137 Ky. 619 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Lead Opinion
Opinion op the Court by
— Affirming.
This action was instituted by the appellant, John Watson, in the court below, against the appellees, Kentucky & Indiana Bridge & Railroad Company, hereinafter called the Bridge & Railroad Company, the Southern Railway Company, the Southern Railway Company in Kentucky, and the Union Tank Line Company, to recover $20,000 damages for injuries sustained to his person on the night of June 14, 1907, from an explosion of gas caused, as alleged, by the negligence of the appellees. It was, in substance, alleged in the petition as amended that while a tank ear, owned by the appellee- Union Tank Line Company, and filled with a highly explosive substance, known as gasoline, was being transported through a populous section of the city of Louisville over the roadbed of the appellee Bridge & Railroad Company, it was derailed and its valve broken, thereby causing all the gasoline to escape and flow in large quantities on the street and into the gutters; that from the gasoline thus flowing and standing in pools upon the street and gutters there arose and spread over the neighborhood of the place of derailment and into the houses of the residents thereof, great quantities of highly explosive and combustible gas which, three hours after the 'derailment of the tank car, exploded with force from contact with a lighted match thrown on the street by one Chas. Duerr, who claimed to have used it in igniting a cigar; that the explosion threw appellant from his bed and almost demolished
The main question involved in this appeal is, whether or not the trial court- erred in giving the peremptory instruction. Its decision will require consideration of the evidence. It is conceded that the tank ear belonged to appellee Union Tank Line Company, and the evidence conclusively shows that it was loaded at Franklin, Pa., with gasoline. In reaching the consignee at Louisville, it passed over several lines of railroad, but was delivered by the Baltimore Ohio & Southwestern Railroad to the appellee Bridge & Railroad Company, in the city of Louisville, at what is known as the Yonngtown yards. The latter company wás at the time of the accident hauling the tank car, attached to one of its trains, from its railroad yards near the Ohio river to the place of business of the consignee in the southern part of the city. The derailment of the ear occurred about 7:30 o’clock in the evening between Walnut and Madison streets. The gasoline began at once to escape from the tank and continued to do ’ so for several hours until the tank was emptied. By the derailing of the car the discharge pipe beneath the tank provided for emptying it of its contents, was broken, as were the appliances for opening and closing the valves by which the contents were allowed to leave, or prevented from leaving the tank. The gasoline in escaping from the tank ran down a gutter or drain in the street and along appellee Bridge & Railroad Company’s right of way, several hundred feet to a sewer, into which it flowed. The employes of appellee Bridge & Railroad Company connected with the train in question, and
There is no disagreement between the parties as to the facts thus far stated, but there are several issues of fact yet to be considered with respect to which there is sharp controversy. One of the points of difference is as to the condition of the railroad track where the tank car was derailed. The evidence of appellant conduced to prove that it was defective and unsafe. Indeed, several witnesses introduced by him testified that the derailment of the car was caused by a low or loose joint in the rails which sank under the wheels of the car to such an extent as to throw it from the track, in leaving which it broke one of the rails; that the low joint was produced by the rottenness of the ties supporting it, want of ballast between the ties, and the flat or swampy condition of the roadbed at the place of derailment. According to the further statements of the witnesses in question the bad condition of the roadbed and track, as described, had continued a long time, and must have been known to those charged with the duty of keeping it
As already intimated, the testimony of appellee’s witnesses radically differed from that of appellant’s as to what was done to stop the escape of the gasoline after the derailment of the car. They all denied that they caused, or that there was, any increase in the flow of gasoline from the tank, and claimed that they did everything in their power to stop the leak; using for that purpose waste, mud, and other appliances after they discovered that the discharge pipe was broken, the valves open, and that the appliances for closing the valve would not perform their work. They further testified that their attempts to stop the leak were attended by great risk and danger to tlieir lives; that the bad odor of the gasoline was nauseating, the darkness interfered with their vision and movements, and the use of lanterns or torches near enough to the car to obtain a good view of the situation, would inevitably have resulted in an explosion of the gas escaping in great volume from the flowing gasoline. Whether the jury, if the case had been submitted to them, would have decided this issue of fact in accordance with the testimony of appellant’s witnesses cannot be known, but it is manifest that the issue was one to be determined by the jury if the case should have gone to them at all. Another issue of fact was as to whether the servants of appellee Bridge & Railroad Company 'gave residents near the place of the accident and persons traveling Madison street at that point warning against the dangers from the gas.
