Louisville Railway Co. v. Park

29 S.W. 455, 96 Ky. 580, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 9, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 455 (Louisville Railway Co. v. Park) 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 Railway Co. v. Park, 29 S.W. 455, 96 Ky. 580, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 132 (Ky. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

JUDGE GRACE

delivered the opinion oe the court.

This is an appeal by th"e Louisville Railway Company from a judgment rendered by the Jefferson Cir[582]*582cuit Court (Common Pleas Division) against it in favor of Ruth Park, for the sum of three thousand dollars in damages for personal injuries sustained by appellee while a passenger on the cars of that company and in alighting therefrom.

Appellee states in her petition that appellant was a common carrier of passengers to and from certain points specified along its line of railway, in the city of Louisville, and appellee being a passenger on the cars of appellant, along the course of its railway, and having paid her fare as such, and reaching her destination, and having given the usual signal, the car stopped, and that in getting off: said car she slipped and fell on the steps of said car, though using due diligence and care on her part and without fault on her part, and that thereby she sustained serious personal injury, and she so slipped and fell on plaintiff’s car, by reason of negligence and carelessness of appellant in suffering and permitting the step of said car from which she slipped and fell to become and remain greatly worn on the outer edge of same; and by the negligence of said road, its agents and employes in suffering and permitting the mud to accumulate in considerable quantity on said step, and, by reason of constant use by passengers, to become hard, and being thus packed hard, was by the rains of the day made slippery, whereby she fell.

The answer of appellant controverts each of these allegations as charged by appellee; denies that the step of their car was much worn, or worn at all, so as to make it dangerous, and denies that it permitted any accumulation of mud on said step, other than [583]*583.such as necessarily accumulated on same along its line of travel and between its regular termini at the ■eastern and western ends of its road; denies any negligence whatever on the part of its agents, employes, or any or either of them; denies that appellee received or sustained any injury; denies that she exercised due care and prudence on^her own part; denies that the rear step of said car, where appellee slipped and fell, was in an unsafe condition; denies that she received her injuries by reason of either or both the matters complained of by her in her petition, and finally affirms that her injuries, if any, were the result of her own negligence and carelessness.

On the issues thus made up, after one mistrial, the parties again went to trial, and on the 14th of October, 1893, the jury found for appellee in the sum before stated, whereon judgment being rendered and motion for a new trial being made and overruled, the Railway Company prosecutes this appeal.

Of the evidence, it is sufficient to say that both parties introduced proof tending to sustain their respective contentions, as made by their pleadings, and whereon issues had been joined, and after a careful examination of same, we are satisfied that the finding of the jury in this case is not within the line wherein this court has felt authorized under the law to set aside verdicts of juries for want of sufficient testimony to sustain same.

The only other question, therefore, that need be examined for error is as to the instructions given by the court, and whether those given at the instance of the appellee, or by the court of its own motion (all being [584]*584excepted to by appellant), contained a correct exposition of the law of the case, and were not prejudicial to the material rights of appellant!

There were seven instructions given by the court and without copying the same in full it may be said briefly that in so far as they, or either of them, authorized any finding for appellee, they were carefully based upon the two matters complained of by appellee in her petition — one that the step of the car from which she slipped and fell was worn off on the outer edges, and the other that by reason of the accumulation of mud on said step it was rendered more dangerous than it otherwise would have been ; the jury being told that if these two things concurred, or either alone existed, and that same was so suffered to remain and exist by reason of the negligence of appellant, and if, in addition, by reason of same, appellee using herself due careaud caution, nevertheless slipped and fell, and so received the injuries complained of, then the company was liable; appellee being careful in the instructions-asked of the court to define the degree of care and diligence required of said company in reference to the two things complained of — one the inherent defect in the step by reason of its worn condition, and the other by reason of the excessive accumulation of mud on said step.

The degree of care and diligence required of the railway company in the general definitions given on this subject were, that said company should use the-“utmost degree of care and diligence,” or the highest degree of practical care and diligence which prudent persons are accustomed to use in defendant’s busi[585]*585ness, and consistent with the mode of transportation adopted by it, and farther defining the terms “negligence,” and “negligently,” whenever used in the instructions, to mean any failure to use the care and diligence defined above; the sixth instruction given by the court, and at the instance of appellee, giving the definitions in a general way of those terms, “diligence” and “negligence,” whenever used in the instructions. So that this limitation — -that the care required of appellant should never be greater or go beyond that used by a prudent person, in matters of a like or the same nature — is clearly set out in the instructions ; and no instruction given goes beyond this limit or this standard.

This limitation of the degree of care and diligence to be used by a railway company in the transportation of its passengers to that used by a prudent man in like or similar business, and having regard also to the means or mode of transportation adopted by appellant, is the same standard as marked out and laid down by this court at least as early as 1882, in the case of the Louisville City Railway Co. v. Weams, 80 Ky., 420, as designating the true line of the liability of railways in Kentucky, and same has been uniformly followed in Kentucky since that time.

That limitation of the degree of diligence required of railways in the transportation of passengers to that of the same diligence used by a prudent man, was and yet remains a material modification of the diligence usually required of such companies engaged in such business, as stated by the leading authors on the subject of common carriers, and as held by quite a. [586]*586number of the Eastern States where the population is dense and travel extensive.

Mr. Ray is quoted by appellant as saying, when carriers undertake to convey passengers by the powerful and dangerous agency of steam, public policy and safety require that they be held to the greatest possible oare and diligence. This court has heretofore held that the same liability of carriers applies to transportation by city railways as by ordinary steam travel. And in this case the fault, if any, was in the means of exit from the cars of appellant, which necesssarily applies, whether the mode of transportation be by steam or other power. It is a right guaranteed to every passenger, a safe means of ingress and egress, these things being necessarily incident to his contract for transportation.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 455, 96 Ky. 580, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-railway-co-v-park-kyctapp-1895.