Tempfer v. Joplin & Pittsburg Railway Co.

131 P. 592, 89 Kan. 374, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 12, 1913
DocketNo. 18,098
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 131 P. 592 (Tempfer v. Joplin & Pittsburg 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
Tempfer v. Joplin & Pittsburg Railway Co., 131 P. 592, 89 Kan. 374, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 74 (kan 1913).

Opinion

[375]*375The opinion of the court was delivered by

West, J.:

Plaintiff sued to recover damages for the loss' of his son who, he alleged, was killed by one of the defendant’s cars. The petition averred, in substance, that on August 21, 1910, and for a long time prior thereto, the defendant at a point on its line known as Fleming station kept a rest room or depot for the accommodation of passengers; that shortly before that date the depot was removed, but that the place continued to be used as a stopping place for passengers, where they were received and discharged, and that a large number of passengers constantly congregated there and used such stopping place; that on the day mentioned the son went to the station at this place for the purpose of becoming a passenger; that he had been accustomed to going there and knew that the defendant still stopped its cars at that point; that he arrived there at about 9 o’clock P. M., and finding no place provided to sit down and rest, sat down on the end of one of the ties of the defendant’s road, that' being the only place to be found at or near the stopping place to rest and wait for one of defendant’s cars, and while so waiting he fell asleep and became unconscious of his surroundings or the approach of any car; and about 9:15 o’clock the defendant wantonly, willfully, recklessly and with gross carelessness and negligence, after its motorman who was running the car saw the deceased several hundred feet away and asleep and unconscious and in plenty of time to have stopped the car, ran the same over and killed him. The answer alleged, among other things, that if the plaintiff’s son was killed it was on account of his own carelessness, fault and negligence, in going upon the tracks and sitting down and remaining there. Testimony was introduced to the effect that the car was loaded and running in the neighborhood of fifteen miles an hour and could have been stopped within 150 to 200 feet, and that the [376]*376motorman saw the deceased 300 feet or more before running over him. One witness testified that he was a passenger on the car and saw something on the track that looked like a man and told the motorman; that he again arose and told the motorman that it was a man, but that the motorman made no reply and simply turned his head; that'the car was 300 or 350 yards from the object when this witness first saw it; that the motorman did not slacken the speed until within ten or fifteen feet of the deceased, who was sitting on the tie close up to the east rail facing east, in a stooping position with his head in his hands. Another witness testified that:

“A big tall fellow said there was a man on the track, but it never took no effect at all, it kind’a stirred them up. I got up and saw something sitting on the tie there stooped over like. I think the tall man said ‘there is a man there.’ The car did not slacken up after that that I noticed.”

Another witness testified that he was on the car.

“When I first heard this tall man say there is a man on the track the car, in my j udgment, was about 300 or 350 feet from him. The car did not seem to slow a bit.”

Numerous witnesses denied that there was any tall man on the car who thus notified the motorman, and various others gave evidence to the effect that the motorman did all he could to stop the car after discovering that the object on the-track was a man. The jury among other things found that the motorman saw the deceased several hundred feet away on the track in a dangerous place, apparently asleep, in time to have stopped the car without injuring him; that had he taken such measures as were in his power at the time he first discovered the object on the track and after he knew and recognized it to be a man who would not leave the track he could have stopped the car before striking him; that the motorman was in no doubt as to the nature of the object on the track when he [377]*377first discovered it. In answer to a question whether the motorman, as soon as he discovered that it was a man and that he was in peril and would not move, applied the air to the brakes and reversed the motion of' the car, they answered “No.” Question No. 24 was:

“Did the motorman, Dan Daetwyler, while operating car No. 64, on the night of August 21, 1910, while approaching Louis Tempfer, wantonly, wilfully and intentionally after he knew that such object was a human being, and that it would not leave the track, run his car upon and over him.”

To this the jury first answered “Don't know,” and on being sent back returned instead the answer “Carelessly.”

The jury were instructed that their chief inquiries were whether the deceased met his death through the wanton, willful, reckless negligence of the defendant, and if so of what such carelessness and negligence consisted ; whether the defendant used ordinary care and caution in the operation of its car after the motorman saw and recognized that the deceased was a human being on the track in a perilous or dangerous position, asleep or apparently helpless, and whether the deceased was killed by reason of his own negligence or by reason of the defendant’s gross, wanton or reckless carelessness and negligence; that the contributory negligence of the plaintiff would not avail the defendant, “if it be-shown that the defendant by the exercising of reasonable care and prudence after having discovered the deceased in a dangerous position, and a place of peril, apparently asleep, or unconscious of the said dangerous and perilous position he was in and in time to stop the car and thereby not injured him, and failed to do so, and run over him and killed him”; that under such circumstances “the doctrine of contributory negligence has no place, the defendant would be liable for any injury inflicted irrespective of the faults which places the injured party in the way of such injury.” Reckless[378]*378ness and wantonness were correctly defined. It was left to the jury to determine whether the act of the deceased in going upon the premises of the railroad company to become a passenger and finding no place provided sat down on a tie to rest was contributory negligence, but they were told that in any event he should use due care and diligence in looking out for the cars and doing everything a reasonably prudent person-would do to avoid injury, “but if he falls asleep while there and becomes unconscious of his surroundings and his danger, and the defendant’s agents observe such conditions and facts in time to stop its cars and to avoid an injury, and fails so to do and kills him, the company would be liable.” In the 15th instruction the jury were specifically told that if the deceased was guilty of carelessness and negligence continuing down to the time of the negligence or carelessness, if any, of the defendant which contributed to the injury or, death “there could be no recovery, unless as I have said the defendant comes within the exception to the rule which I have stated, precluding the defense of contributory negligence.” The defendant requested certain instructions which were refused, but some of which were substantially covered by those given. One, however, was refused and not otherwise covered, that before they could find the defendant guilty of willful and wanton negligence they “must find that the defendant’s motorman, after he discovered said Louis Tempfer on the track and realized that he could not or would not leave it, purposely and willfully ran his car onto and over said Louis Tempfer.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 P. 592, 89 Kan. 374, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tempfer-v-joplin-pittsburg-railway-co-kan-1913.