Weidekamp's Administratrix v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad

167 S.W. 882, 159 Ky. 674, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 840
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 167 S.W. 882 (Weidekamp's Administratrix v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad) 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
Weidekamp's Administratrix v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad, 167 S.W. 882, 159 Ky. 674, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 840 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Turner

— Affirming.

Frank Weidekamp was the foreman of a switching crew in the East Louisville yards of appellee on April 29th, 1911, and while so engaged on that day with his crew in taking from said yards to other yards in the city of Louisville a train of circus ears was run over and killed

This is an action by his personal representative, alleging that he came to his death by reason of the negligence of the appellee, and asking damages therefor.

TJpon the first trial a verdict for $8,000 was returned against appellee, but the court upon motion set that verdict aside and granted a new trial.

On the last trial at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony the court gave a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant, and from a judgment entered under that direction this appeal is prosecuted.

. It is conceded that if the action of the lower court in directing a peremptory instruction on the last trial is erroneous there should be a reversal with directions to enter a judgment on the verdict rendered at the first trial.

Weidekamp was a young man, in good health, active and alert, and had been engaged by appellee as a switch-man for 11 or 12 years.

The evidence as to how the accident happened was substantially the same upon both trials except that upon the second trial Eucker, who had been introduced by the defendant upon the first trial, did not testify, and Birg, a negro, who did not testify at the first trial, testified at the last.

[676]*676The only negligence relied upon as causing the accident is that on the morning before the accident a crew of tr a clonen of appellee in- repairing the tracks at the point where the accident occurred had taken from under the ties a lot of cinders and soft dirt and piled it along the track for a distance of sixty or seventy-five feet in a ridge from a foot to a foot and a half high, and that the decedent in attempting to board his train, while it was in motion, had in some way stumbled over or had been impeded by this ridge of dirt and cinders, and that it was the cause of the accident.

But it is the contention of the appellee (1) that it was not only its right, but its duty to keep its tracks in repair, as well for the protection of its employes as for the proper handling of the traffic, and that, therefore, even if the ridge of dirt was piled along the side of the track, it was merely a necessary incident to the maintenance and operation of the railroad, and was not, therefore, in any event negligence; and (2) that, even if it was negligence for this ridge of dirt and cinders to be where it was, giving the fullest effect to the whole evidence, it is neither shown directly nor by any fair inference that the ridge of dirt and cinders was the cause of the accident.

In our view of the case it is unnecessary to determine whether the existence of the ridge of dirt and cinders along the side of the track was negligence, and it, therefore, remains to be determined whether there is any evidence from which it may be fairly said that the ridge . was the cause of the accident, and this, of course, involves an examination of the evidence on that question.

There were only four witnesses introduced upon either trial who saw the accident or any part of it, viz., Eucker, Kessler, Birg, and Harpring, and only the latter three testified upon the last trial.

Harpring states that he was superintending the unloading of coal at a distillery a short distance away, and was on lower ground than the place where Weidekamp was killed; that there were some cattle cars on a side track between where he was and the place of the accident, ' but by reason of being on lower ground he saw Weidekamp while the cars were running’ over him by looking under the cattle cars. In speaking of the accident to Weidekamp, he says:

“Q. Did anything happen to him on the 29th day of April, while you were up there? A. Yes, sir; he got [677]*677killed. Q. Did you see the accident? A. No, not all of it. Q. Just tell the jury what part of it yon saw, if any? A. I saw the last several cars passing over his body as he was lying on the track. Q. On what rail of the track was his body when it was being run over? A. On the south. Q. Did you see him fall? A. No, sir.”

J. H. Kessler states that he was forty or fifty yards from Weidekamp when the accident happened, and describes it in this way:

“Q. I will get you to tell the jury just what happened, in your own way, just what you saw, to the best of your recollection? A. All I can say, Weidekamp tried to get on and must have slipped or missed the footstep, and fell down between them. Q. . Will you please state positively about that, whether he missed his footstep? A. No, riot particular, because that was done so quick, you know, you couldn’t tell .whether he missed his footstep or slipped. Q. You don’t know about that. You don’t know whether his hand slipped, or whether his feet slipped from the stirrup? A. No, sir. The Court: Which side of the car did he try to get on? The witness: The north side, between the northbound main and the southbound main. Q. Where was the train at the time he tried to get on, on the northbound main? A. On the southbound main. Q. The southbound main is the north track, isn’t it? The Court: The northbound main, the train goes to Cincinnati on that? The witness: Yes, sir. The Court: And the southbound main brings the trains into Louisville and on South? The witness: Yes, sir. Q. On which side of the train was he, on the right-hand side or the left-hand side, going to Cincinnati? A. Going to Cincinnati. Q. Yes? A. He would be on the right-hand side; the train was coming this way. . Q. He was on the riglit-hand side of the train looking towards Cincinnati, no matter how the train was going? A. Yes, sir. Q. Which side of the track were you on? A. The. same side as Mr. Weidekamp. Q. Were you over next to the Elk Run Distillery or over on Mellwood? A. Next to the distillery. Q. That is the side he was on when he was killed? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you see him make more than one attempt to get on that train? A. I think he made two, but never lost his hand-hold, is the way it looked to me.”

And again on Cross-examination:

[678]*678“Q. Now, you say it looked to you as if lie made two attempts to get on, and missed the first one and then tried the second time? A. Yes, sir. Q. But held his hand-hold all the same? A. Yes, sir.”

The colored witness Birg says:

“A. I was coming from the Elk Run Distillery with my team at the time he fell. I saw him when he fell. Q. How did you come from the Elk Run Distillery? A. "Well, the Elk Run set south of where we were hauling coal there. South of the track our cars was on, and I had to come from south, coming north, and then turned east back of the watchman’s shanty, to come along the line of track where our cars were at, going east. Q. When you turned to go east, were there any cars between you and the main track? A. No, sir; there wasn’t no cars between me and the main track at all. Q. That is when you turned east? A. When I turned east; no, sir. Q. In which direction then did you drive in order to get to the coal cars, east or west? A. East. Q. You say you saw Mr. Weidekamp when he fell? A. Yes, sir. Q. How far away from him were you? A. About 20 or 25 yards, as near as I can come at it. Q. In which direction where you looking? A.

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.W. 882, 159 Ky. 674, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weidekamps-administratrix-v-louisville-nashville-railroad-kyctapp-1914.