Louisville Ry. Co. v. Flannery

Opinion op hie court by

Judge Carroll

— Affirming.

' Tile father of Arthur Flannery drove his wagon in front of a fruit store on Jefferson street and left it standing as close to the sidewalk and as far from the street car track in the- middle of the street as he could, considering’ 'the position of other vehicles that. *753were in front of the. store. He got out of ¡the wagon to go into the store, and left his son Arthur, a little hoy about eight years old, as the only occupant of the wag-on. Almost immediately after Flannery left the wagon, or at least in a minute or so, a street car going east on Jefferson street came up to the place the wagon was standing. The motorman saw the nearness of the wagon to the track as he approached it, and was running at slow* speed. When in a few feet of the wagon, he stopped the oar, apprehensive that it would not pass the wagon without striking it, and asked Arthur Flannery to move 'the wagon, but the little boy did not pay any attention to. the request and the motorman, concluding that he could pass in safety, started his car. The front step of the car passed the wagon without striking it, but the rear step bit one of the wagon wheels, the collision throwing the little boy out of the wagon, injuring him severely and permanently. The evidence shows that after the front part of the car passed the wagon, missing it by two or three inches, the horse slightly moved his position, ¡and this caused one of the wheels of the wagon to come in contact with the car.

The only error assigned is the failure, of the trial court to give the following instruction: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the wagon in question was a sufficient distance from the track for the defendant’s car to pass the same in safety, and that the front part arid ’step of said oar did pass said wagon in .safety, arid that afterwards, and while said car was passing said wagon, said wagon changed its position by reason of the horse moving or otherwise, and thus brought said wagon so close to the said car that the rear of the car *754collided with said wagon, then the law is- for the defendant, and the jury should so find.” This instruction' was in effect a peremptory direction to find for the railway company, and, if it should have been given, it is manifest that the failure to do so was prejudicial error. But in our opinion the court did not under the facts of this case commit error in refusing the instruction.

The motorman saw the little boy in the wagon before attempting to pass it. He knew, or must have known, that the boy was not old enough to appreciate or understand that he was in any danger, and that his tender years made him indifferent to his request to move the wagon out of the way. He also knew that the iboy was the only occupant of the wagon, and further knew that the -closeness of the wagon to- the track made it doubtful if the car would pass without striking it. With full knowledge of all these facts, it Was the duty -of the motorman under the circumstances to have stopped his oar until the wagon was moved to a place of safety. If the wagon had been so far from the track that the car could have passed it with reasonable safety, or, in other words, so far that an ordinary or slight movement of the horse would- not have thrown it in contact with the car, and, after the front of the car had passed the wagon, the rear of the car collided with it .on account of the negligence of the driver of the wagon or the restlessness of the horse, the instruction offered would have been appropriate. But, when a motorman sees a vehicle so close to the track that it appears to bim doubtful if it can be passed in safety, the company will not be excused because the horse -attached to the vehicle by a slight movement throws the wagon in such a position that the car will strike it. Here *755we have a ease where the motorman had full notice of the dangerous proximity of the wagon to the track, and evidently believed when,- he stopped his car and asked the little boy to move the wagon that it would be dangerous to attempt to pass it. In attempting under these circumstances to pass the wia-gon the motorman assumed the risk of passing it in safety. Having taken the risk and lost, the company must pay the penalty for his negligence. To say that under a state of facts like those proven in this case the company should be absolved from liability would be, .in effect, holding that, however perilous the -situation of the occupant of a vehicle upon a street, the persons in charge of the car may take the chance of not injuring him and be free from liability if the vehicle from a.ny cause be moved a few inches so as to come in contact with the car. This is not the law. When a vehicle is so close to the car track that the slightest movement of the horse attached to it will bring it in contact with the car, and this fact is known or in the exercise of ordinary care should be known to the motomian, the mere fact that a part of the car passes it in safety will not excuse the company if another part of the car strikes it, and causes injury or loss to person or property. When confronted by a situation like this, the motorman should stop his car until the vehicle is moved to a place of safety.

There is no conflict in the view of the law and that expressed in the cases of the Louisville Railway Company v. Meglemery, 78 S. W. 217, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1587; Lexington Railway Company v Woodward, 106 S. W. 853, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 653; Lexington Railway Company v. Van Laden, 107 S. W. 740, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 1047; Louisville Railway Company v. Garr *756(Ky.) 112 S. W. 1130; Goldstein’s Adm’r v. Louisville Railway Company (Ky.) 115 S. W. 194.

In the casés mentioned the court held that the instruction approved not only presented' the railway company's theory of the case, but contained a correct exposition of the law. The instruction offered in this case, while based on facts sufficient to authorize it, and doubtless stating the company’s defense, does not properly present the law of the case as we understand it. An instruction should not only be based on the facts developed by the evidence, but contain a correct statement of the principles of law applicable to the facts. In each of the cases mentioned the exoneration cf ithe company from liability depended upon the fact that the motorman was exercising ordinary c-arc to prevent the accident, and that it was caused by the negligence of the injured party. Here the motorman was not exercising ordinary care, nor was there any fault upon the part of the injured boy. indeed, we might well say under all the circumstances that the accident was due to- the inexcusable negligence of the motorman.

"Wherefore the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.