P. Bannon Pipe Co. v. Craig, Jr.'s, Administrator

277 S.W. 855, 211 Ky. 562, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 923
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 855 (P. Bannon Pipe Co. v. Craig, Jr.'s, Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P. Bannon Pipe Co. v. Craig, Jr.'s, Administrator, 277 S.W. 855, 211 Ky. 562, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 923 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Sampson

Reversing.

The verdict and judgment for $7,500.(00 for the death of a five-year-old child, run over by a truck of appellant, P. Bannon Pipe Company, on a streét in Louisville, is assailed upon this appeal as erroneous, and a reversal sought upon several grounds, chief among them being (1) that there was not sufficient evidence introduced by the administrator of the Craig child to entitle him_to have the case submitted to the jury; (2) that the company’s motion for a peremptory instruction should have been sustained; (3). that the instructions given by the court were erroneous, and (4) that the trial court erred to the prejudice of appellant company in granting- a new trial from the first verdict and judgment, and appellant now insists that the second judgment and verdict be set aside and the first verdict and judgment be substituted therefor. On the first trial the verdict was for the appellant company, and the evidence upon that trial appears to have been the same in substance as upon the second trial. No witness who testified for either side was able to give the details of the accident save Ewing Winston, the truck driver, and his helper, Dewey Scott, who was on the truck with him. Only one _ witness for the plaintiff, Marion Elmore, saw the child' at the time of the accident, and he was unable to say how the accident happened except that he saw the truck strike the child, but how the child came to be in the street, where it came from or how long it had 'been there the witnesses did not know. Elmore’s evidence upon the subject was as follows:

“17. What first attracted your attention to the accident? A. I don’t know. I just happened to *564 look up and saw it, just walking along- down the street and happened to see it.
“■Q. As you looked up, tell the jury in your own way what you saw? A. I looked up and seen the truck hit the boy and run over him and kill him.
“Q. Where was the child when you first saw it? A. It was bumping him right out in front of the car.
“Q. He hadn’t been knocked down yet? A. It was bumping him right up' against them wheels in the front.
“Q. Was he on his feet? A. No, sir; when I looked up he was sort of bumping him out in front of the truck.
“Q. Bolling along? A. No, sir, was not rolling ■along, bumped up a time or two by the wheel, finally got him down like that.
“Q. And the first you saw of it, the child was right in front of the truck? A. Yes, sir, that was the first I seen of it.
“Q. How long had he been there you don’t know? A. No, sir.
“Q. Which side of the road he came from you don’t know? . A. No, sir; when I seen him he was up on the east side of the road against the truck.
“Q. The truck was actually in contact with him? A. Yes, sir.”

From the evidence of the other six witnesses testifying for plaintiff it only appears that the child was killed; that some of them saw the truck just before and after it struck the child but did not see the child or know just how the accident-happened; that upon going to the scene of the accident they observed the truck standing on the street some thirty or forty feet from where the lifeless body of the infant lay; that they observed truck ' tracks on the street swerving to the left in the direction in which the truck traveled, but what caused the truck to swerve no one of the witnesses was able to say. At the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff the defendant company moved for a directed verdict in its favor, but this motion was overruled, although it is very hard to see from the evidence for plaintiff unexplained, wherein the company or its driver was guilty of culpable negligence, if indeed there was such negligence. After that motion was overruled, the defendant *565 introduced Winston, the driver, who testified as follows with respect to the accident:

“A. Well, how come me to run over the little child; there was two little hoys up on the railroad playing and just as, well, I saw them just a little while before I got to them, but I was right at them almost. Then just as I got ready to pass them I guess — I don’t know exactly how far I was from them, but one grabbed up a handful of cinders to throw at the other one, and he ran right down off the embankment right in front of the truck.
“37. When he ran off the embankment and in front of the truck, what did you do to avoid hitting him, if anything? A. When he ran off the bank the bumper of the truck knocked him down; I cut my truck to the left over in to the ditch and I was about to get into the ditch and turn my pipe off of my truck, and I pulled up on the road again, back up into the road again.
“38. What, if anything, did you do to stop the truck? A. When I knocked him down I .applied both brakes, my emergency brake and foot brake, pulled my emergency brake with my hand—
“39. Did you do that, or not, as soon as you saw him start across to try to stop? A. Yes, sir; no sooner than he ran right off the bank I grabbed my brake and turned my wheel all at the same time.
“40. As soon as you saw him run off the bank you did what? A. Applied my emergency brake and foot brake, and turned my steering wheel with my left hand, over to my left.
“41. What did you do with your feet, if anything, try to stop ? A. Pushed in on my clutch and brake.
”42. Tell the jury, some might know and some not, what are the different methods by which a truck may be stopped, what did you have? A. To stop it when?
“43. Bo you are doing your best. A. Doing it the best I knowed to stop it without killing your motor, as pushing on your clutch that releases your motor from your works.
“44. When you press on your clutch to get it clear, that disconnects the engine from the truck? A. Yes, sir.
*566 “45. And the engine can keep running without applying any power to the truck? A. Yes, sir.
“46. That is the same as if you stopped your engine?, A. Yes, sir.
“47. What device is there for the right foot to operate? A. That is for your clutch — your brake for the right foot.
“48. Your left is the clutch and right for the brake? A. Yes, sir.
“49. What other brake is there ? A. An emergency brake, you pull by hands.
“50. Is there anything else besides throwing out the clutch, or pressing on the foot brake, and pulling on the emergency brake, a person can do to stop the truck? A. No, sir.
“51. Did you do all those things when the boy started to run off the bank? A. Yes, sir.
“52.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 855, 211 Ky. 562, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-bannon-pipe-co-v-craig-jrs-administrator-kyctapphigh-1925.