Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Perry's Administrator

190 S.W. 1064, 173 Ky. 213, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 437
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 1064 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Perry's Administrator) 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. Perry's Administrator, 190 S.W. 1064, 173 Ky. 213, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 437 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

Ebb Perry, while walking on the track of the L. & N. Railroad Company near Corbin, Kentucky, was struck by one of its engines and killed. In this suit by his administrator to recover damages for his death, there was a judgment in favor of the administrator for one thousand dollars, and a reversal of this judgment is asked on the sole ground that the court should have [215]*215directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the de-, fendant.

It is conceded that Perry, at the time he was struck and killed, occupied the attitude of a licensee on the track, and that the company owed him the duty of warning, lookout and reasonable speed. But it is insisted in behalf of counsel for the company that the evidence showed conclusively that the engineer in charge of the engine that struck Perry exercised all the care demanded to prevent striking him, and this being so, the trial court should have taken the case from the jury.

It appears from the evidence that Perry was walking south on the ties, on the main track, on the outside of the rail, on what may be called the right-hand side of the track, or the engineer’s side in the direction in which he was going. The engine that struck him was running without any cars attached to it, at a speed estimated by eye-witnesses of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour and by the engineer at from twelve to fifteen miles an hour, and was going to make a stop, or, at any rate, slow down to go into a switch, about a hundred feet south of where Perry was struck. Perry, who, as shown by the evidence, was quite deaf, was walking with his back to the approaching engine and the track for several hundred yards north of where Perry was struck was straight, there being nothing to obstruct Perry, as he was walking down the track, from the view of the engineer, who was situated in his cab on the same side of the track on which Perry was walking. i

P. C. Jenkins, the postmaster at South Corbin at the time of the accident, was so situated on the right-hand side of and near to the track that he had a full and unobstructed view of the engineer in his cab as well as of the engine and Perry, until the engine got within a hundred feet or less of the place where it struck Perry. He testified that when the engine came about this close to Perry, Perry went into a cut that obstructed him from his view. Jenkins further testified that he had worked on railroads and operated engines and was acquainted with the duties of an engineer, the speed at which trains run, and the movements that an engineer would make in stopping an engine. He said that when the engineer commenced sounding the alarm whistle, the engine was three hundred feet or more from the place where Perry’s body was found after he was killed. That his attention [216]*216was directed to the scene by the constant sounding of the whistle. That when the engine was between two hundred and two hundred and fifty feet, or at any rate over two hundred feet from the point where Perry was struck, he saw the engineer reverse his engine and put his hand on the air valve, and that the engine could have been stopped with safety to the persons on the engine within one hundred feet from the place where he saw the engineer reverse his engine, but that the engine ran over two hundred feet from the place where the engineer applied his emergency'brake before it struck Perry.

There is other evidence to the effect that the engine ran about seventy feet beyond the point where Perry Was struck.

Cooper, an experienced railroad engineer on this line of road, testified that the engine that struck Perry at the time and under the circumstances related, could have been stopped, in the exercise of ordinary care and with safety to the persons on the engine, in a hundred or possibly a little over a hundred feet from the place where the engineer first made an' effort to stop it. He further said that ah engineer has two mean’s of stopping the engine in an emergency, one known as the engineer’s brake valve, that operates the air brake, and the other the reverse lever, but that a quicker stop could be made by using either one of the methods than by using both of them. That it was against the rules of the company to apply the air valve and also reverse the engine at the same time, and besides that this method would cause the wheels to slide.

Hauck, who was in charge of the engine, said that he had an unobstructed view of Perry, and that when he first noticed him he was about two hundred and fifty or three hundred and fifty feet from where he was struck. That when he first saw him walking down the track in front of and with his back to the engine, he sounded the alarm whistle when he was about two hundred and fifty feet from him, at which time the engine was running from twelve to fifteen miles an hour. That he continued to sound the whistle until he got within about a hundred feet or more of Perry, when he discovered that he did not appear to have heard the approach of the train or to have taken any notice of the sounding of the alarm whistle. That when he dis[217]*217covered that he was not heeding the signal, “he applied the brakes in emergency and reversed the engine; applied the air with one hand, reversed the engine with the other and continued to blow the whistle and done that as quick as possible.” That there was no other means on the engine at that time that he could have used to stop it. He further said that he could stop the engine quicker by using both of these means, that is, by applying the air brake and reversing the engine, than he could by using one alone, and that there was nothing else that he could have done that he did not do to avert the accident.

On cross-examination he said that he was about a hundred and fifty feet from Perry when he first observed that he did not give any attention to the approach of the train or the alarm signal. That Perry was about three hundred and fifty feet in front of him when he began to blow the alarm whistle, and that he ran about a hundred feet before he undertook to apply the brakes and reverse the engine, and that the engine ran about two hundred feet or more after he applied the air brakes before it stopped. He further said that he was looking at Perry from the time that he first discovered him, and that he did not give - any indication that he knew of the coming engine, nor did he make any effort to get off the end of the ties and out of the way of the engine, which he could have done by taking one or two steps.

Ellis, the brakeman, who was on the pilot or cowcatcher of the engine, and of coilrse had a plain view of Perry, said that the engine commenced to slow down when it was within one hundred and fifty or perhaps two hundred feet of Perry. This witness also said that Perry did not give any indication that he heard the engine approaching or the whistle sounding.

Under the well known rule of this court applicable to cases like this, that if the evidence on the subject of the negligence of the defendant is of such a nature as that there might be reasonable difference of opinion whether the defendant was guilty' of negligence or not, or if the reasonable inference from the facts tends to indicate that it was guilty of negligence, the case should go to the jury, we are of the opinion that the trial court did not commit error in submitting this case to the jury. Considering the evidence of the engineer in connection with that of the other witnesses, we think there [218]

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 1064, 173 Ky. 213, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-perrys-administrator-kyctapp-1917.