54 Kan. 340 | Kan. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In this case we are called upon to decide whether, under the pleadings, the special findings of the jury, and the conceded facts of the case, there can be a recovery against the railway company. Jeremiah H. Zeiler, while attempting to uncouple freight cars at Woodward, I. T., fell, and the wheels of the car ran over his ankle, crushed it, and almost severed the foot. Woodward was- a station with a kind of eating house, but no physician or drug store, and no good accommodations for taking care of a person in Zeiler’s condition. The accident happened at a little after 8 o’clock in the evening. The train hands took Zeiler from the place where he was hurt to the depot, and placed him on a cot. They tied a handkerchief around his leg to prevent its bleeding, gave him stimulants, and supplied him with blankets to make him as comfortable as possible. The accident was reported to Mir. Strong, the train master at Wellington. The conductor received no response to his notice. A telegram informed him that a doctor would be sent there from Canadian, Tex., on a freight train that would arrive about 11 o’clock. About that time th'e freight train arrived, with Dr. J. A. Hart, a physician and surgeon, who then resided at Canadian, Tex. He gave Zeiler whisky and hypodermic injections of morphine, and wrapped the leg at the seat of the injury with absorbent lint, and placed a bandage around it below the knee. Zeiler was then taken on the cot into the caboose of the freight train, and at 12:14 a. M. the doctor started with him for -Wellington. Doctor Hart testifies that this was so done by order of Chief Surgeon Hogeboom, and that he did not amputatate at
' While it is contended by the railroad company, and there is'evidence showing, that the various physicians who attended
In the case of Railroad Co. v. Weber, 33 Kas. 543, it was held to be the duty of a railroad company to exercise reasonable and ordinary care in temporarily providing for the protection and comfort of a sick, unconscious and unattended passenger. It may be conceded that it was the duty of the