Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Phelps' Administrator

205 S.W. 793, 181 Ky. 689, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 602
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 22, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 793 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Phelps' 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. Phelps' Administrator, 205 S.W. 793, 181 Ky. 689, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 602 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

Thomas C. Phelps, while riding in what is known as the smoking car for white passengers, a car that was divided into compartments by partition in the middle, the front end being set apart for colored passengers, fell against the glass window in the car as he was about to take his seat near the window. In the fall his head went through the glass and broke it and jagged parts of the glass cut Phelps so badly about the face and throat that he died soon afterwards from loss of blood.

Afterwards this suit was brought by his administrator to recover damages upon the ground that the death of his intestate was caused by the negligence of the railroad company. More than one act of negligence was attempted to be made out in the evidence and is discussed in the brief of counsel for the administrator, but as the case went to the jury upon only one ground, which submitted the only act of negligence, if there was any that was at all made out in the evidence, we will confine this opinion to the facts and circumstances connected with it.

So treating the case, the negligence complained of consisted in the fact that the conductor of the train compelled Thomas C. Phelps, who was drunk and disorderly in the coach set apart for ladies as well as men, to remove from that coach to the one immediately in front of it known as the smoking car for white men; that when Thomas C. Phelps, with the assistance of the conductor, was taken from the ladies’ coach to the smoking car, while the train was running at its regular speed, he was in such a state of intoxication as to be helpless and unable to take care of himself; that when he had been taken to a seat in the front end of the smoking car next to the partition that separated it from the compartment for colored persons, and while he was standing in the aisle, or at the end of the seat, but before he [691]*691had taken a seat, the conductor let go his arm that he had hold of at a time when the train was going around a curve in the track, and when the conductor let go of his arm h© fell against the window, breaking the glass and receiving the injuries from which he died in the manner stated.

Turning now to the evidence, the first witness for the administrator was Boone Phelps, the brother of Thomas Phelps, who, after testifying that he and his brother, who was about fifty years old, got on the train at Nicholasville to go to Irvine, testified as follows: “Q. When you got to Nicholasville what was the condition of your brother with .reference to drinking, or being drunk? A. He was' pretty full; he was that way when we left home. Q. When you got to Nicholasville did all of you, or any of you, buy any tickets to Irvine? A. I bought tickets for all three of us. Q. What coach did you get in? A. We got in the second coach, in the front end. Q. The front end of the second coach? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you recollect, with any certainty, as to which seat in the rear coach you got in? A. The first seat after you go in the door, on the left hand side. Q. On the left hand side entering? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now, Mr. Phelps, I will get you to tell the jury what took place between your crowd and the conductor with reference to requiring your brother to move into the front car; the smoking car. A. Well, he passed by several times and brother was talking rather loud, the door was open,.and the rattle of the train and all, and the conductor passed u£ two or three times, and finally he come to us. There was a couple sitting right behind us that stopped him once as he went through, and then he come to my brother and told him, says, ‘You will have to go to the other coach; you are talking too loud in here,’ and caught hold of him and started to the other coach, and I got up and caught hold of him. Q. Which arm did the conductor take hold of him? A. The left arm, and I got hold of the other arm and started through between the coaches, and when we got out on the platform we hit a curve and come pretty near throwing us off, and the conductor took hold of me; grabbed me by the shoulder. Q. What was your condition then with reference to being intoxicated, or not? A. I only had a drink or two in me. Q. Your brother was full, how[692]*692ever? A. Yes, sir. Q. Then what took place after that lurch occurred while on the platform? A. We goes into the smoker, and went up next to the partition that separates the smoker; the white part from the colored sicle, and started to sit down on a seat there, and the conductor and I both let loose of him as he started in between the seats, and about that time they went around a curve, and he went through the window. Q. What was the movement of the train at the time your brother was thrown through the window? A. They seemed to hit a sharp curve, and the train was running pretty fast and hit the curve and threw him right through the window. Q. What was the speed of the train? A. Well, they were running fast. Q. What is the condition of the road with .reference to curves, and the condition; smooth running, or the contrary? A. It is pretty rough; lots of curves. Q. Had your brother ev'en gotten seated at the time he was thrown toward that window? A. No, sir. Q. At what place was it that you and the conductor let go of him? A. At the end of the seat. Q. What was your position; your brother’s and the conductor’s and your own as you went up the aisle? A. Well, the conductor and my brother were a step or two ahead of me. Q. When the conductor took hold of your brother and told bim he had to go in the other car, what part of him did he take hold of? A. He caught hold of his arm here (witness indicating). Q. Did your brother make any resistance to going that you know of ? A. Well, no, he could not hardly go; he was pretty full. Q. What was his motion as he went along? A. Why he was like any other drunken man walking.”

George Teegarden, a witness for the administrator, said: “Q. Which car were you in, Mr. Teegarden? A. I was in the smoking car. Q. What part of the smoking car were you sitting in? A. About half way down on the left hand side. Q. Did you see Mr. Phelps and the conductor when they came into that car? A. Yes, sir. Q. I wish you would go on and explain to the jury just what you saw and heard? A. I didn’t pay much attention; they come in and kinder stopped right at the door, and then I looked around again and seen him and his brother coming down the aisle. There was not room for the three to walk side by side, and the conductor had his arm here (witness indicating). Q. What did he [693]*693do with him? A. Walked down until they come to the Jim Crow door, and he bulged there as they went in there. I don’t know whether the conductor—I think he let go his arm—there was not .room for him to go in there; he held to him as long as he could, and he made a kinder of a bulge, .looked like, right through the window. Q. Went through the glass? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you notice what the condition of the man was with reference to soberness, or the contrary? A. I think he was pretty well set up with whiskey. Q. When the conductor turned loose of his arm what took place then? That was about the time he made the bulge through the window? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now, Mr. Teegarden, when they come there opposite this seat where the accident occurred, did the conductor turn the man loose, or did he jerk loose? A. Could not say; there was not room for him to go in there, it was so narrow; I noticed he held on to him as long as he could. Q. The question I asked you was whether Mr. T. C. Phelps, the man who was injured, jerked loose or did the conductor turn him loose? A. I could not say; a man in his condition could not tell. Q.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W. 793, 181 Ky. 689, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-phelps-administrator-kyctapp-1918.