Ramsey v. Louisville, Cincinnati & Lexington Railway Co.

CHIEF JUSTICE LEWIS

delivered the opinion op the court.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injury to the plaintiff caused by a collision of the defendant's railway train with a coal cart he was driving.

It was not necessary for him to state in his petition that the injury was caused by the gross neglect of the defendant’s servants or agents, an allegation of ordinary neglect being sufficient to enable him to recover compensatory damages.

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the court instructed the jury to find for the defendant, and whether that instruction was proper is the only question before us.

The evidence shows that while the plaintiff was driving his cart, to which two mules were hitched, along Floyd street, across defendant’s railroad track, in the city of Louisville, it was struck by the train moving-fifteen or sixteen miles an hour, and knocked off the track, and he was thrown out with such violence as to severely injure his back and arm. And, according to the testimonjr of both the plaintiff and the only other witness introduced, no signal of the approach of the train to the crossing was given by those in charge of it, either by ringing the bell or blowing the whistle. It farther appears that railway trains are, by city ordinance, expressly prohibited running at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour within the city limits.

*102According to the evidence in this case it is, in our opinion, clear that the plaintiff had a prima facie right to recover. And we must, therefore, conclude that the instruction complained of was given by the court upon the assumption that there appeared such contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff as defeats that right.

The evidence shows that "it was a blustering, windy, dusty day when the collision occurred, and' that the plaintiff, when approaching the crossing, was driving in a sweeping trot, and did not, before attempting to cross the track, stop, nor listen nor look along the track but one way.

Stating the evidence in support of the theory of contributory negligence as strong as the record will warrant, which we have done, it is not such as to authorize the court to take the case from the jury.

When the defense in a case like this is contributory negligence, the proper question for the jury is, whether the damage was occasioned entirely by the • negligence or improper conduct of the defendant, or whether the plaintiff himself so far contributed to the misfortune by his own negligence, or want of ordinary or common care and caution, that, but for such negligence or want of ordinary care and caution on his part, the misfortune would not have occurred. In the first case, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover; in the second, he would not. (Paducah & M. R. Co. v. Hoehl, 12 Bush, 41; Ky. C. R. Co. v. Thomas, 79 Ky., 160.)

The degree of negligence of which the plaintiff must be guilty to defeat a recovery by him must be at least ordinary neglect, his failure to take unusual care being *103no defense to the action. (Sherman & Redfield on Negligence, sec. 29.)

YYhat is ordinary care or ordinary neglect must obviously depend upon the obligations and duties resting at the time and place upon the party doing the injury, and the party injured, and the circumstances of each particular case or class of cases.

If the plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence in this case as should defeat his recovery, it must consist in his failure to stop before attempting to cross, and, by listening and looking up and down the track, ascertain whether he could do so safely, and in the great rate of speed at which he was driving his cart.

But this court has held that “it can not be regarded as a fixed rule that the failure to look for the approach of a traiu is negligence on the part of the party injured, .as there may be proper diligence without the exercise of that precaution.” (Paducah & Memphis R. Co. v. Hoehl, 12 Bush, 41.)

If the place of crossing is where neither the speed of the train is required to be slackened, nor signals of its approach given, it would be culpable negligence on the part of a person about to cross the track not to stop and use his sense of sight and hearing. For in such case his safety depends .upon his own vigilance, and those in charge of the train would not be responsible for any injury that might be done to him, unless, they should discover his peril in time, by the use of ordinary ■care, to avoid injuring him.

On the other hand, the dictates of humanity as well •as the law imperatively require that the speed of railway trains be so slackened when approaching the cross*104ing of a street in a city or town, and that such distinct and timely signals be given as, in a great degree, to lessen the necessity for vigilance and care on the part of those passing along the street.

It would be unreasonable to require each one of the hundreds or thousands of persons passing daily on foot or in vehicles along a public street in a populous busy city or town, to stop at a railroad crossing in order to listen or look up and down the track, sometimes visible-but a short distance, to ascertain whether' a train is-approaching, when they can, without doing so, have comparative security against inconvenience and injury by a reduction of the speed of the trains, and easily and certainly warned of its approach by the bell or whistle.

As said in Spencer v. Illinois C. R. Co., 29 Iowa, 60, cited by this court in the case referred to in 12 Bush, a person about to cross a railroad track “is only required to have satisfactory evidence that the road is clear, and this he might have by those warnings usually attending the starting or moving of a train through a town or city, just as effectually and efficiently as by looking up and down the track.”

In this case not only was the rate at which defendant’s train might lawfully run in the city of Louisville-prescribed by ordinance, but, independent of any ordinance, it was the duty of those in charge of the train to give proper signal of its approach to Floyd street, and the plaintiff had the right to assume that these legal requirements would be complied with. And, consequently, it can not be imputed to him as negligence that he did not anticipate culpable negligence and misconduct on the part of the servants and agents of the *105defendant, of which, the evidence shows they were-guilty, and exercise the ordinarily unnecessary precaution to stop and listen and look up and down the-track before attempting to cross it.

Whether the train would or would not have struck, the plaintiff’s cart if he had been driving at less speed than a “sweeping trot,” which may or may not be a forbidden gait, is a futile inquiry, in view of the indubitable fact that the collision would not have occurred if the train had been running only six miles an hour, and the proper signals had been given.

The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial, and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.