Reversing.
This appeal is from a judgment for $1,500 in behalf of appellee, Hilton Leroy Thomason, against the appellant, Illinois Central R. Co., for personal injuries sustained at a railroad crossing.
The accident occurred near the outskirts of the city of Princeton at a public crossing where a road, within the city of Princeton, crosses appellant's tracks. At the point of accident the tracks run approximately north and south and the road approximately east and west. The injured appellee was a four year old child and resided with his mother, the next friend, at their home in the southwest corner of the intersection facing the road and adjacent to the west side of appellant's right-of-way. On the morning of the accident the injured child was visiting the home of Mrs. Nola Ramey located across the railroad tracks from the Thomason home in the northeast corner of the intersection and was running in and out the house playing with Wanda Ramey, a seven year old child. The Ramey home also faced the road and was adjacent to the east side of appellant's right-of-way. While the child was at the Ramey home one of appellant's freight trains stopped on the crossing. The train was approximately 3,000 feet long and the engine, which was taking water near the station, was approximately 2,300 feet north of the crossing, the caboose being approximately 700 feet south of it. After the train had remained on the crossing for a period of time variously estimated by witnesses to be from eight to twenty-five minutes the injured child, who was then in the Ramey yard, said to Wanda Ramey that he was going to "try to catch the train and go over it and go home." He thereupon started from the Ramey home down the road towards the train and Wanda called and *Page 388 told him not to go over the train but he went on. When he got to the crossing he attempted to climb on the train and just as he did so it started and knocked him down and the wheel ran over his foot. Wanda Ramey and several employees of appellant testified that the train blew just before it started at the time of the accident while one witness for appellees testified positively that the whistle did not blow and one other witness, in position to hear, stated that if it blew he did not hear it. The trial court, over the objection of appellant, permitted evidence to the effect that there were a number of homes on the road near the crossing and that children were accustomed to playing in the yards of these homes.
The case was submitted to the jury on an instruction telling them in substance that if they believed the train blocked the crossing for more than five minutes and further believed that the plaintiff and other children habitually played in the yards near the crossing and were so playing on the occasion in question and that the appellant could have known thereof by the exercise of ordinary care, then it was the duty of appellant to exercise ordinary care to prevent injury to the child on the occasion in question and if it failed to do so and as a result thereof the child was injured they should find for him.
It is first insisted by appellant that error was committed in failing to direct a verdict in its behalf. The determination of this question depends on whether we elect to adhere to or overrule the decision in Trent v. Norfolk Western R. Co.,
"From which we conclude that after a railroad company occupies a public road crossing beyond the lawful period, it owes a duty to persons who are attempting to cross through, over, or under its cars at said public crossing, not to injure them by starting *Page 389 its train without reasonable signal or notice. It will have been noticed, however, that under authority of the Clark [Southern Railway Co. v. Clark, Ky.,
105 S.W. 384 , 13 L.R.A., N.S., 1071] and Jones [Jones v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., Ky.,104 S.W. 258 , 13 L.R.A., N.S., 1066] Cases, supra, the right to recover for a violation of this duty is forfeited by an adult when a live engine it attached to or near the cars, and probably always, on the ground of assumed risk or his own contributory negligence which is imputed as a matter of law."
Numerous cases are relied on by appellant as laying down a different rule from the one enunciated in the Trent case, including Swartwood's Guardian v. Louisville N. R. Co.,
Nor do we think that the domestic and foreign cases cited by appellant, to the effect that the blocking of the crossing in excess of the statutory period of five minutes provided by Section 768, Kentucky Statutes, could not be considered the proximate cause of the injury, sufficient to demonstrate unsoundness of the rule in the Trent case. The holding in that case was in no sense one that the blocking of the crossing was the proximate cause of the injury. That holding was merely that where a crossing is blocked longer than the time permissible under the statute the duty is imposed on the railroad company to give warning of intention to start the train. The question then becomes whether the failure to perform the duty of giving the required warning was the proximate cause of the injury.
In the instant case, as the evidence was conflicting as to whether the whistle sounded before the train started after blocking the crossing for more than the statutory period an issue on this point was made, to be submitted to the jury with the further determination to be made by the jury as to whether the failure to sound the whistle, if there was such a failure, was the proximate cause of the injury. In view of the considerations stated the trial court correctly overruled appellant's motion for a directed verdict.
It seems clear, however, that the case was submitted to the jury upon an untenable theory, namely, that if children were accustomed to playing in the yards in the vicinity of the crossing and appellant knew this or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known it then it was appellant's duty to exercise ordinary care to prevent injury to the plaintiff at the time in controversy. Obviously, the mere fact that children played in the yards near the crossing and that appellant know this did not impose on appellant any knowledge that children would leave places of safety and attempt to climb on the train. Placing the seal of approval upon the instruction given would be, in effect, applying the attractive nuisance doctrine to trains stopping on crossings. If the *Page 391
theory of this instruction were sound, then the burden of exercising ordinary care to avoid injuring children under such circumstances would apply whether the train had stopped a reasonable or unreasonable time at the crossing. The trial court apparently was actuated by the decision in Louisville
N. R. Co. v. Popp,
The trial court was justified in submitting the case to the jury but submitted it upon an improper theory. On the next trial, if the evidence is substantially the same, it should be submitted under the rule laid down in the Trent case to the effect that, having blocked the crossing for more than the statutory period, it was appellant's duty to give warning of its intention to start the train by sounding the whistle sufficiently loud to be plainly audible at the crossing to a person of ordinary hearing. Since there was no evidence for appellant that any other signal or notice than blowing the whistle was given, the instruction as to the warning to be given should, in this particular case, be confined to the blowing of the whistle.
Judgment reversed with directions to grant the appellant a new trial and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. *Page 392
