Citation Numbers: 292 S.W. 506, 218 Ky. 808, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 265
Judges: McCandless
Filed Date: 3/15/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Affirming.
In a suit for negligence causing the death of his intestate, the administrator of the estate of Sherman Clemmons recovered judgment against the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company for the sum of $2,500.00. On this appeal several grounds are assigned for reversal, but the only one seriously argued or that merits consideration is the alleged error of the lower court in failing to direct the jury to find a verdict for defendant.
The accident occurred an Sunday morning, December 10, 1922. Deceased, a young man eighteen years of *Page 809 age, and his brother, Jackie, were section hands. On this morning, they, together with the section foreman, were rabbit hunting. Sherman started home upon the railroad, which at this point is double tracked and lies upon a right curve, though north of this curve the track is straight. He walked north upon the west track of the railroad. A freight train was passing going in the same direction upon the eastern track and his attention was attracted by it, and, as he reached a point about the center of the curve, he was run upon and knocked to the west side of the tracks and instantly killed by a heavy southbound passenger train. The engineer of that train testified for plaintiff, stating that the train consisted of eight or nine coaches, was running at the rate of forty or forty-five miles an hour; that he was keeping a lookout on the track, which at this point lay in a cut; that he saw the boy as soon as he came in sight around the curve, he does not think this was over 100 yards distant, though he had not measured the distance; he realized that the boy did not see the train and that it would be impossible to prevent hitting him, considering the speed of the train and the distance he was from it; that he immediately shut off the steam and applied the air brakes and emergency, and this is all that could have been done to stop the train. The engine was equipped with a whistle, but he did not sound this or give any warning signal, as he did not have time to do this and also put the train in emergency, and thought a signal unavailing.
Jackie Clemmons testified as to a test he had made by standing on the track at the place of the accident and observing the approach of a south-bound train from around the curve, and counting the rails from where he stood to the farthest point at which the engineer in the cab was plainly visible to him; this was nineteen rail lengths or 627 feet. No evidence was introduced by defendant.
Admittedly decedent was a trespasser and when first discovered by the engineer was watching the passing train and unaware of the approaching one. The engineer knew he could not stop the train in time to avoid striking him. If, instead of trying to do this he had immediately sounded the whistle, a matter requiring but a short interval, the sound would have reached deceased almost instantaneously. A young, active man could spring from the center of the track to a place of safety in less than a second; walking at the rate of three miles an hour he *Page 810
could have stepped from the track in less than two seconds. It would require an interval of time for him after hearing the signal to appreciate the danger and to act, but it cannot be said as a matter of law that all of this could not have been done in five seconds, the time the train would have covered the intervening distance of 100 yards, as estimated by the engineer, at the rate it was travelling, even without slackening its speed. It will not be overlooked that the engineer estimated the distance as it appeared to him from the moving train, and further states that he discovered deceased as soon as the point upon which he was standing came into view, and that Jackie Clemmons testified that his test shows a person standing at the point of the accident can see the engineer in the cab of an approaching train over six hundred feet away. Making due allowance for the difference in observation between one in a cab of a moving train and a person standing still upon the track, this evidence is still entitled to some weight, and if true established the fact that the intervening distance was considerably over 100 yards, thus allowing more time for precautionary signals, slackening the speed of the train and for action upon the part of deceased, hence it cannot be said as a matter of law that the engineer used ordinary care in the exercise of all reasonable means at his command, consistent with the safety of the train, to avoid injuring decedent after his peril was discovered. C. N. O. T. P. Ry. Co. v. Jones' Admr.,
Appellant insists that we held otherwise in. Davis v. Crawford's Admx.,
Under the facts in that case the conclusion was sound, but it does not apply to those presented in this case. A number of other cases are cited, but in none of them are the facts similar to those in this case and a reference to them is not deemed necessary.
On the whole case, seeing no error to the substantial rights of appellant, the judgment is affirmed.