Pankey v. Little Rock Railway & Electric Co.

174 S.W. 1170, 117 Ark. 337, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 233
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 174 S.W. 1170 (Pankey v. Little Rock Railway & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pankey v. Little Rock Railway & Electric Co., 174 S.W. 1170, 117 Ark. 337, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 233 (Ark. 1915).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This is :an action to recover damages from tbe street oar company for personal injuries inflicted in tbe operation of a oar. Tbe plaintiff, S. H. Panikey, was a mail carrier on December 24, 1909, when be received tbe injuries specified in tbe complaint, and claimed that tbe servants of tbe defendant, in operating a car, caused it to collide with tbe mail cart in which plaintiff was riding, 'and to overturn the cart .and throw him out and injure him. The defendant denied the allegations of negligence and the trial before the jury resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendant.

The plaintiff’s narrative of the facts is as follows: He was driving west on Prospect Avenue, in the city of Little Bock, late in the afternoon—.about 5 or 5:30—on December 24, 1909, .and was standing on the step of the mail cart, where the mail carrier is accustomed to ride, when the street ear struck the cart and overturned it. There is a double track of the street railway ,a,t that place. On the north side the space between the north rail and the curb is about three and one-half feet, and the space between the south rail .and the south curl) is about thirteen 'and three-fourths feet, thus giving space for other vehicles to travel only on the south side of the street oar rails. The ear which inflicted the injury was coming from the west, and there was a down-grade around a .curve. The evidence shows that from the point where plaintiff was struck, an approaching oar could be seen something less than a 'block. Just around the curve, Fairfax Avenue runs into Prospect Avenue from the south side, but does not cross it. The plaintiff testified that he stopped his cart ait a mail box on the south side of the track to deliver a package .at a residence across the avenue, .and that after returning to ibis cart, he found that he had a registered package for a lady who lived a short distance farther west on the north side of the track. He says that he got in his cart and started diagonally across the street to reach the residence of this lady, Mrs. Witherspoon, and when he had crossed the south rail of the track his .registered mail pouch -slipped from the top of the pile, that his -attention was diverted in trying to catch hold of the -pouch and restore it to its place, and that in this way he slackened his hold on the lines -and lost control, for -the moment, over the movements of his hors-e. His mail was piled very high, so <as to obstruct his view to some extent, and when -he -got the -pouch replaced, he saw the -street car coming rapidly -about three-fourths of a block -away, and he whipped up -his horse and drew him over to the left in -an attempt to get the horse and cart off of the track, but that before he could succeed in doing so, the car struck the cart -and overturned it. He states that he whipped up his horse and drew him over to the left, and made outcries -to attract the attention of the motorman. His testimony is that the -car was running at a speed of about twenty miles -an hour, and in this he is corroborated by -other witnesses. His testimony, and that of other witnesses, tends to establish the fact that the gong was not sounded as the car approached Fairfax Avenue, -and the evidence is sufficient to justify the conclusion that if the gong had been sounded, the plaintiff might have noted the approach of the car in time to have started about getting his horse and cart off of the track at a-n earlier moment.

On the other hand, the testimony adduced by the defendant tends to show that plaintiff got his horse -and cart off of the track before the collision occurred, and then backed into the car, and that he stepped off of the cart before the collision. In other words, the testimony of the defendant completely exonerates its employees from the charge of negligence, and supports the verdict in favor of the -defendant.

It is contended in the first place that the court erred in excluding from the consideration of the jury two ordinances of the city of Little Rock, one relating to the speed of vehicles propelled along the streets, .-and the other imposing a duty on the street car company of sounding the gong -at street -crossings. The ordinances excluded by the court read as follows:

‘ ‘ That no .automobile, locomobile or horseless vehicle propelled by the use of electricity, gasoline or steam, by whatever name such vehicle may be known, whether used for purposes of pleasure or business, shall be moved or propelled along, over or upon any public street, .avenue, boulevard or other public place in that part of the city bounded on the north by the Arkansas River, on the east by Commerce Street, on the south by Tenth Street, and on the west by the west side of Broadway, and also the city park and .free bridge across the Arkansas River, at a rate of speed exceeding eight miles per .hour and elsewhere in the city exceeding fifteen miles per hour. Any person violating .any of the provisions of this ordinance shall, upon conviction, be subject to a fine of not less than five, nor more than twenty-five dollars (section 914 Campbell & Stevenson's Digest of the City Ordinances of Little Rook).”

“Sec. 1859. Same—Bells or Gongs on Gars.—-That every street railway company operating its cars in the streets or other public places of the city of Little Rock •shall place a suitable bell or gong on each of such cars, and cause the same to be rung or sounded on each car approaching or passing another car, or approaching or passing any .street crossing or other regular crossing, such ringing or sounding to be commenced .at a distance of not less than fifty feet from the oar or crossing approached, and continued until such car or crossing has been passed.”

(1) The circuit court ruled that the first of the ordinances, copied above did not apply to street railways, and we are of the opinion that that conclusion is correct. The language of the ordinance does not leave the question entirely free from doubt, but .street cars rather stand in a class to themselves, so far as concerns the mode of operation, and we think that the language used .shows with reasonable certainty that the framers of the ordinance meant only to regulate the .speed of other vehicles. It is true that the designating words “.automobile, loco-mobile or horseless vehicle propelled by the use of electricity, gasoline or steam,” .are broad enough to include street oars propelled by electricity, but the mode of operation of that kind of oars is entirely different from the other kind named, and we think that the city council 'did not mean by this ordinance to classify them with the other kinds of vehicles designated. Of course, it is a question of fact in each case for the jury to determine, notwithstanding the absence of an ordinance specifically regulating the speed, whether those operating the cars were guilty of negligence in running at excessive speed under given circumstances, but as this ordinance had no reference to street cars, the court was correct in excluding it from the consideration of the jury.

(2-3) The other ordinance is clearly applicable, and we think the court erred in excluding it from the jury. It applies to street railway companies and provides that the bell or gong shall be sounded when the car is approaching or passing another car, or approaching or passing any street-crossing or other regular crossing. The contention on the part of the defendant is that the place where Fairfax Avenue runs into Prospect Avenue is not a street crossing within the meaning of the ordinance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 S.W. 1170, 117 Ark. 337, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pankey-v-little-rock-railway-electric-co-ark-1915.