273 S.W. 549 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Affirming.
The appellee and defendant below, J.H. Horn, was operating a transfer business in the assumed name of The Horn Transfer Line and on December 7, 1922, he had an employe as the driver of one of his transfer wagons which was drawn by a horse or mule team who was on that day delivering tobacco prized in hogsheads to the freight depot of the Baltimore Ohio Railroad Company located at the corner of 15th and Rowan streets in the city of Louisville. There was built in connection with the depot a large platform some four feet above the *829 surface of the ground and it extended to within about eighteen feet of the walk on the side of Rowan street. Between that walk and the platform the railroad company had constructed a concrete surface on a level with the walk. The driver of defendant's truck or wagon backed across the walk on Rowan street and from thence to the platform for the purpose of unloading his four hogsheads of tobacco. Richard B. Cutsinger, a lad nine years old, with some other boys whose ages ranged from seven to fourteen years, had started to get upon the concrete platform of the depot for the purpose of skating thereon and Cutsinger attempted to mount the platform from the concrete surface immediately behind the wagon or truck, as it was backing, and it caught one of his legs between the side of the platform and the rear of the wagon and besides mashing it considerably, dislocated his hip joint. He was carried to a hospital and some four hours later was operated on for the purpose of reducing the dislocation, all of which was successfully done and his hip put in a plaster casing. The surgeons were waiting for the plaster to harden for the patient to be moved, but he had not entirely recovered from the effects of the anaesthetic, and about the time they were contemplating removing him from the operating table he belched and appeared to have something in his mouth when it was discovered there were some beans therein, an abundant amount of which he had eaten for lunch just before being hurt, and they were only partially cooked and wholly unmasticated. It was discovered that he was laboring for breath and everything was done to relieve him but he shortly died. A post-mortem examination revealed the fact that he had nine unmasticated beans in his larynx or windpipe, which all the medical testimony in the case proved was the direct cause of his death, and the same testimony also proved that the death was not the proximate result of his injuries.
The Louisville Trust Company qualified as decedent's administrator and afterwards brought this action against defendant to recover damages for his death upon the ground that defendant's servant had negligently backed the wagon or truck at the time the injuries to the decedent were sustained. The answer denied all the material averments of the petition, including that of the death being the proximate result of the injuries, and also contained a plea of contributory negligence, which the reply denied and upon a trial before a jury the court, *830 at the close of plaintiff's testimony, peremptorily instructed it to return a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff's motion for a new trial was overruled and from the judgment dismissing the petition it prosecutes this appeal.
Defendant's counsel urge two grounds in support of the peremptory instruction which are: (1) That there was no actionable negligence proven, and (2) that if there had been the death of the decedent was not the proximate result of the injuries he received, and it appears that it was upon the latter ground that the court sustained the motion for a directed verdict. Whether we agree with that conclusion of the trial court is unnecessary to be determined, if the evidence introduced by plaintiff failed to establish negligence and thereby authorized the directed verdict under ground (1) which question we will first discuss and determine.
It is universally held that an essential element in the creation of actionable negligence is the existence of some duty which the party charged owed to the one who suffered by the negligence and a violation of that duty to his damage and detriment. In an effort to show a duty which defendant through its employed servant in delivering the freight on the railroad platform owed decedent, it is attempted to be proven that he and his companions had theretofore been skating on the depot platform, and the inference is sought to be drawn that they thereby obtained some sort of license or invitee privilege, which the patrons of the depot were bound to respect, and that unless such patrons took cognizance of such rights and governed their actions accordingly they would be liable to any of the boys, including the decedent, who might sustain injuries thereby.
The theory is rather far fetched and necessarily proceeds upon the idea that the patrons of the depot, as well as its owner, occupied the same relationship towards decedent and his youthful companions and that the concrete platform was a sort of attractive nuisance and the railroad company, as well as its patrons, owed the boys a duty to maintain a lookout for them and to use the premises in the discharge of their business in such a way as not to inflict injury. We, however, do not agree with any such theory. In the first place, not even the railroad company could, under the facts, be charged with maintaining an attractive nuisance in so constructing its depot. It was built in the usual and ordinary *831 fashion and constructed of material universally recognized as suitable and appropriate for the purpose. It possessed none of the elements of an attractive nuisance as recognized in the law; but, if otherwise, the proof is uncontradicted that every time the deceased and his companions appeared upon the platform to skate thereon some employe of the company would run them away and firmly admonish them to desist in such use and not to return. The companions of the deceased, who testified in the case, each and every one of them showed that they were watchful in order to find an opportunity when no employe of the railroad company was on guard. But even if that feature had been absent and the facts were such as to charge the railroad company, who maintained the depot, it does not necessarily follow that the patrons of the depot would likewise be so charged.
Independently, however, of any of the foregoing facts there is no proof that defendant's driver on the occasion in question was himself familiar with the use of the platform by decedent and his companions. It is true one or two of them said they had seen him about the depot before, but they each testified to no fact that he saw them there on the occasion of the accident. On the contrary, they testified that so far as they knew he did not see them and did not know that decedent went or was behind his backing wagon, and they also said that the decedent went behind it after it started to back from the sidewalk on the street. The driver was necessarily behind the four hogsheads of tobacco and could not see anyone behind his wagon and, surely, it cannot be contended that it was his duty to get out of the wagon and go behind it for the purpose of seeing whether or not a trespasser was liable to be injured.
The general doctrine concerning the rights of licensees (even if we should consider decedent a licensee) was discussed and stated in the very recent case of Louisville Nashville Railroad Co. v. Page,
The case is altogether unlike that of Tupman's Admr. v. Schmidt,
It is the well settled practice in this court that if there exists any reason in the record for sustaining a particular ruling of the trial court it will not be disturbed on appeal, although a different reason was assigned for it by the trial court and, since the peremptory instruction in this case was authorized for the reasons hereinbefore stated, the giving of it will be upheld, although it was done upon a different ground and which renders it unnecessary for us to either discuss or determine the sufficiency of that ground.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.