142 Ky. 814 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Alleging that he was carelessly, negligently and wrongfully. ejected or thrown' from o.ne of ■. appellant’s trains, :-while running at a'high rate of speed, by the conductor or other employe in charge, appellee sued to recover damages for injuries sustained by reason of. said wrongful or negligent act. The company denied liability and pleaded that, at the time the accident happened, appellee was a. trespasser upon said train, and jumped or fell from the train of his own accord and without fault on the part of any of the employes of said company.
A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee for $500.00. The company appeals. The grounds relied upon for a reversal are, that the court misinstructed the jury, that the verdict is not supported by the evidence, and that certain incompetent evidence was permitted, over the objection of appellant,' to go' to the jury.
The incompetent evidence complained of is, that the plaintiff was permitted to testify that he thought he was
It is next insisted that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence. The facts, as fully developed, are that appellee, who lived in Lee county, Kentucky, had gone to Columbus, Ohio, to enlist in the army. Bor some reason he did not enlist, but at once returned to Cincinnati, reaching there after five o’clock, and took the six-ten train, on -the'Queen & Crescent Railroad, intending to go to Lexington. He claims that he purchased a ticket to Lexington; that he boarded a train, took a seat, and that sometime after the train left Cincinnati he went to the end of the ear for the purpose of getting a drink of water; that, when passing the conductor; he was stopped by him and asked for his ticket; that he gave his ticket, calling for passage to Lexington, Kentucky, to ihe conductor, and passed on and took a seat; that later 1 tie conductor came to him and demanded his ticket, and he at that time insisted that he had already given up his ticket. This the conductor denied;, telling him that he had only given him a ticket good to Williamstown, Kentucky; that he would have to pay cash beyond that point or be put off; that he then gave the conductor forty cents; which entitled him,to passage to Corinth; that- at Corinth
At the time this accident happened the train was between stations. The conductor was notified, and at the next station he telegraphed back to have the section foreman hunt up appellee, and to have the fast freight following notified that he had fallen from the train, so 4hat those in charge might be on the lookout Ms presence on or about the track. Appellee went to the Some of one Mr. Rogers, near there; his injuries were
While an issue is made in the pleadings on: the question as to whether or not appellee had purchased a ticket from Cincinnati to Lexington, this was but an incident to the presentation of the real cause of action, the charge that appellee was wrongfully, willfully and negligently thrown from the train while in motion, thereby causing his injury. He sustained no injury by being put off the train at the time when the conductor required him to leave it. The only damage which he sustained by reason of that act, if wrongful, was the expense to which he would have been put to go from that point on to Lexington, his destination, and. any loss he suffered by reason of the delay occasioned in reaching Lexington. The cause of action for which he seeks a recovery is separate, distinct, and wholly disconnected with his being required by the conductor to leave the train. The evidence fails to show that, in requiring him to leave the train, the conductor was rude, rough or insulting in his manner, or that the conduct of the conductor at the time he was ejected from the train was such as to give appellee any just cause of complaint, save for the items of expense or cost of being transported from the point at which he was ejected to Lexington, together with a reasonable compensation for any loss sustained by reason of his delay in reaching that point. After he was ejected from the train he was no longer a passenger; and when he climbed upon the step of the rear platform and concealed himself under the drop cover, his relation to the company was not that of a passenger, but a trespasser, and the company owed him no duty except the duty to protect him from injury after his presence there was discovered.
The instructions should have directed the jury’s attention to the single issue, Was plaintiff pushed or shoved from the train by the brakeman? This phase of the case was correctly given in instruction No. 1. The measure of damages as defined in instruction No. 2 was proper; and instruction No. 4 correctly defines gross negligence. Instruction No. 3 was based upon the idea that, at the time plaintiff received 1ns injuries, he was in fact a passenger. This was error, and upon another trial, in
For- the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for another 'trial-land further proceedings consistent herewith.