Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Treanor's Administrator

200 S.W. 634, 179 Ky. 337, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 634 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Treanor'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. Treanor's Administrator, 200 S.W. 634, 179 Ky. 337, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 226 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court, by

Judge Carroll —

Affirming.

[338]*338Frank Treanor, while driving' a heavy automobile truck of the Standard Oil Co., was killed at a public road grade crossing when the engine of a passenger train of the railroad company struck the truck at the crossing. On a trial of the case there was a verdict and judgment accordingly against the railroad company for ten thousand dollars, and it prosecutes this appeal.

' The principal ground relied on for reversal is that Treanor did not take reasonable or sufficient precautions for his own safety in attempting to cross the track and so being guilty. of such contributory negligence as would defeat a recovery, there should have been, as requested, a directed verdict in favor of the railroad company. •

Other alleged errors committed by the trial court in the introduction and rejection of evidence, as well as in giving and refusing instructions, are also presented, but, as stated, the chief question in the case relates to the precautions the driver of an automobile should take for his own safety when and before he is about to cross a railroad track at a grade crossing. Before, however, taking up these questions, we will state so much of the evidence as develops the circumstances and conditions surrounding the accident and the place where it occurred.

Frank Treanor, who all the witnesses'say was a sotíer, prudent, industrious and intelligent man, was and had been for some years employed by the Standard Oil Co. as its agent' at Shclbyville, Ky., for the sale and delivery, of its oil and other products. In delivering the articles kept for sale to different customers throughout Shelby county, he used an automobile truck that weighed between six and eight thousand pounds on which he carried in cans the oils, gasoline and other things that the Standard Oil Co. sold at this agency. This automobile had a seat in front large enough to accommodate a driver and another person, and on the day he was killed L. F. Eush, an intelligent, sober and prudent young man, was riding with him on the seat in the front of the automobile, Treanor being at the wh

In the afternoon of August 5,1916, the day of the accident, Treanor, who was out in the truck delivering-goods, left Christianshurg, a station of the. railroad company, on his way to Croppers, another station about three miles west of Christianshurg. Between Christianshurg; and Croppers the single track of the railroad company is1 crossed at grade by one of the public turnpike roads of [339]*339Shelby county. This road, at and near this crossing, was in a populous section of the county and the travel on it by vehicles of all kinds, including automobiles, was heavy.

On his way towards the crossing Treanor stopped for a few minutes about two hundred feet from the track for the purpose of delivering some oil to a customer at the side of the road, and then drove on towards the track.

The railroad ran in a deep cut for several hundred feet on each side of this crossing, and the.turnpike road also ran in a cut for a distance of about 180 feet from the railroad, the turnpike cut terminating at the railroad right of way about 20 feet from the track. Extending from a ditch, which was near to and alongside the railroad track, to the face or side of the cut, the railroad company had thrown up on each side of the turnpike a bank of dirt about three feet high taken from the ditch, and on top of these piles of dirt, from a point very close to the track to the top of the railroad cut, the company had built on each side of the turnpike a plank fence about five feet high, with planks about ten inches wide, and with spaces of three inches between the planks. So that a traveler on the turnpike going in the direction Treanor was would enter a cut about 180 feet from the track, getting deeper as he approached the track, until a depth of about eight feet was reached at the railroad right of way line a few feet from the track. This cut would obstruct from his view an approaching, train until he reached the railroad cut on the line of its right of way and, when he got to it, his view would be further obstructed by the banks of dirt that the company had put on its right of way from the track to the face of its cut and by the plank fences that it had built on top of these banks of dirt.

As the railroad also ran in a deep cut, the two cuts and banks of dirt and fences would likewise prevent the engineer and fireman from seeing an approaching vehicle until it had virtually gotten on the track, and so it will be seen that it would be difficult to find anywhere in the country a more dangerous grade crossing than this one.

After leaving the point where Treanor had delivered the oil, and while approaching the track, Rush, whose escape from death was little short ■ of miraculous, described what happened as follows:

[340]*340“Q. Where were you intending to go ? A. To Cropper, I think. Q. Did you have another stop to make there? A. I think so. Q. What was the nature or grade of the road, from the point where the oil was delivered at your last stop, down to the railroad tracks ? A. Slightly down grade. Q. I will ask you whether or not, after you left that last stop at the oil tank, going towards the turnpike crossing, the view was cut off from a train approaching from the direction of Louisville? A. Yes, sir. Q. What, if anything, obstructed that view? A. Bank on that side. Q. On the side of the turnpike? A. Yes, sir; side of the turnpike. Q. For what distance back from the turnpike and the railroad crossing would you say that view was cut off? A. I can’t say; I don’t know. Q. You don’t know? A. Yes, sir. Q. As you and Mr. Treanor approached this turnpike crossing, where it crossed the tracks of the Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co., was the attention of either one of you called to the fact that you were approaching a railroad crossing? A. He remarked to me that was the most dangerous crossing in the county. Q. Did he say why? A. He said, ‘You can’t see the track either way.’ Q. I will ask you whether or not you observed that yourself? A. Yes, sir. Q. Well, what, if anything, did he do as he approached the crossing? A. Why, he was going rather slow, and he slowed down still further. Q. I will ask you if there was any attempt made by either you or him to observe the approach of the train to the crossing? A. I was looking myself forward and listening; he seemed to be doing the same. Q. How close did you get to the railroad crossing before you observed the- train approaching? A. We were almost on the track. Q. Could you say ip feet how many feet you were from the railroad crossing — from the railroad track? A. Well, I' don’t know how many feet we were; I know we were almost on the- track itself. -Q. Almost on the rail, you mean? A., Yes, sir. - Q. How far was the train at that time, would you say, Mr. Rush? A. I don’t know just exactly .how far off it was; not a very great distance, though. Q. Say in feet about how many, the best you can estimate. A. I will have to make a guess at it, Mr. Beard. -Q. Your best judgment is what we want, Mr. Rush. A. I would say thirty yards; I don’t know whether it was that far or farther. Q. -Something about thirty yards? A. Yes, sir. Q. How fast did the train seem to be approaching? [341]*341A. "Well, it seemed to be coming fast; I don’t know just bow fast. Q. Conld you estimate in miles about bow fast it was coming? A. No, sir; I wouldn’t know bow to estimate it; I know it was coming very fast from tbe distance it went on before it stopped.

‘ ‘ Q.

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200 S.W. 634, 179 Ky. 337, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-treanors-administrator-kyctapp-1918.