Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Scott's Administrator

211 S.W. 747, 184 Ky. 319, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 21, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 747 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Scott'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. Scott's Administrator, 211 S.W. 747, 184 Ky. 319, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 55 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing”,

This suit ivas filed to recover damages for the alleged negligent killing of Oscar Scott by the appellant and defendant below, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, on December 5, 1916. The accident resulting in decedent’s death occurred at a grade crossing in the town of Campbellsburg, Henry county, at about 9:33 a. m., by a fast passenger train going east from Louisville to Cincinnati colliding with an automobile truck in which the deceased was riding. The truck which weighed nine tons was being driven by Charles Staebleiy who was hauling crushed rock to be put upon the Campbellsburg and New Castle pike, a short distance from the former town, and it had on it at the time a load weighing five tons. In general terms the negligence alleged' consisted in a failure to give proper warning of the approach of the train to the crossing; that the crossing was in an incorporated town, a densely populated community, and that a great number of people crossed it daily, making it extensively used, and that it was, because of the topography of the ground, an exceptionally dangerous- crossing; that because of these facts ordinarv care on the part of the defendant required that it should not only give the usual signals of the approach of its train to the crossing;, but that ordinary care for the trav[321]*321oler required it to adopt some other method of warning him by maintaining a flagman, a gate, an automatic bell, or some other contrivance which ordinary prudence might dictate.

The answer contained a denial of the allegations of the petition and a plea of contributory negligence, which was denied by a reply, and upon trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $15,000.00, and complaining of it the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Many alleged errors are relied on for a reversal. For ns to undertake to consider in detail each of them would not only entail a heavy tax upon our time, but would carry this opinion far beyond due limits. Con-densely stated, it is urged that the peremptory instruction offered by defendant should have been given, but that if mistaken in this, the court improperly instructed the jury; that the court, over the objections of the defendant, permitted incompetent testimony to be introduced, and that the verdict is excessive.

The right to the peremptory instruction is insisted upon because it is claimed that no negligence is shown on the part of defendant, and that the testimony conclusively shows contributory negligence on the part of deceased. A disposal of these contentions calls for a brief statement of the facts.

. Campbellsburg. is an incorporated town with municipal officers and has a population, according to the testimony, of between three and four hundred people, with the contiguous territory to the corporate limits quite thickly settled, especially in the direction of and beyond the crossing in question. That crossing is made by the main street -in the town and seems to be the only entrance to the town from the territory lying north and east of it. It is shown without contradiction that from three to five hundred people cross over the crossing daily. Between the station whistling post and the town there are two other crossings, one of which is an overhead one, and the other, at grade and is about 2,400 feet west of the crossing where the accident occurred.

The depot is 920 feet west of the crossing involved, and something like half way the distance between the depot and the crossing the railroad track enters a cut which terminates practically-at the crossing, and which is about eighteen or twenty feet deep. The cut is in a [322]*322curve, and the hill through which it runs obstructs the view of a train approaching from that direction until the traveler is practically upon the track, although when fifty feet away from the track a train could be seen about one hundred and forty feet from the crossing, and when within twenty-five feet of the track it could be seen about two hundred or two hundred and fifty feet from the crossing.

On this occasion the train in question was what is known as a double-header, which- contained, besides thctwo engines, eight coaches; it was running one minute late and at a speed ranging, according to the testimony, from thirty to sixty miles per hour. Its schedule rate from Louisville to Cincinnati was thirty-three miles per hour, with a maximum if necessary of forty-five miles per hour. The employes on the train and many other witnesses testified that the train signaled for the station at the usual place, then for the grade crossing west of the depot, then for the board at the station, which, when given, was answered by another signal, and that about the time it passed the depot it gave the usual signals for the Campbellsburg and Now Castle crossing; that at that time the bell was ringing and continued to ring until the crossing was reached. A number of witnesses for plaintiff testified to hearing some one or more of these signals, but say that although they were close to the track there was no signal given for the crossing in question, nor was the bell ringing when the train approached it. All the .signals testified to except the one at or near the depot were too far from the crossing to comply with the statute, and possibly too far for any one behind the hill 'at the crossing to hear them. If there was a failure to signal for the crqssing* at or near the depot, it is clear that ordinary care was not exercised to give warning of the approach of the train. We therefore conclude that the insistence that a peremptory instruction should have been given because no negligence was shown on account of the failure to give warning of the train’s approach can not be sustained.

The truck in which decedent was riding had been loaded from a car just west of the depot, and when it left the car it was traveling at the rate of about five miles per hour. The pike from the depot to the crossing ran practically parallel with the railroad track, which [323]*323was in plain view for about half the way, where the track, as stated, entered the cut. The space between the track after the entrance into the cut and the road over which decedent was traveling was occupied by several houses, some of which had picket fences around them, and those obstructions prevent a traveler on the pike from seeing the train after it enters the cut. The pike some distance before reaching the crossing is down grade, and when within about fifty feet of the crossing it turns so as to cross the track practically at right angles. East of the crossing the ground is level. The driver, Staebler, testified that he listened for trains on approaching the crossing; that he looked east and saw no train; that when within about fifty feet of the crossing, and again when within twenty-five feet of it he looked west and saw none, neither did lie hear one from that direction, and did not discover its approach until he was upon the track. He says that the deceased also looked west at about the time he did. Twelve hundred feet east of the crossing was a semaphore which indicated, if in working order, when a train would be within tlie block. It was in evidence that the semaphore was in working condition on that day.

The deceased had no connection with the repairing of the pike, or the hauling of material for that purpose. He had merely gotten upon the truck on his own account for the purpose of riding out to where the pike was being repaired. Ho had no control over the movements or actions of the driver.

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211 S.W. 747, 184 Ky. 319, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-scotts-administrator-kyctapp-1919.