Citation Numbers: 174 Ky. 362, 192 S.W. 18, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 169
Judges: Clay
Filed Date: 3/2/1917
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
Reversing.
Plaintiff, Sallie Williamson, brought this suit against defendant, United Fuel Gas Company, to recover damages for personal injuries. From a verdict and judgment in her favor for $500.00 the defendant appeals.
The principal error assigned for a reversal is the' failure of the trial court to sustain the company’s motion for a peremptory instruction.
The faets are as follows: The defendant is a corporation engaged in the production and sale of natural gas, which is conveyed by pipe lines from West Virginia to the company’s various consumers in the states of Kentucky and Ohio. At various places along its pipe line it is necessary for the company to. maintain gas measuring stations where regulators are provided for the purpose of controlling the pressure of the gas. In the west end of the town of Inez the company maintains one of these stations on its own property. The station consists of a small building eight feet by six feet erected over the regulator and measuring appliances. On the side of the building is a door, through which the employes enter for the purpose of operating the applicances. The station is situated about fifty feet from the public road leading out of the town of Inez down Rock-castle creek. On the north side of the road and between the road and the gas station is a, high board fence. Plaintiff, who lives about five miles from Inez, rode a mule into town on September 15, 1913; She was accompanied by her little boy, who rode behind her. Plaintiff says that as she and her son were passing the station on their return trip she noticed that the door of the station' was open and thought to herself “what a scary looking place.” While that thought was in her mind and just as the door came open, the mule wheeled around and threw her off. She was positive that it was the move- . ment of the door that scared the mule. The mule was gentle and had never become frightened before.
Plaintiff contends that her right of recovery is sustained by the cases of Lynn v. Hooper (Maine), 47 L. R. A. 752; Snyder v. Philadelphia Company of West Virginia (W. Va.), 63 L. R. A. 896, and Heinmiller v. Winston, 131 Iowa 32, 107 N. W. 1102, 6 L. R. A. (N. S.) 150. In the first mentioned case, the defendant placed within the highway a hay cap, consisting of white cloth tied by
It is clear, we think, that the rule announced in the above- cases cannot be applied to the facts of the case-under consideration. Plaintiff does not contend that her mule was frightened by the operation of any of the applicances in the gas station. Her sole complaint is that the door swung open and frightened the mule. There is a wide difference between the placing of a hay cap in a highway, or the use of a large steam shovel or the operation of a gas well near the highway* and the mere swinging of a small door attached to a building eight feet by six feet, located on the other side of a high board fence and fifty feet from the highway. 'It cannot be said that the swinging of a door so located is in any sense a nuisance, or that the owner of the building should anticipate that it would frighten horses or mules of ordinary gentleness while passing along the highway. The rule that the owner of property should so use it as not to injure others does not go to the extent of requiring him always to be on the alert to see that the doors of his residence, or barn, or outhouses, are securely fastened, for fear that, if left open, they might be blown by the wind and cause some passing horse or mule to become frightened and injure his rider. That a recovery in this case would necessarily result in such a rule,- there can be no doubt. We, therefore, conclude that the trial court should have sustained defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded,for a new trial consistent with this opinion.