Slaton v. Union Electric Railway Co.

145 P.2d 456, 158 Kan. 132, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1944
DocketNo. 35,988
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 456 (Slaton v. Union Electric Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slaton v. Union Electric Railway Co., 145 P.2d 456, 158 Kan. 132, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 76 (kan 1944).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This was an action for damages sustained by plaintiff while riding in an automobile which collided with a freight car which was being pushed by an electric locomotive on defendant’s street railway in Coffeyville. The city of Coffeyville was impleaded as defendant.

The Union Electric Railway Company has a railway line which runs east and west on Eighth street in Coffeyville. That street is about thirty feet wide and is paved with brick. Buckeye street crosses Eighth street in a suburban part of the city.

On Labor Day, September 8, 1942, plaintiff and two young men, Arthur Cornett and Toby Curtis, spent part of the day riding about town in Cornett’s automobile. Curtis did the driving. Late that night another girl, Lucille Blumenstein, joined them. She and Curtis sat in front and Jewell Slaton and Cornett occupied the rear seat. About half an hour after midnight, while these young people were riding westward on Eighth street near its crossing with Buckeye street, Toby Curtis, their driver, undertook to pass another automobile going in the same direction. To do so he veered to the left, astraddle of the streetcar track. At that time a large freight car was approaching from the west, being pushed by defendant’s electric locomotive. Before Toby Curtis got the automobile off the track it collided with the freight car and Jewell Slaton was injured.

Hence this lawsuit.

In her petition Miss Slaton pleaded her version of the accident and her resulting injuries, alleging that the defendant railway company was negligent in the following particulars:

“That the brick pavement between the rails of said defendant’s track were lower than the rail. That the brick and filler adjacent to the inside of its north rail had been removed and worn away, causing a ditch or depression along the inside of said north rail, so that the tire on the car in which plaintiff was riding could not be driven over said rail with safety, but caught against said rail, thereby causing said collision.”

[134]*134Plaintiff’s petition also alleged that defendant failed to have a light on the front end of the freight car as it was being pushed eastward, so that the same could have been seen and warning given in time for the driver of the automobile to get off the streetcar track. It was alleged that the pavement—

“On the inside of the north rail . . . [was] from one to four inches lower than the top of the rail. That said brick did not fit against the north rail, and the filler between the brick and the rail had crumbled and worn away, so that there was a ditch or depression from two to six inches deep and from three to eight inches in width adjacent to the north rail.
“That when the car in which plaintiff was riding was approximately seventy-five (75) feet from -the -approaching box car . . . Toby Curtis turned the steering wheel of said car to the north and attempted to drive said car off the streetcar track. That the left front tire upon said automobile caught against the north rail and the car slid forward for a distance of approximately thirty (30) feet, at which time it cleared the rail, and the back tire caught on said rail, holding the automobile on the track. That the train . . . kept coming from the west, and, without diminishing its speed, struck the car in which plaintiff was riding, thereby crushing and mashing the same, and cutting, mashing and injuring the plaintiff . .

The petition also charged that defendant failed to have an employee on the front end of the freight car so that such employee could have seen the automobile in which plaintiff was riding and signalled defendant’s motorman to stop in time to avoid the collision.

Plaintiff also alleged that the defective condition of the street had existed for more than six months and that the city of Coffeyville, and its agents and servants knew or should have known its condition in time to repair it, but that they negligently failed to discover its defective condition, which resulted in her injury and damage. She prayed for $10,000 damages against the street-railway company and against the city.

The defendant railway company answered with a general denial, and alleged that if plaintiff was injured at the time and place alleged, said injuries were the sole result of an unavoidable accident for which defendant was not responsible.

The city’s separate answer was to the same effect, with the further plea that plaintiff’s petition did not state a cause of action against the city.

' The cause was tried before a jury. By the time the evidence for all parties was completed, it developed that there was no failure on the part of the railway company to have the advancing end of [135]*135the freight car properly lighted and to have an employee riding in front. There was testimony that at and near the point of the collision the groove inside the north rail was somewhat deeper than necessary for the free operation of the flanges on the wheels of the defendant’s cars and vehicles. It was shown that the advancing freight car on the street-railway tracks could have been seen for a long distance by the occupants of the automobile; and that for the purpose of passing another automobile going in the same direction the driver of the Cornett car drove it on to the streetcar track in the face of the on-coming freight car about the intersection of Buckeye street and Eighth street, and that the point of collision was a short distance west of there. There was evidence that the Cornett car was traveling westward at 25 miles per hour, and that the freight car was being pushed eastward at 15 to 20 miles per hour. Defendant’s freight car and electric engine were equipped with an air hose which, by manipulation of hand levers under control of the employee riding on the front end of the freight car, would sound a whistle and set the brakes of the train.

Plaintiff testified quite candidly:

"I rode along in the automobile that night ... to the point of collision. I . . . did not see any light, . . . did not see a box car . . . I paid no attention to the driving and did not pay any attention to the streetcar in front of us; I paid no attention to the streetcar tracks and did not look or listen or anything like that.”

Arthur Cornett, plaintiff’s seat-mate in the car (and who has since married her) testified with equal candor to the same effect.

Lucille Blumenstein, who rode in the front seat with the driver, testified that when their automobile was passing the other car prior to the accident, she had been looking straight ahead but “turned around to say something to Jewell . . . and the next thing I looked and seen the Union Traction boxcar coming up the street just before it hit us.”

Toby Curtis, driver of the automobile, testified by deposition:

“I passed a car near Buckeye [street], and as I went around it, I got over on the streetcar tracks.”

When Curtis gave his deposition he had deposed, — “but I did not see a streetcar until I was about, it must have been about ten feet.” However, before he signed his deposition, he changed the words “ten feet” to read “seventy-five feet.” When this portion of the deposition was read in court it precipitated a colloquy between coun[136]*136sel for the litigants extending through several pages of the abstract.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baker v. Braum's, Inc.
D. Kansas, 2024
Sepulveda v. Duckwall-Alco Stores, Inc.
708 P.2d 171 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1985)
Roach v. Henry C. Beck Co.
442 P.2d 21 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1968)
Gertrude D'HonDt v. James Drake Hopson
269 F.2d 759 (Tenth Circuit, 1959)
Beye v. Andres
296 P.2d 1049 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1956)
Beitz v. Hereford
220 P.2d 135 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1950)
Pierce v. Jilka
181 P.2d 330 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1947)
Atherton v. Goodwin
180 P.2d 296 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1947)
Ranney v. Camden Fire Insurance
179 P.2d 190 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1947)
Drennan v. Pennsylvania Casualty Co.
176 P.2d 522 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1947)
Towell v. Staley
166 P.2d 699 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1946)
Thummel v. Kansas State Highway Commission
164 P.2d 72 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1945)
Frazier v. Cities Service Oil Co.
157 P.2d 822 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 456, 158 Kan. 132, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slaton-v-union-electric-railway-co-kan-1944.