162 Ky. 253 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
On April 9, 1913, the appellant furnished Mitchell, the appellee, a box car in which to remove his household effects and personal property from Barbourville, in Knox county, to Point Levell, in Garrard county. Mitchell paid $38.00 for the use of the ear, and was required to buy a passenger’s ticket, although he rode in the ear which was loaded with his household effects, farming implements, kitchen and dining-room furniture, some lumber, four pigs in a crate, and five head of cattle and a calf fenced off in one end of the car.
The car thus loaded was placed in the middle of an ordinary freight train and carried to Corbin, where it Avas put into a new train, consisting of forty-six loaded cars, Mitchell’s car being placed next to the engine.
When the train reached Eound Stone Creek, near Livingston, in Eockcastle county, from some unexplained reason Mitchell’s ear telescoped the tender, causing a bad wreck.of Mitchell’s car. The draw-head was pulled out of the car and Mitchell received severe internal injuries, although no bones were broken, and his property was badly damaged.
He brought this action in Knox county, and recovered a verdict and judgment of $10,000.00 for personal injuries; $350.00 for doctors’ bills, medicines, nursing, &e.; and $500.00 for damage to and loss of his property, making a total recovery of $10,850.00. From that judgment the company prosecutes this appeal, and for a reversal relies upon the following grounds: (1) The Knox Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the action; (2) no negligence upon the part of the appellant was shown; (3) the verdict was excessive; (4) misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel upon the trial; and (5) error in the first three instructions.
Section 73 of the Code, which fixes the venue of actions against a common carrier, reads as follows:
“Excepting the actions mentioned in Section 75, an action against a common carrier, whether a corporation or not, upon a contract to carry property, must be brought in the county in which the defendant, or either of several defendants, resides; or in which the contract is made; or in which the carrier agrees to deliver the property. An action against such carrier for an injury to a passenger,, or to other person or his property, must be brought in the county in which the defendant, or either of several defendants, resides; or in which the plaintiff or his property is injured; or in which he resides, if he reside in a county into which the carrier passes.”
Section 83, relating to joinder of actions, provides, in part, that “several causes of action may be united, if each affect all the parties to the action, may be brought in the same county, and may be prosecuted by the same kind of action.”
Appellant concedes that the Knox Circuit Court had jurisdiction to try the appellee’s claim for injury to his property, because the contract to carry said property was made in Knox county. It insists, however, that the Knox Circuit Court had no jurisdiction over the other two claims, for personal injuries, and for- doctor’s bills, medicines, nursing, &e„, because, under Section 73 of the Code supra, an action against a carrier- for an injury to a passenger, or his property, must be brought in the county in which the defendant resides, or in which the -plaintiff or his property is injured, or in which he resides, if he resides in a county into which the carrier passes. Mitchell and his property were injured in Rockn cakfcle county; the appellant resides in Jefferson county, wherein its chief office is located; and it contends that Mitchell resided in Garrard county at the time he received the injuries to himself and his property.
Proceeding upon the theory that there was a mis-joinder of causes of action, appellant attempted to raise that question by filing a speaking demurrer to. the peti
The special demurrer was properly overruled, for two reasons: First, because a demurrer cannot enlarge the allegations of a petition by reciting extraneous facts. Section 92 of the Civil Code of Practice says: “A special demurrer is an objection to a pleading which shows that the court has no jurisdiction of the defendant, or of the subject matter of the action.” The petition does not show the facts relied upon to defeat the jurisdiction, and those facts cannot be shown by reciting them in the demurrer, as was here attempted. In the second place, the Knox Circuit Court clearly had jurisdiction of the claim for injury to Mitchell’s property; and, since the special demurrer was to the jurisdiction generally, it was properly overruled because the Knox Circuit Court had jurisdiction over one of the causes of action stated.
Appellant could have raised the question of mis-joinder of actions by making a motion under Section 85 of the Civil Code of Practice, to require the appellee to elect which of the actions he would prosecute. Metcalfe v. Johnson, 151 Ky., 826. But this it failed to do.
Appellant did, however, subsequently raise the question of the jurisdiction of the court, in its answer, by alleging that Mitchell was a resident of Garrard county at the time of the accident; and upon that allegation issue was joined and evidence taken. The only evidence, however, upon the question of residence was that of Mitchell. He testified that he had kept house in Bar-bourville for several years; that in February, 1912, he had bought a farm in Garrard county; and having difficulty in securing a satisfactory tenant, he resolved to go to the farm temporarily, in the spring of 1913, for the purpose of making some needed repairs and improvements upon the farm.
Mitchell was a traveling' salesman for the Crescent Milling. Company, and, expecting to continue his work
Appellant offered an instruction submitting to tbe jury tbe issue as to Mitchell’s residence, but tbe circuit court refused to give it, upon tbe ground that tbe evidence upon that issue was all one way, and showed that Mitcbell was a resident of Knox county at tbe time of the accident.
We are of opinion there was no error in this ruling. Mitcbell testified, without contradiction, that bis intended sojourn in Garrard county was to be temporary, and only for tbe purpose of caring for bis farm in that county, and that bis returning to Barbourville in'the fall was arranged for with bis tenant before be left Barbour-ville.
“Residence indicates permanency of occupation, as distinct from lodging, or boarding, or temporary occupation. It does not include as much as domicile, which requires an intention combined with residence. * * *
“One may seek a place for purpose of pleasure, of business, or of health. If bis intent be to remain it becomes bis domicile; if his intent be to leave as soon as bis purpose is accomplished, it is bis residence.” Bou-vier’s Diet.
