169 Ky. 140 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
■ The town of Pittsburgh, in Laurel county, is a mining town and extends along the railroad track of the appellant north and south for a considerable distance, the northern part of the town being known as Baxtertown, and just north of Baxtertown is another village known as East Bernstadt. About 350 yards north from the depot in Pittsburgh is a public road crossing over the right of way and track of appellant. Between this public crossing and the depot there has existed for twenty-five years or more a pathway on the railroad right of way on the
On November 26,1913, the appellee was traveling over this pathway going north, and when he was about 100 feet from the public road crossing, a freight train consisting of about 35 cars approached from the south and as the tender to the engine was even with him he was struck and injured by a piece of iron pipe, which was hollow and about two inches in diameter and eight or nine feet long. His right leg was broken just above the ankle and he sustained some other minor injuries. He brought this suit to recover damages for his injuries, alleging that the company negligently permitted the piece of pipe to swing out or be thrown from its train and strike him, or that same was purposely or negligently thrown from the train" by some of the agents and servants in charge of it. The allegations of the petition were denied by the answer of the defendant and in a second .paragraph it pleaded contributory negligence, which was denied by reply, and upon a trial there was a verdict in behalf of plaintiff in the sum of $2,000.00, which it is sought to have set aside on this appeal.
In cities and towns, or thickly populated communities, where the people generally have used the track of the railroad company for a considerable length of time, out of humane reasons and for a due regard for life and limb, the law raises a presumption that such use of the track is by acquiescence of the company and imposes the duty upon it while using its tracks at that place, in the operation of its trains to anticipate the- presence of persons so using it and to exercise a corresponding degree of care in approaching said place to keep a lookout to discover the presence of persons on the track there and to exercise the same care in the control of the movement of its trains at such places and to have them under
An examination of these cases will show that there is no effort made through the rule announced by them to convert the user of the track at such place from a trespasser into a rightful user or licensee. It is nowhere indicated in any of the cases that the public or any member of it by the character of use considered, acquires any property right in and to the use of the track or right of way for a passway by way of easement or otherwise. On the contrary, it is the settled doctrine in this State that no such rights can be acquired through persistent and repeated wrongs. As is stated by this court in L. H. & St. L. R. R. Co. v. Woolfork, 30 Ky. L. Rep., 569:
“These persons were trespassers, and, as a practical proposition, the railroad has no remedy against such trespassers. The public cannot acquire a right in the private property of a railroad by repeated wrongs. If this could be done, then the railroad’s tracks, bridges, and trestles would be at the mercy of habitual wrongdoers, and the corporation largely deprived of its property rights for public use without the compensation provided by the constitution.
‘ ‘ The reasoning which requires railroad corporations to exercise a lookout duty when their tracks cross the streets of cities or towns at grade, or constitute a part of the highway of municipalities or thickly settled places or communities, has no place in the case at bar. A lookout duty is imposed upon the corporations in the class of cases mentioned because the public have a right to cross and be on their roadway, and, therefore, they must use due care not to injure those who are exercising their lawful rights in the premises.”
In denying the application of the rule announced in the cases, supra, as to the duty which the railroad company owed to persons thus using its track, to persons so using a part of its right of way other than its track, this court, in the very recent case of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Hobbs, 155 Ky., 130, said:
*143 .“The company should not be required to safeguard every place of possible danger on its right of way for the protection of persons who must generally take the premises as they find them, nor should it be liable for an accident that happens to a mere licensee who accidently or thoughtlessly falls into some defective or exposed place on its premises.”
As appellee was not at the time of the injury on the railroad track or sufficiently near thereto as to be in danger of a collision with the moving train, he is not in a position to invoke in his behalf that rule. In the Hobbs case, the plaintiff was traveling upon a part of the railroad, premises, the use of which was of such a character as to have imposed upon the company the exercise of ordinary care in the operation of its trains so as to prevent injuring any member of the public which might have been in danger of a collision with the train, had the pathway been on the track or sufficiently near thereto' as to be covered by the train in passing over it. It, however, was off of the track, but on the right of way, and while using it the plaintiff was injured because of its alleged unsafe condition, and which unsafe condition was produced by the company. In the course of the opinion denying a right of recovery, this court said:
“For example, if appellee had been injured by the movement of a train that was being operated without lights or signals or warning of its approach, it might well be said that the company should be required to respond in damages because the long continued use of the premises by the public carried with it the duty on the part of the defendant to prevent affirmative injury by the movement of its trains.”
We, therefore, hold that the appellee is not entitled to recover under the acquiescence doctrine of the use of railroad tracks by the public unless, perhaps, his injury was produced by affirmative or positive acts of negligence in causing the piece of iron to fly or be thrown from the train, for which there is no proof in the case. .
Many cases are to be found from this court, and indeed it is the doctrine announced by all authorities,, that if one is injured while on the premises of the railroad company by being hit with some object flying or: thrown from the moving train, when such person is, in the occupancy of a place where he has a right to be,,
As we have seen, however, this injury was not produced by any affirmative or positive acts of negligence on behalf of the company or any of those connected with the operation of the train. The only testimony on this point is that about 200 yards south of the place of the accident someone saw a piece of, iron dragging by the side of the tender, but what',’ if' any, connection it' had with the equipment is not shown, nor is there any fact or circumstance appearing in the testimony from which it might reasonably be inferred the length of time that this pipe had been in the condition as observed by' the witness or what caused its loose condition, and the case is evidently not one for the application of the doctriné of res ipsa loquitur, because the relationship sustained by the plaintiff toward the company while using the pathway at the place does not bring the case within that rule.
As the appellee failed to show by his proof any violated duty which appellant owed him, the motion of the company for peremptory instructions should have prevailed, and if upon another trial the proof should be substantially the same, and this motion should be made, it should be sustained.
Judgment reversed, with directions to proceed in accordance with this opinion.