124 Ky. 79 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The appellee-, a passenger on on© of the appellant’s ears going west, got off at Twenty-second street and Portland avenne, on the north side of the street, and after alighting, passed behind the car for the purpose of going to the south.side. As she was crossing the south track a car on this track going east struck and seriously injured her. Prom' a judgment and verdict in her favor, this, appeal, is prosecuted.
The negligence complained of as stated' in the petition is. that the east-bound car was running at a high and dangerous- rate of speed, and, without warning to appellee, ran into- and against her, and that her injuries were caused by the- carelessness- and negligence of appellant, its- servants, and agents, in failing to give warning of the approach of the car to the crossing, and in operating and managing the car in a careless and negligent manner.
The chief, and in fact only, ground of complaint is alleged error of the court in the qualification of discovered peril added to instruction No. 2, which reads as follows: “It was the duty of the plaintiff when she started across the tracks- of the- defendant at the place mentioned in the petition to exercise- ordinary care fo-r her own safety, and, if you shall believe from the evidence that at that time she failed to - exercise ordinary care- for her own safety, and, by reason of such failure, she helped to cause o-r bring about the injury of which she complains and that she would not have been injured but for her failure in that respect,
Some eye-witnesses to the injury testified that the west-bound car had just started when appellee was struck; others, that the car had gone about ten feet. It was plainly the duty of the servants of appellant in charge of the east-bound car to have it under perfect control, to sonnd the gong, and run at a slower rate of speed when approaching the car that was standing on an adjacent track for the purpose of permitting passengers to alight. Where! there is a double track the street cars in use are usually so constructed or arranged that passengers can only alight from the side of the rear platform- that is farthest from the other track, and, if they desire to cross the street, it is usual and customary to do so immediately behind the car from which they have alighted, as the cars stop to discharge passengers at the street crossing, and, while going behind the car for the purpose of crossing the street, their view of a car approaching on the other track in an opposite direction is- obstructed, nor can the person in charge of the car see them until they get from behind the car from which1 they have alighted, and, when they do so, they are necessarily either on or in dangerons proximity to the track upon which the other car is approaching. When a car has been stopped at the usual place for discharging passengers-, itis-theduty of those in charge of an approaching car on the other track
The rule herein expressed as, to the duty that street car companies owe to protect their passengers from being injured by cars on a, track adjacent to the one from which they have alighted has been applied in substance and effect by the Supreme, Court of Illinois in Chicago City Railway Company v. Mary A. Robinson (Ill.), 18 N. E. 772, 4 L. A. R. 126, 11 Am St. Rep. 87, where.the court held that,“where street car tracks are in close proximity, to run a car or train of cars in one direction at a rate of speed and without signal or warning over a sidewalk crossing while a car or train bound in the opposite direction is discharging-passengers at such crossing, and where, in this, case, the view of the approaching train is obstructed by the standing cars from which the injured person has just alighted is surely conduct, which fairly tends to prove culpable negligence, even though the rate of speed of such approaching train does not exceed that which is permitted by ordinances. ”