Southern Railway Co. v. Dugless

183 S.W. 937, 169 Ky. 360, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 S.W. 937 (Southern Railway Co. v. Dugless) 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
Southern Railway Co. v. Dugless, 183 S.W. 937, 169 Ky. 360, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 701 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Turner

Affirming.

The main building of the Greenbaum distillery in Midway, Kentucky, is at the southeast corner of Gratz [362]*362and Dudley streets. The boiler room is located in the extreme eastern end of the main building, the north wall bordering on Gratz street and the south wall facing the yards or property of the company. In the south wall of the boiler room, and near the southeast corner of the main building, is a door ten feet wide and about eight feet high, which is operated by lifting and lowering. The south wall of the boiler room is seventeen inches thick and the door is on the inside of that wall.

Appellant’s main track runs north and south through the distillery property, and at a point about one hundred and thirty-six feet northeast of the boiler room door the main track connects with a switch several hundred feet long which is operated by the railroad company, but is used chiefly in delivering freight to and taking freight from the distillery.

Prom the point where the switch leaves the main line for a distance of about two hundred and seventy-five feet the switch-track curves considerably to the west and is described in the evidence as being a sixteen degree curve or a curve of about two feet to the one hundred; at the point where it reaches the southeast corner of the main building and passes the south door of the boiler room it is still on this curve, and from the time it reaches the southeast corner of the main building it runs as close to the south wall of the main building throughout almost the entire length thereof as is consistent with its operation, the purpose being no doubt to enable cars to be loaded from or unloaded into the distillery.

The boiler room door is six feet three inches from the nearest rail of the switch track and only five feet and eight inches from the side of a passing car, and of this space seventeen inches is represented by the thickness of the wall, the door being on the inside thereof.

The appellee was on the 6th of January, 1914, an employe of the Greenbaum distillery, and on the morning of that day, between eleven and twelve o’clock, had occasion to go to the boiler room; he had been instructed to repair a certain hoe, and having gotten that while in the boiler room, started to leave through the south door; when he came to the door he found that it was partially down, being lifted from the concrete floor only about two and one-half or three feet, and instead of raising it higher he got down on his hands and knees and crawled under it. When he got under, of course, he was [363]*363right at or near the inside rail of the switch, and he says that as he was in the act of straightening up he looked first over his left shoulder toward the main track and then over his right shoulder to assure himself there was no danger, and started to cross the track; that because of the curve in the track at that point his vision was obstructed by the corner of the building and he could only see some eight or ten feet beyond that point, and that after he had gotten on the track he found the train, which was backing onto the switch, was right on him and he undertook to save himself by grabbing hold of something on the end of the car, but could not secure a good hold, and then the train struck him, ran over and amputated his right leg between the ankle and the knee and crushed his other foot and ankle.

He brought this suit for damages against the railway company, alleging that the injuries were the result of its negligence and that the place where he attempted to cross the switch was habitually used by the employes of the distillery company in going to and from the boiler room, and that this fact was known to the company and its agents and servants, and that it was therefore a place at which the presence of persons on the track was to be anticipated. The defendant in its answer denied negligence, denied that it was the owner of the switch track, and pleaded contributory negligence.

On the trial in the circuit court a verdict was returned for the plaintiff for $15,000.00 in damages, upon which judgment was entered, and the company has appealed. ]

The appellant claims that it was entitled to a directed verdict: First, because the evidence shows the' appelleé to have been a trespasser upon its tracks, to whom it owed no duty until after his peril was discovered; and, second, because, as claimed, the evidence showed the appellee to have been guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

The evidence is that the employes of the distillery when the same was in operation, as it was on the 6th of January, 1914, habitually and constantly during the ■ day used the switch track immediately in front of the boiler room door as a passway to and from that room; that the main distillery building was on one side of the switch track and several other distillery buildings on the other side, and in fact it was a necessity for the em[364]*364ployes in going from one part of the plant to the other to nse the switch track; that at the time appellee was injured he had with him the hoe which he intended to repair at the blacksmith shop or forge belonging to the company, which was on the other side of the switch track.

It is argued by appellant that where there is a private switch used by a railroad company only once a day, and then at a regular and fixed time, the fact that it was habitually used by large numbers of persons at other times of the day, and not at such fixed time, makes a person using it at the regular fixed time a trespasser rather than a licensee. The claim is that inasmuch as the company only used this switch once every day and then generally between eleven and one o’clock, and the distillery people had given orders that the door should be kept down while trains were switching, that the company should not be expected to anticipate the presence of persons on the track at that point during those hours.

In support of this view we are cited to the cases of Sou. Ry. Co. v. Sanders, 145 Ky. 679; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Bayes’ Admr., 142 Ky. 400; and Hoback’s Admr. v. L. H. & St. L. R. R. Co., 30 K. L. R. 476. But an examination of those cases will disclose that they were each cases where parties were using the tracks of the railroad company in the late hours of the night, and it is merely held that even though it might be the duty of a company to anticipate at such'places the presence of persons upon its track in day time, or at such reasonable hours as they were shown to customarily have used them, that no such duty rested upon it in the unusual hours of the night when in the regular order of things persons were not to be expected at such places.

In this case the evidence shows that at all times during the working hours of the day the employes of the distillery used this switch as a passageway to and from the boiler room, and failed to show any fixed time was given by orders of the distillery company when it should not be used as such other than that the door must be kept down when trains were switching. Appellee’s evidence is that he had no notice that the train was switching, and that no signal was given indicating its approach to the passway.

The train which struck appellee consisted of an engine, tender and three freight cars, and at the time it was backing on the switch at the rate of six or eight [365]

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.W. 937, 169 Ky. 360, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-dugless-kyctapp-1916.