Sage's Admr. v. Creech Coal Co.

240 S.W. 42, 194 Ky. 415, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 195
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 14, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 42 (Sage's Admr. v. Creech Coal Co.) 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
Sage's Admr. v. Creech Coal Co., 240 S.W. 42, 194 Ky. 415, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 195 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

[416]*416This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment sustaining a demurrer to his petition as amended and dismissing same.

The pleadings are too long to be copied here but the facts alleged are these:

The defendant owns and operates a double-track tram-road between its mine and its tipple. This road is an incline and is supported a part of its distance by a trestle. Empty cars are raised to the mine on one track as loaded cars are lowered to the tipple on the other by means of a wire cable which is attached to the ends of the cars and runs around a drum at the head of the incline. Appellant’s intestate, an infant — years of age, was walking on the trestle on his way to school when this cable broke and struck him, knocking him off of the' trestle to the ground about twenty feet below and killing him instantly. The defendant owns all the houses and land in the mining camp surrounding the trestle, which is “daily, habitually and constantly” used as a walkway by large numbers of children in going to and from school and between their homes and defendant’s commissaries, as well as by the men and women residing in the camp. The father of decedent worked in the mine and with his family, including decedent, lived in one of the residences owned by the company. This use of the trestle by decedent and others so using it was “with the knowledge, consent, permission and license of the defendant company.” The cable was caused to break “through and by reason of the gross negligence and carelessness of the defendant company, its agents and servants in charge of the operation and control of same” and because same “and the appliances used in connection therewith were defective, dangerous, out of repair and unfit for the purposes for which they were used.” Decedent at the time was exercising ordinary care for his own safety. The defendant, its agents and employes knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, of the dangerous and unsafe condition of the cable and of decedent’s peril, and decedent did not know and by the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety could not have known thereof.

The decedent’s age is not stated in the petition otherwise than that he was “an infant;— years of age,” and it is not alleged he was defective in any way. Under these allegations, according to thoroughly established rules of pleading, he must be considered as a normal boy barely under 21 years of age, and we cannot accept the state[417]*417ment of counsel in brief that he was at the time bnt 15 years old, although we do not think this if conceded to be true would be material in any possible view of the other facts alleged.

Counsel for plaintiff rests his argument in brief solely upon the theory that the facts alleged bring the case within the attractive nuisance doctrine, and he cites only cases applying that rule, except L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Vaughan’s Admr., 183 Ky. 829, to which he refers in support of the contention that whether or not decedent was a trespasser was a question for the jury.

Just what relevancy this latter contention or the case cited in support thereof is supposed to have here where we are considering only the petition as tested by a demurrer, we do not know. Every fact alleged must be taken as true, and decedent’s status at the time of the accident is fixed and must be determined so far as material by the court from these imdisputed facts.

That these facts do not bring the case within the attractive nuisance doctrine is too obvious, it seems to us, to require citation of authorities or extended discussion. There is no intimation that children ever played upon the trestle, and it was not a movable thing with which they •could play. They simply used it as a walkway in exactly the same way as did the men and women of the mining camp, and as men, women and children use many parts of all kinds of railroad tracks everywhere. The trestle was not different in any essential feature so far as involved here from every other part of defendant’s tram-road that may have been used as a walkway. It unquestionably was a dangerous walkway for anyone but not in any sense an attractive nuisance. Decedent was not induced to be upon it by any attractive features possessed by it, even if we might concede a normal boy just under 21 years of age or even 15 years old could claim the protection of that doctrine. Besides the petition makes it clear he was simply using the trestle as a walkway on his way to school when he was injured, and that use in connection with the company’s attitude toward same, must determine its duty to him, if any.

The two cases upon which alone plaintiff relies to bring this one within the attractive nuisance doctrine are Lyttle v. Harlan Town Coal Co., 167 Ky. 345, and L. & N. R. Co. v. Steele, 179 Ky. 605. The former is confessedly an extension of that doctrine in order to sanction a manifest right of recovery where a nine-year-old child [418]*418was injured while at play on the defendant’s premises and from a positive act that under the circumstances really amounted to wilful or at least wanton negligence towards a licensee, upon which ground it could and doubtless should have been rested in view of the recognized rule of this and other courts to restrict rather than enlarge the attractive nuisance doctrine.

At any rate we are unwilling to accept that case as authority for still further extension of the doctrine so as to include the wholly different and not at all analogous facts of this case.

The 'Steele case also presented entirely dissimilar facts and was quite properly classified as within that doc-' trine, as this one can not be, since there a boy eight years of age, according to the plaintiff’s evidence, was hurt after his peril was discovered and while at play on defendant’s moving cars in accordance with a long established custom in which the company acquiesced.

Convinced that defendant’s duty to decedent, if any, cannot be measured by the attractive nuisance doctrine it must depend upon whether he was technically an invitee, a licersee or a trespasser.

That he was not an invitee as that term is ordinarily employed is clear since he was on defendant’s premises for purposes of his own, and not for any purpose connected with the company’s business or beneficial to it.

He was therefore either a trespasser or a licensee, and if the latter he was a bare licensee since nnder the facts alleged it is patent he did not have an irrevocable license or interest in the walkway. In so far as the duty of the owner is concerned there is but little and usually no difference in the two relationships. In both the owner of the premises is bound not to injure him wilfully or wantonly, but in neither is the owner bound to maintain either his premises or his appliances in a safe condition for the user, and the age of the user does not change the rule except perhaps with reference to a licensee of much ten•derer age than decedent. ■ The licensee like the trespasser must take the premises as he finds them. About the only essential difference is that the owner need not anticipate the presence of the trespasser but often must anticipate the presence of the licensee. This duty of anticipating the presence of the licensee does not, however, impose any affirmative duty upon the owner of providing him a safe place and he may revoke the license at any time, but it does place upon him the negative duty, so long as [419]

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240 S.W. 42, 194 Ky. 415, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sages-admr-v-creech-coal-co-kyctapp-1922.