166 Ky. 48 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Plaintiff, William Moore, brought this action against defendant, Consolidation Coal Company, to recover damages for personal injuries. Prom a verdict and judgment in his favor for $600, the coal company appeals.
Briefly stated, the facts are as follows: Plaintiff was employed to load coal in defendant’s mine near Van Lear. When the cars were loaded they were coupled to an electric motor, which pulled them outside the mine. After loading a car on the morning of the accident and waiting some time for the motor to pull it out, plaintiff went to the entry and requested the motorman to call for his car. Shortly thereafter the motorman returned with the motor. As the motor was turning into the room track, plaintiff was walking- by the side of it. The motor was derailed and plaintiff’s foot was caught between one of the rails and a gob of slate lying nearby. His foot was crushed and two bones broken. There'was some evidence tending to show that the room track was not constructed for the purpose of operating a motor over it and was insufficient for that purpose. There was likewise evidence tending to show that the. ties at the place of accident were defective, and that one of the ties where the motor was derailed broke in two just under the rail. One of the witnesses stated that the break appeared to be an old one. There was further evidence to the effect that the crab rope, which was used to draw the loaded cars off the room track, was not quite long enough to reach from the entry, track to the car, and that this made it necessary to run the motor onto the room track in. order to connect the crab rope, or cable, with the loaded car.
The instructions authorized a recovery, not only if the track was defective or insufficient, but if the crab rope was not of sufficient length to reach from the motor on the entry track to the loaded car. It is argued that this phase of the case should have been submitted to the jury, because there was evidence tending to show that the insufficient length of the crab rope .made it necessary for motor to go on the room track in order to connect the loaded car with the crab rope. The fact remains, however, that the crab rope was Hot being used at the time of the accident. While its insufficient length may have made it necessary for the motor to go on the room track, its insufficiency was not the proximate cause of the accident. The defective or insufficient condition of the track, if it was defective or insufficient, alone caused the motor to be derailed and was the proximate cause of the injury. That being true, the trial court erred in authorizing a recovery based upon the insufficiency of the crab rope.
On the return of the case, the plaintiff will be permitted to amend his petition and fill the blank in the allegation with reference to the time which he lost by reason of his injuries.
Judgment reversed and"'cause" remanded for á new trial consistent with this opinion.