Defendant appeals from the verdict and judgment of $7,660 recovered by plaintiffs for the death of their minor son, Arlie Brown.
The evidence tends to show the following facts: Arlie Brown was killed on the station grounds of the Rock Island Railroad at Scandia, Kansas, as a result of a derailment of a freight train of the railroad at about 9:10 o’clock on the night of November 14, 1941. At thé time of his fatal injury, Arlie Brown was sitting in the cab of his truck parked upon a cindered area west of the station building, at a point some 40 feet north of the main line Rock Island track which ran east and west on the south side of the station. Sitting in the single seat of the cab of the truck with him were three other young people, a boy, Dick Garoutte, and two girls, Audrey Thomas and Florence Berggren. The freight train was an eastbound through train of twenty eight cars, traveling at a speed of 30 to 35 miles per hour. At a point some 200 feet west of the station, the second car from the engine, and thirteen cars immediately following, derailed and piled up on both sides of the track from that point to the station, one or more striking the truck in which the young people were sitting. Arlie Brown and Florence Berggren were instantly killed, Dick Garoutte was fatally injured and Audrey Thomas seriously injured.
The Rock Island station lies about a mile south of the business district of Scandia. The connecting public road comes to a dead-end at the station grounds, with a cinder and gravel surface roadway extending from the public road over part of the railroad right of way to the railroad station. The roadway across the station grounds and the cindered parking area on both sides were maintained by the- railroad for over twenty five years. No sign was ever erected to limit or prohibit general public use of .the roadway and parking area, and the evidence tends to show that people frequently went to this area for their private purposes, such as to visit and watch the trains go through, as well as to do business with the railroad. It also appears that use of this area was the only available method by which a vehicle could readily turn around to return over the public road to Scandia.
There is a conflict in the evidence as to the purpose for which these young people were at the railroad station. Plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show that plaintiffs’ son had driven there so that Dick
The court denied defendant’s motion for directed verdict at the close of all the evidence, and its motion to set aside the verdict and judgment rendered thereon and to render judgment in favor of defendant, in accordance with defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The court instructed the jury, inter alia, that defendant was bound to exercise reasonable and ordinary care to prevent injury to deceased, if the area upon which his truck was parked had been generally used with knowledge of the defendant by the public for parking vehicles to the extent that defendant knew that vehicles might be parked there, and even though deceased was not on the station grounds in connection with business with the defendant; and that it might infer that defendant negligently failed to exercise ordinary and reasonable care towards deceased from the fact of the derailment. The court refused, inter alia, defendant’s' requested instruction directing a verdict for defendant if none of the occupants of deceased’s car went to the depot on any business connected with defendant, but were there for their own entertainment or pleasure; and also refused defendant’s requested instruction directing a verdict for defendant if the jury did not find that Dick Garoutte went to the station to obtain timetables, that deceased went there to take Dick for such purpose, and that deceased and Dick remained on the grounds and were there at the time of the accident for such purpose.
On appeal, the defendant assigns as error the above stated action of the trial court.
The issues thus presented to this court for determination are (1) whether defendant was under a duty to the plaintiffs to exercise ordinary and reasonable care in the operation of its railroad, and (2) whether the mere fact of the derailment was sufficient evidence to support a finding by the jury of a failure to exercise ordinary and reasonable care.
It is well settled that this court must apply the law of the State of Kansas, the place of the injury, in the determination of these issues. Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
The view of the Kansas law taken by the trial court in regard to the defendant’s duty toward deceased is supported by the Kansas cases. In De Tarr v. Heim,
Section 66-234, General Statutes of Kansas 1935, provides: “That railroads in this state shall be liable for all damages done to person or property, when done in consequence of any neglect on the part of the railroad companies.” This statute was enacted in 1870 as Ch. 93, Laws, Page 197. In St. Joseph & D. C. Railway Co. v. Grover,
No Kansas case has been found either applying or refusing to apply this statute to a situation like the one ,now before this court. This statute furnishes an additional ground to that already stated for our holding that the railroad had a duty to exercise reasonable and ordinary care to prevent injury to Arlie Brown.
The movement of trains past railroad stations does not in ordinary course result in cars leaving the track and piling up on the station grounds where ordinary and reasonable care has been used in the provision, maintenance and inspection of the means and in the operation, and the derailment shown in this case with the consequent damage, presented an appropriate situation in which to apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. The court properly instructed the jury to consider the evidence as to the cause of the accident and the finding of failure on the part of the railroad company to use ordinary and reasonable care is sufficiently supported by the evidence of its derailment of its train at the place it had reason to expect the presence of members of the public. Mayes v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.,
As we find no error, the judgment is affirmed.
