180 Ky. 298 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1918
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
On a morning, about eight o’clock, Mortimer Logan Broaddus, a lad, about six years of age, was run over and killed, by a car, of the appellant, on Second street, between Oak street and Ormsby avenue, in the city of Louisville. This action was instituted, by the administrator of the deceased boy, to recover the damages suffered, by his estate, by reason of his death. The basis of the action, as alleged in the petition, was that the car, which was propelled by electric power, was caused and suffered by the negligence and carelessness of the servants and agents of the appellant to run down the decedent and destroy his life. The defense set up by the appellant, in its answer, was a traverse of the material averments of the petition, and contributory negligence on the part of the decedent, which contributed to the cause of his death to such extent, that, but for which, he would not have been injured. Second street runs north and south. Oak street intersects it toward the north, and Ormsby avenue to the south, of the point, where the tragedy occurred. The distance between Oak street and Ormsby avenue is seven hundred and twenty-four feet, and on both the east and west sides of the street throughout the block, it is closely occupied by dwelling houses. The appellant, Railway Company, has two
Four grounds are insisted upon by appellant for the reversal of the judgment:
First: The court erred in overruling the motion for a directed verdict in favor of appellant.
Second: The court erred in instructing the jury that it was the duty of the appellant to operate its car at a reasonable rate of speed and to have it under control, and in directing the jury to find a verdict for appellee, if the appellant failed in that duty, if such failure was the cause of the lad’s death.
Third: The court erred in giving to the jury instruction No. 3.
Fourth: The error of the court in the admission of incompetent testimony, which was objected, to at the time.
(a.) As to the first ground for reversal insisted upon, it is useless to recite the well known rule, that in actions triable by jury, when there is evidence to support both the affirmative and negative of an issue, it is the province of the jury to weigh the evidence and determine the issue, and that under such circumstances, the court should not invade the province of the jury by
(b.) The second ground relied upon for a reversal of the judgment is, that the court was in error in direct
(c.) Among other instructions given to the jury was instruction No. -2, which, in substance, directed the jury, that it was the duty of the decedent, for his own safety, to exercise that degree of care usually - exercised, under circumstances alike or similar to those shown by the evidence, by ordinarily prudent children of his age, intelligence and experience, to learn of the approach of the car and to keep out of its way, and if he failed to exercise for his own safety such degree of care, and by reason of the failure helped to cause or bring about his death, and that he would not have been injured, except for such failure upon his part, to find for the railway company, although the motorman in charge
By a- third instruction the jury was in substance advised, that, although the decedent failed to exercise, for his own safety, the degree of care required of him by the second instruction, yet, if it believed from the evidence that the motorman, after the failure of the decedent to exercise the degree of care for his safety required by the second instruction, if he did so fail, saw or by the exercise of ordinary care, in maintaining a lookout, could have seen the peril, in which the lad had placed himself, by his own negligence, in time to have enabled the motor-man, by the use of the means at his command and by the exercise of ordinary care on his; part, to have prevented or avoided the collision between the car and the decedent and negligently failed to do so, and that such failure on the part of the motorman, if he did so fail, caused the collision to occur or brought it about, that the jury should find for the appellee.
It is insisted that the giving of instruction No. 3, is erroneous and is not the law to be applied to the facts as proven to have existed. The basis, upon which this contention is made, is, that it was a primary duty, which was incumbent upon the motorman, to maintain a sufficient lookout and to exercise reasonable care to see persons upon the track or near enough to it to be in danger from the car and to avoid injury to them, whether they were or were not guilty of negligence in failing to use reasonable care for their own safety, and that the jury was in substance so directed in the first instruction, and that instruction No. 3, should not be given where such primary duty exists, but is only applicable where a lookout is not required of the motorman, and where an individual, having no right to be upon or near to the tracks, negligently puts himself in a place of peril and •his peril is then discovered by the motor-man, in time, to enable him by ordinary care to avoid injury to the person and negligently fails to do so. Whatever may be said of the logic of such a contention, and, however, it may have been dealt with in other jurisdictions, it is not in accordance with a long line of adjudications in
(d.) When the car had been stopped and the motorman descended from it and walked to the side of it and saw the mangled body of the decedent, he became partially overcome with the sight and sat down upon the front of the car apparently in great distress of mind, and about five minutes after the occurrence said: “I thought the boy would get out of the way.” Objection was made to the proof of this statement of the motorman and it’ is now insisted that the court was in error in overruling an objection to it. It was competent evidence as a part of what is termed res gestae, which includes declarations made by an actor in the affair, substantially contemporaneous with the time of the act
The judgment is, therefore, affirmed.