137 Ky. 156 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
— Reversing.
The two foregoing cases arise out of the same tort, and, as they present the same facts and identical questions of law, they are heard together in this court.
An employe of appellant in driving an automobile along the public highway in Marion county failed, so it is alleged, to - observe the statutory regulations concerning the movement of such vehicles, by reason of which the horse being driven by the appellees was caused to take fright, and run away, injuring each of appellees. ' In these suits, brought by appellees a.gainst appellants to recover the damages inflicted, appellee, Mrs. Elliott recovered a judgment for $3,-500, and Mrs. Powar a judgment for $2,750. These appeals are prosecuted from those 'judgments.
On the afternoon of November 5, 1908, appellees were driving together in an open buggy along the Lebanon and Danville turnpike road, and close to its intersection with the Gravel Switch and Logan Hill turnpike in Marion county. They intended to turn into the latter, which intersected the former at a right angle. Just as appellees were in the act of turning into the latter road, appellant’s employe, .Scott Moore, who was driving the automobile, rapidly passed them, coming from the rear and going on •out the last-named road. It is claimed by appellees 'that he was driving his machine at a high rate of' speed, and did not give any warning of his approach. For a rod or so before he came alongside the buggy the horse .drawing the buggy showed evidence of 'fright, and, as the machine whipped by, the animal began kicking and running. Appellees were thrown
The statute regulating the movement of automobiles and motor vehicles in this state is' as follows (Ky. St. Sec. 2739g): “Upon approaching a crossing of intersecting public highways, or a bridge, or a sharp curve, or a steep descent, and also in traversing such crossing, bridge, curve or descent, a person operating a motor vehicle shall have it under control, and operate it at a rate of speed no greater than six miles an hour, and in no event greater than is reasonable and proper, having regard to the traffic then on such highway and the safety of the public.”
“Upon approaching a person walking in the roadway of a public highway, or a horse or other draft animals, being ridden or driven thereon, a person operating a motor vehicle shall give warning of its approach by signaling with a horn, bell, or other device not calculated to frighten such animal, and use every reasonable precaution to insure the safety of such person or animal, and, in case of horses' or other draft animals, to prevent frightening the same, and at once reduce the speed at which such vehicle is being operated and hold same under control, and if such horses or draft animals appear- frightened, to not more than one-half the speed permitted by section two, and bring same to a stop if apparently necessary for the safety of such person or animal, having due regard to the safety of passengers in such motor vehicles.”
# Every motor vehicle, while in use on a public highway, shall be provided with good and
By the seventh subsection of the act (which is the act of March 26,1904), not only is the driver of the machine guilty of violating the provisions of the act liable to a fine, but is made liable to a civil action to any person injured in his person or damaged in his property by its violation. The act declares the common law- of negligence, and adds to it certain standards of care on the part of drivers of the machines which per se constitute negligence, and which, if injury ensues to another using the highway, is a sufficient basis for an action to recover damages for the injury.
