118 Ky. 260 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion of the court by
Reversing.
Appellee, William. S. Lowe, was in the service of appellant, the Louisville & Nashville Bailroad Company, as as
Appellant complains that the court refused to instruct the jury peremptorily to find, for it. It also complains of the instructions given by the court. The court, in substance, instructed the jury that if they .believed from the evidence that appellee, at the time he received the injuries, was upon appellant’s track in the usual course.of his employment, and that its agents in charge of the engine and tender that injured him negligently failed to ring the bell or give other signal of its approach, or. negligently failed to stop' it after they saw his peril, or after they' might have seen it-by the use of reasonable care, then they should find for the plaintiff, unless they believed- from the evidence that he by his own negligence contributed to such an extent to the injury that but for his negligence it would not have happened, and that in this event he could not recover, unless appellant’s agents in charge of the engine and tender knew, or could have known by ordinary attention, of the peril in which his negligence had! placed him, and thereafter failed) to observe reasonable care to avoid the injury which followed. - ■
It is earnestly maintained for appellant that the evidence shows no negligence on its part; that, as to appellee, it was
Appellant has at Lebanon Junction something like 200 employes. ■ The place,at which appellee was injured is used by them and by other persons, to a great extent, in coming and going. The proof presents a case where the presence of persons on the track should reasonably be anticipated by those in charge of the train. The point was not far from the station — between it and the coal bins — and where a great many people passed back and forth, especially during the day. In Shelby’s Adm’r v. Cincinnati, etc., Railroad, 85 Ky., 224, 8 R., 928, 3 S. W., 157, the intestate was in the yard of the railroad at Junction City for - the purpose of soliciting employment in watering stock, and was run over by a train backed without signal or outlook. The place was not so much traveled as in the case before us, and the intestate was barely a licensee, and yet the court held the company liable. After showing that increased vigilance and precaution are required, the court said: “But it is obvious that neither the duty of giving the warning of the approach of trains, nor of resorting to the proper and necessary means to prevent collision with persons, can be performed unless there be some one in a position to see ■ahead of the train and to control it.”
In Conley’s Adm’r v. Cincinnati, etc., Railroad, 89 Ky., 402, 11 R., 602, 12 S. W., 764, the intestate was killed in like manner by a backing train as he was crossing the track, and the case is discussed on the idea that he was technically a trespasser. The court held the company liable, and said:
These cases control the one before us, for the danger from the want of signals of the approach of the train, or outlook in front of it, was greater in this case than in any of them, ■under the evidence. The same rule has been announced elsewhere. Thus in 2 Thompson.on Negligence, section 1889, it is said: “Persons lawfully at work in repairing a railway track, or in repairing a highway where it crosses a railway track, can not be expected to pursue their labors, and at the same time maintain a constant lookout for an approaching train. They are passive, and are not a source of danger to the train. Those who are driving the train are active, and are handling and are in control of thei instrument of danger and mischief. The obligation or reasonable care which the law puts upon the railway company under these circumstances therefore demands nothing less than an active vigilance in favor of persons thus lawfully at work upon, the track, and the giving of seasonable danger signals to arouse their attention and.enable them to get out of the way before it is too late.”
It is earnestly insisted, also, that the court erred in instructing the jury that appellee could not recover if but for his negligence the injury would not have happened, unless appellant’s agents in charge of the engine and tender knew, or could by ordinary care have known, of the peril in which his negligence had placed him, and thereafter failed to observe reasonable care to avoid the injury which ensued.
In towns and cities'where the presence of persons on the! track of the railroad may be rightfully anticipated, a due regard for human life requires that a lookout should be maintained in the operation of engines' and trains^. This has been often declared. The place where the injury sued for occurred was in a town, and at a place which was used not only by the numerous employes of appellant, but by other persons, in passing from the station to the coalyards; and from one portion of the town to another. The presence of persons on or about the track at the point where the injury occurred
It is further urged that appellee and the men in charge of the engine were fellow servants, being all engaged in the operations of the yard, and that, at any rate, appellant is not liable, except for the gross negligence of its man in charge of the engine. The engine was run from the coal bin to the side track by a man employed for that purpose to take charge of the engines in the yard, and known as the “hostler.” There is much conflict in the authorities as to who are fellow servants, but the rule in this State has been steadily maintained from the beginning. In L. & N. Railroad Co. v. Collins, 63 Ky., 114, 87 Am. Dec., 486 — the first case on the subject— where a laborer on an engine in the yard was injured by the negligence of the man in charge of the engine, this court said: “The only consistent or maintainable principle of the corporation’s responsibility is that of agency: ‘Qui fadt per attum fadt per se.’ It is therefore responsible for the negligence or unskillfulness of its engineer, as its. controlling agent in the management of its locomotives and running cars, and that responsibility is graduated by the classes of persons in
Lastly, it is insisted that the verdict is excessive. Appellee is thirty-four years of age, and was earning a dollar a day. He has lost one arm, and does not appear to have received other permanent injury. In no case before this court has it ever sustained so large a verdict for such an injury, and we are all of opinion that the verdict is excessive, andi that for this reason a new trial should be granted. We see no other error in the record.
Chief Justice Burnam and Judges O’Rear and Barker dissent, because peremptory instructions were not given. Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.