Citation Numbers: 153 Ky. 691, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 887, 156 S.W. 127
Judges: Clay
Filed Date: 5/9/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Plaintiff, William Cooper Weaks, suing by his guardian, Mrs. Willie Weaks, brought-this aetion against the McDowell Construction and the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to recover damages for personal injury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants. Plaintiff appeals.
The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company runs ■through the City of Hopkinsville. It contracted with the
About one o’clock P. M. on the 19th of June, 1911, plaintiff, William Cooper Weaks, who was 15 years and nine months of age, together with Cyrus Radford, a boy 14 years of age, and Christy Smith, 15 years of age, went to the cut and turned into the beaten path leading by the machines. It was a hot day and when they reached the steam shovel nearest to them they all sat down on the ends of the cross ties in the shade of the steam shovel, and on its east side. While in this position Radford discovered that the iast iron lid of the journal on one of the trucks was partly open. Upon further examination, he saw a small tin box projecting* out of the journal between the top and frame work of the journal. The tin box had some lettering, on it, Including the
The ease was submitted to the jury on the theory that the defendants-were liable if the blasting caps were unusually attractive to children and were placed by the employees of the construction company in such an exposed and unguarded position that they could be easily seen and discovered by persons and children congregating or visiting such point, and that the plaintiff took possession of them, and because of bis tender years and want of judgment and discretion, be did not know the danger of handling them and did not understand the risk be ran in undertaking to remove the explosive substance from the cáps, and thereby unintentionally caused the explosion.
Though the question of the defendant’s liability under the facts adduced in evidence has been elaborately briefed, yet in view of the fact that the case was submitted to the jury by instructions which are not complained of, and the jury found for the defendants, we deem it unnecessary to pass on the question of a peremptory.
A reversal is asked on tbe ground of tbe admission of incompetent evidence and on the further ground of newly discovered evidence.
The evidence complained of as being incompetent is: (1) The statement of the assistant superintendent of the construction company to the effect that all the employees of the company knew that is was a dangerous thing to place caps in the journals of the steam shovels,
(2) Evidence to the effect that the magazine in which the explosives were stored and the chest in which they were kept while the blasting was in operation, were on several occasions broken- ixito and dynamite caps and other explosives taken therefrom.
The question was: Did any employee of the construction company place the caps in the journal? There was no direct evidence to this effect. The only evidence introduced on behalf of the plaintiff was that caps like those found in the journal had been used for some time by the employees of the company in blasting near the steam shovels. On the other hand, the witnesses for the defendant testified that the caps could not have been put in the journal before the shovel was moved, for in that event there would have been an explosion. No blasting caps were used by the company after the machine was moved. Even when they were used they were used by the powder man, who never permitted any of the other employees to handle them. He did not place them in the journal. At the time of the trial, the various employees engaged in the construction work were scattered over the country and could not be secured as witnesses. It was also shown that the explosives, including the dynamite caps, were kept in a magazine, which was some distance away. This magazine was securely built and fastened .by a Yale padlock. The powder man also had a chest in which he removed the explosives from the magazine to the place where they were to be used. This chest was always kept securely locked. It was the theory of the plaintiff that some one of the employees negligently placed the caps in the journal, intending thereafter to remove them. As said before, there was no direct testimony on this question. Plaintiff’s theory is based entirely on the use and possession of .the caps by the company’s employees. The question, therefore, was one of inference or probability. In the absence of any evidence tending to show that other persons were in the possession of caps like those found in the journal, it was the reasonable inference that some employee of the company, having the use and possession of the caps, actually placed the caps in the journal. If any employee did this, he did it either maliciously or negligently. Though .plaintiff’s theory is that it was done negligently, this
The only newly discovered evidence relied upon for a new trial is the affidavits of Eaymond West and Willard Hawkins to the effect that during the winter and spring, of 1911, and before the work of blasting was completed, they saw gunpowder and dynamite lying loose on the bank of the cut and unprotected, and that one of them, just a few days before plaintiff was hurt, found a blasting cap lying loose on the ground on the east side of the cut. The affidavits further state that when they saw the explosives the powder man was not near, but the same could have easily been taken away by anyone disposed to do so,
Judgment affirmed.