One contention made on behalf of appellants on these appeals is that the- court should have granted a peremptory instruction to the jury upon the close of the plaintiffs’ case to find for the defendants. Counsel, while admitting that the test of this position is whether there is any evidence introduced on the plaintiffs’ behalf tending to support their cause of action, yet insist that the testimony of Mr. Manson Isaacs, an intelligent and disinterested witness introduced by the plaintiffs, should be taken as the best evidence of what occurred. Mr. Isaacs was driving along the road in the same direction as appellees were traveling and some 200 yards behind them. He became interested in the speed of the machine as it passed him, and, true to the instinct characterizing many of the men of his state, determined to test the speed of his horse by that of the machine, not without expectation of beating it, or at least holding his own. He was driving a young spirited horse, which in spite of his faith in its speed, was unequal to the test. It may therefore be
From that two propositions are asserted by appellants : One, that the horse did not take fright until it had passed into the cross-road some distance; and, two, that, if it did take fright before, it was so obscured by the bulk of the buggy and those in it that it was not observable by one coming up in the rear. Other evidence on behalf of the plaintiffs was that the horse first showed fright about two rods before leaving the Lebanon and Danville pike; that it pricked up its ears, tossed its head high, and considerably increased its speed, as well as showed other signs of extreme nervousness. Whether appellant Moore saw the animal’s condition was a vital fact in the case; and whether, though he did not see it, he might, by the exercise of ordinary care, have seen it, is another pertinent fact. The road was practically straight and level from some distance back before the intersection was reached. That the horse and vehicle as well as the drivers could have been seen and were in fact seen by Moore for some distance before he overtook them there' can be no doubt. Seeing them, or their being in view so that they could have been seen by Moore by his exercise of ordinary care, the statute then made it his duty to give warning of his approach by sounding his horn, and, in addition, to “use every reasonable precaution to
It will be observed that the statute also requires the operator of the Machine to slacken its speed to not exceeding six miles an hour when approaching an intersecting road. Appellants contend that this provision could have been meant only for the protection of those about to come out of the intersecting road onto the one being traversed by the machine. That was doubtless one, and perhaps the main, consideration moving the Legislature to the enactment of that requirement. But the language of the section is emphatic and without exception. It will not do for the courts to say that the Legislature meant less than it has plainly said, or that the simple, imperative regulation should not be held to apply for the benefit of all persons at or near the intersection, on whichever road they might be. The regulation is a police act.
It is not unreasonable to presume that the legislative object was the protection of life, limb, and property of all whose safety might be imperiled by the
Manson Isaacs testified for the plaintiffs that the machine when it passed him, which was some quarter of a mile from the point where the accident occurred, was going very fast, that he immediately speeded his horse up to 12 miles an hour or more, following the machine, yet it was running so fast that by the time it reached the intersecting road it had gained 200 yards on him. It is objected by appellants that-the testi
The principal complaint is against the instruction authorizing the infliction of punitive damages. The instruction reads: “If you shall believe from the evidence that defendant Moore as he approached the intersection of said pike and plaintiff did fail to-have his machine under control, and did fail to give any warning of his approach as set out in instruction No. 1, and that by reason of such failure to-have said machine under control or to give such warning of its approach he was guilty of gross neglect, and as the direct result thereof, plaintiff’s injuries followed, then you may or may not in your own discretion award her punitive damages, not exceeding'in all, however, $10,200.” Another instruction defined gross negligence as the absence of slight care. It is not every case of gross negligence that warrants the infliction of punitive damages. McHenry Coal Co. v. Sneddon, 98 Ky. 688, 34 S. W. 228, 17 Ky. Law Rep. 1261. It is only where the negligence manifests a wanton disregard of the lives or safety of
The most that can he said of the conduct of Moore from the worst aspect .presented by the plaintiffs’ evidence is that he failed to comply with the statutory regulations as to -six-mile limit of speed at that point, and failed to sound Ms signal horn. Most horses, are now accustomed to the sight and sounds of automobiles, and pay but little attention to them. The nag did not show symptoms of fright until the machine was so near that it was probably impracticable to stop it so as to relieve its apprehension of danger. It is not shown that appellant Moore knew that the horse was frightened, or that he purposely refrained from looking. He simply failed to see what he might have seen by close attention, and the exercise of greater caution. Unless he was aware of the animal’s fright, and of the danger to the plaintiffs, or unless the conditions were such as necessarily put him on notice that such conditions would most likely result from a continuation of his course, it can scarcely he said that he wantonly or willfully inflicted the injury on the ladies. The facts fall short of making the ease for an instruction allowing punitive damages. Giving it was an error.
Appellees contend that the amount of the verdicts are no more than compensation for their injuries. Perhaps not. But they are quite substantial verdicts. True, the plaintiffs each suffered severe, and likely permanent injuries, the detail of wMch is harrowing. There is no standard by which the dam