Louisville Railway Co. v. Wilder

136 S.W. 892, 143 Ky. 436, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 432
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 2, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 892 (Louisville Railway Co. v. Wilder) 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. Wilder, 136 S.W. 892, 143 Ky. 436, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 432 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

OpiNXon of the Court by

Judge Caeroll

Reversing.

This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment in favor of the appellee, and a reversal is asked npon the ground that the evidence offered in her behalf did not support the. averments of the petition, and for alleged error in giving and refusing instructions.

The petition, as amended, averred that while one of appellant’s cars was standing motionless for the purpose-of permitting passengers to get on, appellee who was carrying an infant child in her arms got on the platform-[437]*437of the car for the purpose of going in the car, and taking a seat, and before she was safely in the car it was by the negligence of the persons in charge of the car started with a “reckless or unnecessary and unusual jerk of lurch,” causing her to be thrown against the side of the doof-way and seats of the car, bruising and injuring her severely.

Appellee testified in substance that when the car stopped, she got on the platform and was in the act of entering the door of the car with her baby in her arms when the car suddenly started forward and threw her against the door and afterwards against one of the seats. But there was no evidence in her behalf that the car was started in a reckless manner or with an unusual or unnecessary jerk or lurch. Witnesses for the appellant testified that the car was started in the usual manner and that there was no violent, or unnecessary or unusual jerk or lurch, and that appellee was not carrying her child when she fell hut that the child was in the aisle of the car ahead of her and she was caused to fall by the fact that in passing from the platform into the body of the car he stepped upon her dress, tripped and fell. We may, therefore, say that under the evidence, the case for the appellee must rest upon the ground that the operators of the car were negligent in starting it before she had opportunity to get to a seat or be seated. The negligence, if any, consisted not in the manner in which the car was started, but in the fact that it started before appellee, who had her baby in her arms, had opportunity to get inside the car and to a seat.

With the evidence in the condition stated, the court in instruction No. 2 told the jury that: .

“If they believed from the evidence that on the occasion mentioned the train was started suddenly, with a reckless or unusual jerk or lurch, and that the plaintiff was thereby thrown down and was injured thereby, or if the jury believe from the evidence that when the plaintiff got upon the platform of the car and was about to enter the car she was carrying her child in her arms, and that by reason of such fact, if it was a fact, she required more than usual care, and that her situation, if such it was, was, or by the exercise of the highest degree of care upon their part would have been, reasonably apparent to the defendant’s agents or any of them in charge of the car, and that such agents started the car before the plaintiff was seated in the car, and that the plaintiff was [438]*438thereby thrown down and was injured thereby, then the law is for the plaintiff and the jury should so find.”

In another instruction the “highest degree of care” was thus defined as:

“The highest degree of care which prudent persons engaged in the operation of cars propelled by electric power exercise for the safety of passengers under similar circumstances to those under investigation in this case.”

Under the instruction the jury was authorized to find a verdict for the appellee if they believed from the evidence that the car was started with a reckless or unusual jerk or lurch, or, if they believed that appellee’s condition or situation was such as to impose upon the operators of the car the duty of exercising unusual care for her safety. So much of this instruction as authorized the jury to find for the appellee if the oar was started with “a reckless or unusual jerk or lurch” should not have been given, as there was no evidence whatever upon which to submit this theory of the case to the jury.

Another objection to the instruction is that it allowed a recovery if the jury believed that the appellee in entering the car with her child in her arm “required more than usual care, and that her situation, if such it was, was or by the exercise of the highest degree of care upon their part would have been, reasonably apparent to the defendant’s agents or any of them in charge of the car, and that sueh agents started the car before the appellee was seated in the car and that the plaintiff was thereby thrown down and was injured thereby.” Under this instruction the jury were in substance and effect told that if the situation of appellee imposed upon the persons in charge of the car the duty of exercising more than usual care, appellee was entitled to recover if they started the car before she was seated, thus, putting upon the company as a matter of law a higher duty and degree of care than should have been imposed. If the situation or condition of appellee required more than usual care on the part of the agents in charge of the car in starting it, and her situation and condition was reasonably apparent to them, then it was their duty before starting the car to have allowed appellee a reasonable opportunity to get seated. Or, to put it in another way, it was for the jury to say (1) whether appellee’s condition was such as to require the operators of the car to exercise more than [439]*439usual care, (2) whether by the exercise of the highest degree of care her condition or situation could have been discovered by or was reasonably apparent to the operators of the car, (3) whether they failed to allow her reasonable opportunity to take a seat in the car before starting it. To entitle appellee to recover :t was necessary that all three of these conditions should exist and it was for the jury to say under proper instructions whether they existed or not. It was as much the province of the jury to pass upon one of these questions of fact as the other, and the existence of each of them was necessary to make out a case for appellee. The operators were not reciuired as a matter of law to hold the car motionless until appellee was seated. They were only required to hold it motionless until she had a reasonable opportunity to be seated. Although the jury might have believed that her situation was known to the operators of the ear, and that it demanded unusual care upon their part, yet, if they allowed her reasonable time and opportunity to take a seat before starting the car, and she failed to avail herself of the time and opportunity so allowed, the company would not be liable. The Anew we have of the law of the case was incorporated in an instruction offered by counsel for appellee, but not submitted in which the jury were told that:

“* * * After getting upon the platform of the car, the plaintiff with her child still in her arms, attempted to enter the door of the car, and if the jury shall believe from the evidence that under these circumstances, the exercise of the highest degree of care for the plaintiff’s safety required that the defendant’s agents in charge of the car and controlling its movement should have allowed her a reasonable opportunity to take a seat in the car before starting it in motion, and if the jury shall believe from the evidence that the car was started in motion while the plaintiff was entering it, carrying her child in her arms, and that she was thereby caused to fall and so sustain the injuries of which she complains, they should find for the plaintiff. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 892, 143 Ky. 436, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-railway-co-v-wilder-kyctapp-1911.