Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Sinclair

188 S.W. 648, 171 Ky. 562, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 18, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 648 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Sinclair) 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. Sinclair, 188 S.W. 648, 171 Ky. 562, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 394 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Hurt

Reversing.

[563]*563On the 2nd day of June, 1914, the appellee, Mrs. Fannie Sinclair, who is a married woman and at that time a resident of Georgetown, purchased a ticket from the appellant, Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Company, which entitled her to ride as a passenger upon its train and over its line of railroad from Frankfort, Kentucky, to Nashville, Tennessee. In company with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Llewellyn Sinclair, she came from her home at Georgetown to Frankfort on the morning of June 2nd, over the Frankfort & Cincinnati Eailroad, and arrived at Frankfort at 9:56 a. m. on that' morning. At that time it seems there was an arrangement by which a passenger coach was, upon each day, brought from Eiehmond, Ky., to Frankfort, over the line of the Louisville & Atlantic Eailroad. At the latter place it was detached from the train which brought it from Eiehmond and was placed upon a track in appellant’s yards. When the regular train of appellant from Lexington arrived at Frankfort, it would pass this detached coach and after passing through one or more switches, would get upon the same track upon which the detached coach stood, when it would back to and couple on to the detached coach and carry it as a part of its train to Louisville. Only a few minutes intervened between the arrival of the coach from Eiehmond and tlie arrival of the Frankfort & Cincinnati train from Georgetown and appellant’s regular south bound train from Lexington. On the morning in question the coach, which was brought over the Louisville & Atlantic Eailroad from Eiehmond, was placed upon a track in appellant’s yards, at a point a short distance to the east of appellant’s depot, at Frankfort, and between it and the tunnel, through which, appellant’s train from Lexington arrived at Frankfort. The train from Eiehmond arrived at Frankfort prior to the arrival of the train from Georgetown, and the coach, to be attached to appellant’s train from Lexington, had been detached and placed in position upon the track for some minutes before the arrival of the train from Georgetown. When the latter train arrived at Frankfort, the appellee and her sister-in-law came out of it and went into the waiting room of appellant in the depot, but immediately approached the ticket agent of appellant in his office in the depot and requested information as to the train which they would take to continue their journey to Nashville, over the appellant’s road. The ticket agent [564]*564pointed out to them the coach standing upon the track; told them that was the coach in which they would ride and directed them to get into it. The evidence is con-, tradictory as to whether the train from Lexington had then arrived in the Frankfort yards. The appellee and her companion, however, immediately proceeded to the coach as directed and entered it from the end, which was to the west. At the time of their entering into the train several passengers were in the coach and were sitting upon the seats, near to the door to its western end. The appellee claims that she and her companion immediately upon entering the coach proceeded to select a seat near the middle of the coach and went immediately to it, wherein they both proposed to be seated. Appellee was walking in front,' and when she arrived at the seat, she stepped aside to permit her sister-in-law to enter first, as the sister-in-law desired to sit against the window; her sister-in-law at once entered between the seats and sat down upon the seat at the end against the window; appellee was proceeding to sit down upon the end of the seat next to the aisle in the coach, but before she had a reasonable opportunity in which to sit down, the train of appellant, which had arrived, from Lexington and which consisted of an engine and four • or five cars, backed against the coach, in which she was, for the purpose of attaching it to the-train; that the .train men, handling appellant’s train, carelessly, and negligently backed the train agáinst the coach with great, unusual and unnecessary force'; that the coupling was made with such unusual and unnecessary- force, "that the collision between the train and the • coach was so unnecessarily and unusually violent that she was thereby thrown to the floor of the car, headlong, and with such force,. that the • contact broke one of her hips and she was unable to -arise without assistance. She was unable to continue her journey, and after a short space of time, she was lifted up by two of the passengers in the coach and was borne by them into the depot', from which place she-was carried to a hospital, where she was confined for five weeks. She was then taken to her home and from thence to Lexington,, where she remained in a hospital for five or six weeks; that she was caused to endure much.mental and physical pain’and suffering by her injuries; that.when the fracture of her hip healed, one of her limbs was shorter by an inch to-an inch and. three-quarters than the other,.; [565]*565that she was caused by the injury to be a permanent cripple and compelled to use crutches at all times in walking; that her injury was permanent,- and since she had received it she had been unable to perform the work of housekeeping, which she had theretofore done. To recover damages for the injuries sustained, she instituted this, action.

The appellant’s answer' consisted of a traverse of the averments of the petition and amended petition and a plea of contributory negligence upon the part of appellee, without which it was alleged that the injuries received by appellee would not have been sustained. The alleged contributory negligence was denied by a reply. The contention of appellant was, that the coupling of cars was one of usual character and was made without unnecessary or unusual force or violence; that appellee had contributed to her injury by negligently standing in the car and failing to secure a seat before the coupling of the train and coach was attempted; that no more force was used 'in making the coupling than was usual and necessary for the purpose; that the servants of appellant were in no wise negligent, and that appellee’s injuries would not have been sustained,- but for her own negligence. Quite a number of witnesses gave testimony upon the issues and their evidence was exceedingly conflicting. A trial of the action before the court and jury resulted in a verdict of the jury for the appellee, by which the damages which appellee had suffered were fixed at the sum of $8,000.00, and a judgment of the court was rendered in accordance with the verdict of the jury. The appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled and hence this appeal.

The grounds for a new trial embrace many things, but the briefs for appellant only make mention of the following grounds, and rely upon them, only, for a reversal of the judgment, viz.:

(1) The appellant was not guilty of. any negligence, and a verdict for it ought to have been directed at the close of the evidence for appellee.

(2) The appellee was contributorily negligent, as a matter - of law, and for that reason a verdict ought to have been directed for appellant.

(3) The verdict is not sustained-by a sufficiency, of evidence.

[566]*566(4) The court erred1 in the admission of incompetent evidence for appellee.

(5) The damages are grossly excessive, due to pas- . sion and prejudice on the part of the jury.

(6) The court erred in instructing the jury as to the measure of damages.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 648, 171 Ky. 562, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-sinclair-kyctapp-1916.