Sizemore's Administrator v. Lexington & Eastern Railway Co.

184 S.W. 383, 169 Ky. 497, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 716
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 14, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 383 (Sizemore's Administrator v. Lexington & Eastern Railway 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
Sizemore's Administrator v. Lexington & Eastern Railway Co., 184 S.W. 383, 169 Ky. 497, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 716 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle.

Affirming.

A. B. Sizemore was run over and killed November 10, 1912, by a work train owned by tbe appellee, Lexington & Eastern Railway Company, and operated by its servants. The accident occurred near the village of Krypton, in Perry county, and at a point about one hundred feet from where a county road crosses the railroad track. The administrator of the decedent’s estate sued in the Perry circuit court to recover damages for his death, alleging in the petition that it was caused by the negligence of appellee’s servants in charge of the work train. The answer of the appellee denied the negligence charged in the petition and alleged contributory negligence on the part of the decedent, and the latter plea was controverted by reply. On the trial the circuit court, after the introduction of the appellant’s evidence, on appellee’s motion, peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict for the latter, which was accordingly done. Prom the judgment entered upon that verdict this appeal is prosecuted.

At the time of the accident appellee’s railroad had not been completed, but had been in operation to Krypton and for some distance beyond for about six months. No permanent station or depot had then been established at Krypton but trains operated on the road were stopped at a temporary station in use there. About a quarter of a mile west of Krypton appellee’s railroad track is crossed by a county road and the decedent was admittedly killed at a point 100 to 110 feet West of the road crossing in question. Whether he was then returning to Krypton from Glenn, a store and post office on the railroad three-' [499]*499fourths of a mile west of the crossing, or from a church near Glenn at which religious services were being held on that day, Sunday, does not appear from the evidence; but the evidence does show that he was walking on the railroad track and between the rails thereof at the time he was overtaken and killed by the train. Between Glenn and the road crossing near which the decedent was killed the railroad track passes through a deep cut known as the Campbell cut, the eastern end of which terminates about two hundred yards from the crossing near which the accident occurred, but between the end of the cut and the crossing there is a long sharp curve upon a heavy fill, the fill being constructed over the Campbell creek near its mouth. Between the crossing and the mouth of the cut there is no roadway paralleling the railroad track, but there was another travelled way contiguous to the' railroad track which could be used and was used by persons in going from Krypton to Glenn and from Glenn to Krypton. There were perhaps a half dozen families and residences between Krypton and Glenn, but none of these residences were situated immediately upon the railroad.

Several of appellant’s witnesses testified that persons in passing between Krypton and Glenn frequently and even daily walked appellee’s railroad track. They differed, however, as to the number of persons using the track, the estimate ranging from ten to a larger number daily, that of one witness, the appellant, being that it was probably used by a hundred people daily. But it was neither alleged in the petition nor shown by the evidence that such use of appellee’s railroad track between the points mentioned was necessary, was assented to by it, or had continued such a length of time as shows appellee’s acquiescence therein. In other words, the evidence fails to show such use of appellee’s track at the place of the accident as imposed upon it, in operating its trains, the duty of anticipating the presence of persons thereon or of maintaining a lookout for them and giving warning of the movements of the trains. The rule requiring these precautions upon the part of those operating railroad trains is confined to cities or thickly populated communities and cannot be extended to rural communities or sparsely settled places, although the tracks at those places may be used by a large number of persons. C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Nipp’s Admx., 125 Ky. 49; L. & N. R. Co. v. Redmon’s Admx., 122 Ky. 384; Miller’s Admr. v. [500]*500I. C. R. Co., 118 S. W. 348. Cumberland R. Co. v. Walton, 166 Ky. 371.

There are, however, some other cases, such as Warnock’s Admr. v. L. & N. R. Co., 150 Ky. 75; Carder’s Admr. v. C., N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co., 155 Ky. 536; C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Dawson’s Admr., 159 Ky. 296, in which it was held that the question whether the party injured was a mere trespasser or a licensee must depend not upon the fact whether the accident happened in an incorporated city or town, but on the number of persons using the track at the place of the accident; and further, that the question should be left to the decision of the jury under a proper instruction from the court; but as in the instant case the evidence failed to show such use of appellee’s track as imposed upon it, while operating its train, the duty of anticipating the presence of persons on it at the place of the accident or of maintaining a lookout for them and giving warning of the movements of the train, there was no reason for submitting this question to the jury.

It is, however, apparent from appellant’s evidence that appellee’s servants in charge of the train on the occasion in question, in operating’ it, exercised all the care that could have been required of them had the deceased been a licensee. Practically all the witnesses agreed that the engine whistle was blown either as the train approached the cut or after it entered it. Jack Hibbard, an eye-witness to the killing of the decedent, testified that when the train came out of the cut it sounded the whistle three times, the deceased then being about thirty or forty yards ahead of it, but that the latter kept walking along the track and seemed to pay no attention to the whistle or noise of the train; that the train was composed of an engine, tender, tw'o cars and a caboose, one of the cars, a flat, being in front of the engine. The witness further testified that when the train came in sight Rowlan, appellee’s brakeman, was standing on the front end of the flat car ahead of the engine and that the engineer was at the same time maintaining a lookout from his cab; that Rowlan made signals with his hand and as the car got close to the decedent attempted to strike him with his hat; but whether the signals given by Rowlan with his hand were intended for the engineer or decedent the witness was unable to say. The whistling of the train while in the cut or approaching it was evidently for the crossing near which the decedent was [501]*501killed, and the three blasts heard by Hibbard after it emerged from the cut must have been given to warn the decedent of the danger he was in from the train, and if so, while the train could not have been stopped within the thirty or forty yards intervening between the flat car and the decedent, the latter could, if he had heeded the signal, have stepped from the track in time to save his life. .The testimony of Hibbard is corroborated in all essential particulars by that of Isaac Hamden, the only other witness besides Hibbard who had the decedent directly in view when the train struck him. There was a diversity of statement among appellant’s witnesses as to the speed of the train at the time of the accident, but it is evident from the evidence as a whole that its speed was not so great as to be unusual or unsafe in approaching a crossing.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 383, 169 Ky. 497, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sizemores-administrator-v-lexington-eastern-railway-co-kyctapp-1916.