There is no contrariety of proof as to the fact that Charles Duerr lighted the match that caused the explosion. Indeed, the act was admitted by him, but he testified that when it was done he and Miller, a companion, were standing on Madison street in front of the Warner residence a square from the derailed car, talking with the two Warner girls, the four having just returned from Shawnee Park; that he took a cigar and match from his pockets, struck, a light from the match, and ignited the cigar; that the explosion followed before the match reached the ground and that he was knocked down by the explosion. hle further testified that at the time of lighting the match he had just returned from Shawnee Park and knew nothing of the derailment of the tank car, or
Appellees were permitted to prove that Duerr, who had been a telegraph operator in the employ of the appellee Bridge & Railroad Company, was on the morning of the day of the explosion discharged from its service,"and that 20'minutes before the explosion Duerr remarked to his companion, in the hearing of Giacometti and Darnall, “Let us go and set the damn thing oh fire.”*' The foundation for the introduction of the testimony of Giacometti and Darnall was laid by first'obtaining from Duerr a denial that he had
A There was, as previously indicated, evidence from which the jury might have found the appellee Bridge & Bailroad Company guilty of negligence in failing to keep in proper repair and condition its. roadbed and track at the place where the tank car was derailed, and that such failure caused the derailment resulting in the escape from the tank of the gasoline, contact of the gas from which with the match lighted, by Duerr caused the explosion. There was also some evidence, very slight, it is true, tending to support appellant’s contentions.that the employes of the appellee Bridge & Bailroad Company were negligent in handling the car after its derailment, and in failing to sufficiently warn residents and others near the place of the accident against the dangers to be apprehend
The lighting of the match by Duerr having resulted in the explosion, the question is, was that act merely a contributing cause, or the efficient and, therefore, proximate cause of appellant’s injuries? The question of proximate cause is a question fo'r the jury.'* In holding that Duerr in lighting or throwing the match acted maliciously or with intent to cause the explosion, the trial court invaded the province of the jury* There was, it is true, evidence tending to prove that the act was wanton or malicious, but also evidence conducing to prove that it was inadvertently or negligently done by Duerr.*It was therefore for the jury and not the court to determine from all the evidence whether the lighting of the match was done by Duerr inadvertently or negligently, or whether it was a wanton and malicious act.'* As said in Milwaukee Railroad Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469, 24 L. 256: “The true rule is that what is the proximate cause of the injury is ordinarily a question for the jury. It is not a question of science or legal knowledge. It is to be determined as a fact in view of the circumstances of fact attending it. ’ ’ Snydor v. Arnold, 122 Ky. 557, 92 S. W. 289, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 1252. In Thompson on Negligence, section 161, it is said: “On principle, the rule must be here, as in other cases, that, before the judge can take the question away from the jury and determine it himself, the facts must not only be undisputed, but the inference to be drawn from those facts must be such that fair-minded men ought not to differ about them. It must be concluded that this is so, when it is considered that proximate cause is a cause which would probably, according to the experience of mankind, lead to the
If the presence on Madison street in the city of Louisville of the great volume of loose gas that arose from the escaping gasoline was caused by the negligence of the appellee Bridge & Railroad Company, it seems to us that the probable consequences of its coming in contact with fire and causing an explosion was too plain a proposition to admit of doubt. Indeed, it was most probable that some one would strike a match to light a cigar or for other purposes in the midst of the gas. In our opinion, therefore, the act of one lighting and throwing a match under such circumstances cannot be said to be the efficient cause of the explosion. It did not of itself produce the explosion, nor could it have done so without the assistance and contribution resulting from the-primary negligence, if there was such negligence, on the part of the appellee Bridge & Railroad Company in furnishing the presence of the gas in the street. This conclusion, however, rests upon the theory that Duerr inadvertently or negligently lighted and threw the match in the gas. This view of the case is sustained by the following leading cases, all decided by this court: Snydor v. Arnold, 122 Ky. 557, 92 S. W. 289,
