have sufficient strength in that leg to enable him to do the kind of work he had been doing before the injury or to do any work that required him to stand on his feet. That after he recovered sufficiently to go to work, he commenced driving his team again, but had to quit on account of the condition of his leg.

There is no> contradiction of his evidence as to the character of injuries received, or that his disability is permanent. Considering his age and the fact that he must earn his living by labor, and that the injury has permanently impaired if not destroyed his ability to work as a teamster, in which occupation he had been engaged for many years, or to do any other kind of manual labor that required him to stand for any length of time or use his legs, we do not think the verdict was excessive.

With this issue out of the way, there remains two questions to be considered — first, Was the railroad company guilty of negligence in piling this snow in the street in the manner that it did, and in permitting it to remain there for the time that it did; and second, was Mulverhill guilty of such contributory negligence as: would defeat a recovery.

It is too well settled to need even the citation of authority that it is the duty of a city to exercise ordinary care to keep its streets and public ways in a reasonably safe condition for public travel, and that if it fails in the performance of this duty it will be liable for any injury directly resulting therefrom. It is equally as well settled that if a third party, whether he be an abutting property owner or not, places: or maintains in the [364]*364street-obstructions that make it unsafe for public travel, that he will be liable for any injuries directly resulting therefrom. But, to this principle in the law of streets thus broadly stated, there are of course many exceptions growing out of unusual conditions that will exempt for a reasonable time at least both the city and the individual causing the obstruction of the street from liability to persons injured thereby. Among these exceptions may be noticed one arising out of the necessity that exists for the removal of ice and -snow from buildings. We have no doubt that property owners may, after heavy falls of snow, remove the same from their buildings and premises and pile it in the carriage or driveway of the street in such a manner as not to unreasonably interfere with the use of the street, and let it remain there until by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence it could be removed. But this license to obstruct 'temporarily in an emergency the street with snow and ice taken from adjacent property does not authorize the property owner to permit the snow and ice thus piled to remain on the street indefinitely or for an unreasonable time, when it interferes with or obstructs the use of the street by the public or renders it unsafe or dangerous for travel. It might be conceded that the railroad company would not be liable to a person injured in the daytime, as was Mulverhill, by this obstruction of the street on the day or the day after the snow had been piled there, or until after such a time as by the exercise of reasonable care the obstruction could have been removed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 83, 147 Ky. 360, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-mulverhill-kyctapp-1912.