145 Ky. 475 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Mrs. Bessie Hurt brought this suit against the Illinois Central Eailroad Company alleging in her petition that after she had bought a ticket from McHenry to Horton, Kentucky, she attempted to board the train when it stopped at McHenry for the purpose of taking on passengers, and while she wás making the attempt and before she had entered or had time to enter the car and while she was on the steps ascending from the platform to the car “the defendant’s agents and servants in the control of the train wrongfully, unlawfully and with gross negligence started the train with a violent jerk from which the plaintiff was thrown against the end of the car” by which her arm was fractured and other injuries inflicted to her damage in the sum of $1.-000. The defendant filed an answer controverting the' allegations of the petition, and pleading contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. The proof for the plaintiff by herself sustains the allegations of her petition. Her testimony was in some degree corroborated by other witnesses introduced for her. The proof for the defendant was to the effect that reasonable time was given for passengers to get on the train, and that the train was not moved until after the plaintiff had entered the coach; that she walked up the steps and
.It is insisted that the court erred in instructing the jury, and that there was no evidence on which to give an instruction on contributory negligence. But there was ample proof to show that the train stopped at the station long enough for everybody to get on. Other ladies who were there with plaintiff had gotten on and taken their seats before she started up the steps, and there appears no sufficient reason why the plaintiff was so slow in getting on the car. If she did not get on the ear while it was standing still a reasonable time for passengers to get on, and then got on just as the car was starting, the jury were warranted in finding that any injury she suffered was caused by her own want of ordinary care in not getting on the train promptly.
It is also insisted that the court erred in telling the jury in Instruction 1, that they should find for the plaintiff if the defendant’s servants negligently caused the train to jerk and it is said that the defendant is responsible to' the plaintiff if she was injured by the starting of the train while she was on the steps although there was no jerk of the train. The instruction followed the allegation of her petition. The court did not tell the jury that they should find for the plaintiff if there was a violent or unusual jerk. The'instruction followed the rule laid down by this court in C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Bor
Judgment affirmed.