110 Ky. 662 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
. The plaintiff, Flynn, now appellant, instituted this action in the Jeffersom Circuit Court, law and equity division, against the defendant, now appellee, to recover judgment for personal injury caused by the defendant’s gross negligence. It is substantially alleged in the petition that in January, 1898, plaintiff was a member of the Salvage Corps-of the city of Louisville, and that, while in the discharge of his duty as a member of said corps, he responded to an alarm of fire, and, while riding in a wagon across the intersection of Third and Jefferson streets, that defendant, its agents and servants, did by their gross negligence cause a street car, known as a “motor car,” propelled by electricity, to run against, and with 'great force and violence to collide with, the wagon in which plaintiff was riding, and thereby throw plaintiff to the pavement, and the bones- of his arm were thereby broken in several places, and was otherwise greatly injured in his body and limbs, and was in consequence of which for a long time confined to his- home, under the care of physicians, and suffered great pain and ■agony, both -mental and physical, and permanent impair
The grounds relied on for a new trial are: First, that the court erred in excluding from the jury, and in refusing to allow plaintiff’s witnesses to testify, that the motiorman, after he became aware of the approach of the wagon on which plaintiff was riding, could have stopped the car, by the exercise of ordinary. care; in time to have avoided the .collision; second, that the court erred in instructing the .jury peremptorily to find for the defendant.
It may be that the witness had not, by his testimony, shown that he had any knowledge as to the time in which ■the ear could have been stopped, -and on that account it may be that the court properly rejected the testimony offered. If, however, it had been shown that the witness had any .facilities for knowing how soon or under what conditions the car could have been stopped’, the testimony would’ have been admissible.
It sufficiently appears that the plaintiff in this case was ,a member of the Salvage Corps — a corporation organized by an act of the Legislature of the State — one,' if not the .chief, object of which was to prevent the destruction by fire of the property in the city of Louisville;, and by the act
Also, see Cahill v. Railway Co., 92 Ky., 345, 18 S. W., 2, and 2 Shear. & R. Neg. (5th Ed.), section 484 et. seq. and notes.