1 S.W.2d 957 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1927
Affirming.
On the morning, of February 22, 1926, an automobile owned and driven by Llewellyn Sharp was struck by a train of the appellee Louisville Nashville Railroad Company at a grade crossing on a public road known as the Russell Cave pike about a mile north of the city limits of Lexington. At the time of the accident Edwin A. Stephenson, a young man 22 years of age, was riding in the automobile as Sharp's guest. Both Sharp and Stephenson were killed instantly.
Stephenson's administratrix brought this action in the Fayette circuit court against the appellees Louisville Nashville Railroad Company and the executors of Llewellyn Sharp seeking to recover damages for Stephenson's death.
The trial court sustained a motion for a directed verdict as to the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company, and, the case having been submitted as to Sharp's executors, the jury returned a verdict in their favor.
Appellant urges as grounds for reversal that the court erred in peremptorily instructing the jury to find *498 for the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company and as to the appellees, executors of Llewellyn Sharp, that the court erred in submitting to the jury the question of contributory negligence and in refusing to peremptorily instruct the jury to find for the plaintiff.
Stephenson and Sharp left Lexington in the latter's automobile going north on Broadway toward the Russell Cave pike. The witness Irwin N. Lee, while walking south on Broadway between Third and Fourth streets, had his attention attracted to the automobile by reason of the speed at which it was traveling. He recognized Sharp and saw another man sitting by his side on the front seat. He testified that as the car passed him it was running at about 40 miles per hour and that the man sitting on the front seat by the side of Sharp was half turned toward Sharp with his arm on the hack of the seat. The automobile was next seen by the witness Leroy Turner at a point about 600 feet from the railroad crossing. Turner was walking in the same direction the car was going, and when it passed him it was traveling from 35 to 45 miles per hour. He saw Stephenson sitting by the side of Sharp, and at the time they passed him both of them were looking straight ahead. He was approaching the crossing and could see the wigwag, which was located at the crossing. The wigwag was then operating. About 150 or 200 feet beyond Turner and about 400 or 450 feet from the crossing the witness Leon W. Taylor met Stephenson and Sharp. Taylor was in an automobile and was going toward Lexington and had just passed over the crossing in front of the train. He testified that the automobile in which Sharp and Stephenson were riding passed him at a speed of 35 or 45 miles per hour, and, knowing the train was rapidly approaching the crossing, he stopped his car and looked to see if Sharp's car was going to avoid colliding with the train. He did not observe any change in the speed of the automobile from the time it passed him until the collision, but he saw it swerve to the left just before it was struck by the train. He testified that when he passed over the railroad crossing the wigwag was operating. When the automobile passed him Stephenson was turned sideways looking toward Sharp as though engaged in conversation with him. Both the eyewitnesses to the accident and others, including members of the train crew, testified that the train whistled for the crossing. The train was *499 going from the direction of Paris, which was to the right of Sharp's automobile and on the side on which Stephenson was sitting.
The ground urged for reversal as to the appellee Louisville Nashville Railroad Company requires but little discussion. The evidence conclusively shows the train whistled for the crossing, the wigwag was operating, and an electric bell located at the crossing was ringing. There is a total absence of the usual negative testimony as to signals. It is said, however, that the trial court should have submitted the case to the jury on an issue as to whether or not the railroad company should have provided other means at the crossing for warning the traveling public than the wigwag signal. There is no evidence tending to show the crossing was ail unusually dangerous one. A train approaching the crossing, as did the train in question, could be seen for a distance of several hundred feet by travelers on the highway. Under such circumstances it should not be left to the jury to determine whether other and additional means of warning should be employed. Payne, Agent v. Barnette's Administrator,
It is earnestly insisted by appellant that there was no evidence to support an instruction upon contributory negligence. If there was any evidence supporting the plea of contributory negligence, it was the duty of the trial court to submit the question to the jury. Negligence will not be presumed, but it may be inferred from proven facts. John R. Coppin Co. v. Richards,
Stephenson was familiar with the railroad crossing and had the same opportunity as Sharp of seeing and hearing the signals, and, due to his position in the car to the right of Sharp, had a better opportunity to see and hear the approaching train. The duty imposed by law upon Stephenson as a guest in the automobile was the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety. What constitutes such ordinary care on the part of an invited guest in an automobile necessarily depends upon the facts and circumstances of each case. He cannot ignore obvious dangers or intrust his safety absolutely to the driver when the same knowledge or means of knowledge of obvious or threatened dangers is possessed by both. He cannot idly sit by, close his eyes and ears to such dangers, and, in the event of an accident, hold his host liable in damages. He must use ordinary care for his own safety, and when his means of observing obvious dangers are the same as or better than those possessed by the driver and he fails to observe them, or, observing them, fails to warn the driver, he is guilty of contributory negligence. Bohmer's Administrator v. Kentucky Traction
Terminal Co.,
But appellant contends there is no testimony in this case as to what was done or said by Stephenson immediately before the accident, and, since no one will be presumed to recklessly imperil his own life, the presumption must be indulged that he did all the law required him to do to prevent the accident and to get Sharp to stop the car. Such a presumption, however, must rest upon the more violent and untenable presumption that Sharp, having been warned of the danger, deliberately drove his car in front of the approaching train, imperiling his own *501 as well as Stephenson's life. As said in Coppin Co. v. Richards, supra:
"It is always to be presumed that one will not to anything which will directly imperil his life or that of his associates with whom he is on good terms."
Stephenson, being acquainted with the crossing and its surroundings, and knowing that he was approaching it at a high rate of speed, was required in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety to use his senses of sight and hearing to ascertain whether or not it was safe for the automobile in which he was riding to pass over the railroad track, and if he failed to exercise ordinary care to ascertain the danger, or having ascertained the danger, failed to warn the driver, he was guilty of contributory negligence.
The facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence were sufficient to authorize a submission to the jury of the question of contributory negligence. The only reasonable deduction from the facts and circumstances proven is, that Stephenson not only failed to warn Sharp of the danger, but that he failed to use any precaution to ascertain the danger. When the car in which he was riding passed Turner and Taylor, Stephenson was apparently unconscious of any danger, and it is plain that at that time he had not seen the wigwag nor heard the train whistle. The car was then traveling at a rate of speed that would carry it to the crossing in less than eight seconds, and, while there is no testimony as to what Stephenson did or said during this short interval of time, a reasonable deduction from all the circumstances is that he said and did nothing.
The facts do not bring this case within the rule announced in Ray v. Ray,
It is insisted, however, that the trial court in instruction No. 1 erroneously submitted to the jury for its determination the question as to whether or not the decedent Sharp was negligent. This instruction would have conformed to the facts more nearly had it directed the jury to find for the plaintiff unless they believed Stephenson's death was due to his own neglect as defined in the instruction on contributory negligence; but we are convinced that in the form given it could not have misled the jury. The proof conclusively shows a total absence of negligence on the part of the railroad company and the negligence causing the accident was thus confined to the occupants of the car. It is clear the jury's verdict was returned under the instruction on contributory negligence, assuming, as we must, that it was composed of sensible and reasonable men.
Finding no error prejudicial to appellant's substantial rights, the judgment is affirmed.