If, however, the act of Duerr in lighting the match‘d and throwing it into the vapor or gas arising from the gasoline was malicious, and done for the purpose of causing the explosion, we do not think appellees would he responsible, for while the appellee Bridge & Bailroad Company’s negligence may have been the efficient cause of the presence of the gas in the street, and it should have understood enough of the consequences thereof to have foreseen that an explosion was likely to result from the inadvertent or negligent lighting of a match by some person who was ignorant of the presence of .the gas or of the effect of lighting or throwing a match in it, it could not have foreseen or deemed it probable that one would maliciously or wantonly do such an act for the evil purpose of producing the explosion. Therefore, if the act of Duerr was malicious, we quite agree with the trial court that it was one which the appellees could not reasonably have anticipated or guarded against, and in such case the act of Duerr, and not the primary negligence of the appellee Bridge & Bailroad Company, in any of the particulars charged, was the efficient or proximate cause of appellant’s injuries. The mere fact that the concurrent cause or intervening act was unforeseen will not relieve the defendant guilty
j'/ The record shows no cause of action whatever ^against the Union Tank Line Company. The only /ycomplaint against it is that the tank car was defective. I The testimony conclusively shows that the car was inspected at Franklin, Pa., before its delivery to the ' railroad company there for transportation to Louisville, and was found to be in good condition; that it remained in such condition on the way to Louisville and such was its, condition when delivered to appellee Bridge and Railroad Company, at Louisville. On the other hand, the appellant introduced no evidence to show that the car was not properly constructed, that an3” of its appliances were defective, or that it was leaking prior to the time of the accident. This being! true, it is patent that the derailment of the car broke' or injured it to such an extent as to cause the escape of the oil, and with that accident the appellee, Union! ¿Tank Line Company, had nothing to do and was in! "y’no sense responsible therefor. The peremptory in-I struction, therefore, so far as the appellee, Union! '‘Tank Line Company, was concerned, was proper.-
We do not think the court erred in allowing the indictment against Duerr for burning the stable, or the judgment showing what disposition was made of the case, to be read to the jury. The stable was de
We also think that the testimony of Giacometti and Darnall showing the threat of Duerr to cause the explosion was properly admitted for the purpose of contradicting Duerr, who had previously denied making the threat. But the testimony, as well as that furnished by tlie indictment and judgment, should have been considered by the jury, only for the purpose of affecting Duerr’s credibility as a witness, and the court should have so told the jury.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is affirmed as to the Union Tank Line Company, but reversed as to the Bridge & Railroad Company, and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with .the opinion.
Rehearing
On petition for rehearing,
June 17, 1910.
The petition for appellees asks a withdrawal of so much of the opinion as declares the statements of Duerr, made in the hearing of Giacometti and Darnell just before the explosion, and the evidence furnished by the indictment against him and judgment thereon, were competent only for the purpose of affecting his credibility as a witness, and
Upon reconsideration of the matter, we have reached the conclusion that the testimony of Giacometti and Darnell as to the declarations or threats made by Duerr immediately before the explosion should be admitted as substantive evidence conducing: to prove what his motive was in lighting and throwing the match into the gas. But as the indictment against him was returned, and his conviction thereunder occurred, after the explosion, we adhere to the conclusion expressed in the opinion that the evidence furnished by them is .competent only for the purpose of affecting Duerr’s credibility as a witness, as explained in the opinion.
The opinion is modified to the extent indicated, but the petition in other respects is overruled.