205 Ky. 203 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Pearl street in the city of Cynthiana, Kentucky, runs east and west, and something near midway between Walnut street and Church street, both of which run north and south, the track of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company crosses Pearl street at grade, with the railroad track -some lower than the street, causing a depression at the place of the crossing. Somewhere near the hour of 6:40 p. m. on September 26, 1921, the decedent, Wilson Adams, went in a Ford .automobile from his residence on Walnut street to Pearl street and then turned east on Pearl street and almost immediately thereafter there was a crash at the railroad crossing and persons who soon gathered there discovered that there had been some sort of a collision of the machine with a fast passenger train running south, and the automobile was south of the crossing some distance at the side of the track with signs and indications upon it that the collision had occurred to its left side, and Adams was dead or died shortly thereafter. This ordinary action was brought by his administrator in the Harrison circuit court to- recover damages sustained by his estate because, as alleged in the petition, he was killed as a result of negligence on the part of the defendant, Louisville- & Nashville Railroad Company, its agents and -servants. The answer was a denial with a plea of contributory negligence, which in turn was denied, as was also an amended petition, and upon trial the jury, under the instructions given by the court,- returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $5,-500.00, upon which judgment was rendered and defendant’s- motion for a new trial was overruled, and it prosecutes this appeal.
The disposition of the contention in favor of a peremptory instruction requires a brief statement of the facts which the testimony tended to prove. A number of witnesses introduced by plaintiff said that the train on approaching the crossing failed to give signals, either by whistle or bell and that the .electric bell which defendant had installed at the crossing and which, had been in operation for more than six years was not ringing, although the preponderance of the entire evidence introduced at the trial was to the effect that both the signáis from the train were given and that the electric bell at the crossing was. ringing. There was also a contradiction in the proof as to the speed of the train as it passed over the crossing; the testimony of plaintiff going to show that it was from forty to sixty miles per hour, while that of defendant was. that it was running only about eighteen or twenty miles per hour. The same contradiction exists with reference to the obstructions to the view of the traveler on the street in the direction from whence the train was coming, though it is quite thoroughly established that one must be at most about twenty feet from the track before he can see up or down it any considerable distance. It would be useless for us to detail the testimony upon the- points mentioned since what we have stated in a general way was sufficient to. authorize a submission to the jury of the- issue of defendant’s negligence.
Strange as it may seem no one saw the accident. One witness saw deceased get into his automobile and start north on Walnut street toward Pearl street and turn into the latter street towards the railroad crossing at a distance of only 155 feet from it, and almost immediately after the turn he heard the crash. Another witness living at the corner of the junction of Walnut street with Pearl street heard the automobile as it passed his house with the exhaustions therefrom indicating that it was. going at considerable- speed, though the witness did not see it,
But, it is insisted that under the doctrine announced by- this court in the case of Sublett v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad Co., 145 Ky. 707, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1153, the court should have given the peremptory instruction asked on the ground that the proof showed that instead of the train colliding with the automobile that the latter collided with the train after it was upon the crossing. But, we are not prepared to agree with counsel in that contention, even though we should concede that the accident happened in that way, which is extremely probable, since there were no indications of a collision on any part of the front of the engine of the train, and both the engineer and fireman testified that they were on the lookout ahead and did not
The court in its first instruction submitted to tbe jury tbe duty of defendant as to tbe giving of notice of tbe approach of tbe train to tbe crossing and as to its speed and its reasonable control, and also said, ‘ ‘ or cause tbe electric bell to sound so as to give timely warning of the approach of tbe train,” and then stated to tbe jury that if tbe defendant or any of its agents or employees “failed in any of these duties (including that of warning by the ringing of tbe electric bell) and by reason thereof tbe decedent was struck and killed, tbe law is for the plaintiff and you should so find,” etc. It will thus be seen that tbe court not only submitted to tbe jury the ordinary
That opinion so completely stated the reason why the extrahazardous instruction should not be given in a case where the company had adopted and installed a means, method or contrivance by the operation of which, if kept in working order, notice of the train’s approach could and would be given, as to leave no room for enlargement thereon in this opinion. However, we feel that it would not be amiss to apply that reason to the facts of this case and to emphasize the error in the light of instruction number 1. The latter instruction expressly recognized that the installation of the stationary electric bell was an extraordinary precautionary method provided by the company at that crossing and presumptively because it was. an extraordinarily clangorous and hazardous .one. 'It, therefore, told the jury that if that bell was not maintained and kept in working- order and by reason thereof decedent was prevented from discovering the approach of the train, then the defendant would be liable unless, of course, the decedent himself was guilty of such contributory negligence as defeated a recovery. The second instruction and the one which we have criticized, and which was condemned in the Barnette opinion, told the jury in substance that, notwithstanding the named
Numerous objections are urged to the testimony introduced by plaintiff over defendant’s objections and exceptions, the greater part of which related either directly or indirectly to the dangerous character of the crossing which has been practically disposed of by what we have already said, since we have treated the case, as did the defendant before the accident, as if the crossing was a dangerous one, and the objected to testimony bearing upon that fact can have no material effect upon the case either one way or the other.
Defendant also objected to the testimony of witnesses introduced by plaintiff wherein they stated that
Other questions not herein passed on are left undetermined, since they are not likely to occur upon another trial, but for the reasons stated, the judgment is reversed with directions to grant a new trial and for proceedings consistent herewith.