Tbe only evidence upon this issue shows that Mitcbell never intended to reside in Garrard county.
Applying this rule to tbe uncontradicted facts shown by Mitchell’s testimony, be was a resident of Knox county, and tbe Knox Circuit Court bad jurisdiction to try all tbe causes of action set forth in tbe petition.
2. Appellant insists that it can be liable only in case negligence is shown upon tbe part of its servants and employes, and that the proof in this case wholly fails to show negligence; and, further, that tbe petition rested the plaintiff’s case upon a charge of negligence in furnishing him a car that was greatly out of repair, dangerous and unsafe, while tbe proof shows the accident is unexplained, or at least was not caused by a defective car.
Unquestionably the rule is, that, under a general allegation of negligence, any negligence may be shown; but where specific acts of negligence are relied upon, they must he proved as alleged, in order to sustain a recovery. But here there was evidence to sustain the negligence specifically charged.
Appellant insists that the accident occurred by the breaking of the air hose which automatically set the brakes on the engine, and that the momentum of the heavy train caused by its movement, caused the slack in the train to he taken up, and Mitchell’s car to he thrown against the engine in the way above described. Appellant would explain the breaking of the hose by suggesting that it was cut by a tramp riding on the train. There is no evidence, however, even tending to support the suggestion.
Appellee explains the accident by saying that the weight of the train pulled the draw-head out of the rotten sill, and the draw-head also broke; that this caused the train to part, and the hose or air-line was thereby broken and the brakes automatically applied to the engine, whereupon the train ran against the engine and tore up the ear, as above indicated.
It is sufficient in this connection to say that there was evidence upon both sides of the charge that the car was defective; and that being true, the decision of that question was for the jury.
A common carrier of passengers is bound to provide for their safety, so far as human care, skill and foresight are capable of securing that end. Morgan v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 127 Ky., 435, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.), 790, 16 Ann. Cas., 608; C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Burke, 147 Ky., 694, Ann. Cas. 1913 D., 208; 4 R. C. L., p. 1144.
As was said by Mr. Justice Harlan, in Pennsylvania Railway Co. v. Roy, 102 U. S., 451:
“He (the carrier) is responsible for injuries received by passengers in the course of their transportation, which might have been avoided or guarded against by the exercise upon his part of extraordinary vigilance, aided by the highest skill. And this caution and vigi
This rule as to the full duty of the carrier to the passenger is supported by the decisions of this court in Kentucky Central R. R. Co. v. Thomas, 79 Ky., 160, 42 Am. Rep., 208; Davis v. Paducah Light & Ry. Co., 113 Ky., 267, and cases supra.
And, the injury having been shown, the burden is upon the carrier to show that it could not have prevented it by the exercise of the utmost skill and foresight.
In Morgan v. C. & O. Ry. Co., supra, the rule was stated as follows:
“When the passenger has proved his injury as the result of a breakage in the car or the wrecking of the train on which he was being carried, whether the defect was in the particular car in which he was riding or not, the burden is then cast upon the carrier to show that it was due to a cause or causes which the exercise of the utmost human skill and foresight could not prevent. And the carrier in this connection must show, if the accident was due to a latent defect in the material or construction of the car, that not only could it not-have discovered the defect by the exercise of such care, but that the builders could not by the exercise of the same care have discovered the defect or foreseen the result.”
The petition having charged that the car furnished Mitchell was defective, and sustained that charge by proof, there was a case for the jury, and appellant’s motion for a peremptory instruction was properly overruled.
3. Was the verdict excessive? This ground relates principally, if not entirely, to the recovery of $10,000.00 for personal injuries; the size of the two smaller recoveries is not seriously questioned.
Mitchell’wás 37 years of age, and had been earning about $1,500.00 net annually for several years.' And, al
There was some medical proof introduced by the appellant to the effect that Mitchell’s injuries were more feigned than serious, but that was a question for the jury to pass upon. If Mitchell’s injuries were as bad as they were outlined by him and Dr. Jones, and the jury had a- right to believe them, we are not prepared to say that the verdict is palpably against the weight of the evidence: L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Mitchell, 87 Ky., 327.
4. The misconduct of counsel for appellee consisted in his making the following statements in his argument to the jury, which were objected to by counsel for appellant :
“1. If the jury waits till one of your fellows come in here and admit that anything wrong happened, we’d all be in the grave. (Defendant objects.) Well, that’s the fact.
“2. Yes, you get on one of these trains and go anywhere and there’s a wreck and the employes come in here and they are looking everywhere, they look at the brakes, the hand-holds, the wheels and everything.
“4. You can ridicule Mathew Mitchell, hut it’s my honest judgment, gentlemen, that you’ll not see Mathew Mitchell above the dirt twelve months from today. (Objection.) That’s my honest judgment, gentlemen, from the evidence of Dr. Doxier and Dr. Jones.
“A. What, would you go through with the pain and suffering he has endured and what pain and suffering he will endure?
“B. If he goes to his grave by the result of this injury this verdict is the end of it; if he lives throughout his life to endure this pain and suffering this verdict is the end of it. Bring a' verdict that means something.”
While some of these statements were not, strictly speaking, entirely relevant to the questions at issue, they were not prejudicial.
5. Aside from the contention that there should have been a peremptory instruction for the reasons above stated, no serious or substantial objections are made to the instructions given. In their brief counsel for appellant make some minor objections of the first three instructions, but they are more critical than substantial. In requiring appellant to exercise only ordinary care in inspecting its cars, the instructions were more favorable to appellant than the authorities above cited warranted.
Judgment affirmed.