206 Ky. 325 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
In this action, brought by appellant against the appellee for damages on account of the death of appellant’s decedent, the lower court at the close of appellant’s case gave a peremptory instruction in favor of the appellee, and.the only question before us is the propriety of the lower court’s action in this regard.
On the afternoon of June 12, 1921, Daugherty came to the appellee’s depot at Evelyn, where he remained until a little after midnight. Meeting some friends, he began drinking with them and drank more or less steadily during the afternoon and evening, and once or twice even with the appellee’s operator. As Daugherty drank, his spirits mounted and he became somewhat hilarious and boisterous. The operator on the evening shift left about 11:30 when his successor, Miss Jennie Linn, now Mrs. Don Lannen, came on duty. By this time it seems that everybody had left the station except Daugherty and Miss Linn. Daugherty became more and more boisterous and Miss Linn became alarmed. She endeavored to persuade him to go home, at first without avail, but finally on her procuring him a lantern, D'augherty, who was then quite drunk, finally consented to go home. Miss Linn saw him go up appellee’s right of way towards his home, but whether he was on the tracks of the siding or by the side of them, she does not remember. He was .staggering from side to side, but was still able to get along, and the last she saw of him was when he disappeared with his lantern around the curve.
About an hour later, a freight train coming from Ravenna towards Beattyville passed through this siding. This was the only train that did pass through this siding from 11:30 p. m. until after four o’clock the following
On the authority of the oases of Glenn’s Admr. v. L. & N., 90 S. W. 975, 28 K. L. R. 949; Fagg’s Admr. v. L. & N., 111 Ky. 30, 63 S. W. 580; C., N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co. v. Marrs’ Admx., 119 Ky. 954, 85 S. W. 188, the appellant urges that the court should have submitted this case to the jury. The doctrine laid down by those cases in substance is this: where an agent or employe of a railroad knows that an individual, even though a trespasser, is on the right of way of a railroad in a drunken and helpless condition and such agent or employe can by the exercise of ordinary care warn those in charge of the railroad’s trains in time for them by the exercise of ordinary care to avoid running over such individual,' then a failure so to warn is negligence, and if the individual be run over or hurt by reason of such failure, the railroad is responsible.
We doubt very much whether the evidence in this case as to the condition of appellant’s decedent, measures up to the requirements of this rule. Althotigh he was very drunk, the evidence does not show that he was so drunk as to be helpless, and although he. was staggering, he had managed to get at least two-thirds of the way home without material trouble. But be that as .it may, and conceding though expressly not deciding that the
It is therefore clear that, for the reasons indicated, the lower court did not err in granting a peremptory instruction at the close of the appellant’s case, and for that reason the judgment is affirmed.