Court Opinion

ID: 7136012
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:24:00.454825+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:37.633709
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Judge Settle
Reversing.
Appellee, R. E. Goddard, a trader in saddle and harness horses, together with two other stockmen, James and MeGarvey, desiring to ship by rail, for exhibition at the State Fair in the city of Owensboro, a number of high grade horses, procured of appellant, Southern Railway Company in Kentucky, a palace stock car for that purpose. The car was left by appellant on a side track in its depot yard, at Harrods-. burg, and at its stock pen and chute provided for loading stock on its cars. Under the stock chute, and on appellant’s right of way, is a ditch, about eight feet in width and five in depth, which extends east of the chute 100 feet. On the south side of the ditch, and about three and one-half feet from the track on which the stock car was standing, is a perpendicular stone wall, from five to six feet in height, erected by appellant to protect the roadbed bordering on the ditch from landslides; the top of this stone wall being on a level with the roadbed. In addition to the horses to be shipped by appellee, James and MeGarvey to Owensboro, they had harness, sulkies and other paraphernalia, to be carried on the same car. After loading the horses appellee discovered that there was not room in the car for one of his sulkies. For the purpose of ascertaining whether there was room for it on the platform at the end of the car, he went from the stock chute to inspect the platform of the car. This he did by climbing over the railing of the chute *572and going down a short flight of steps, attached to the side of the chnte and connecting with the roadbed below, on the south side of the ditch, by the side of the car containing the horses. Upon reaching the ground appellee walked to the platform of the car, and, finding no room there for the sulky, went on around the car to see if its south door was securely fastened, and in attempting to return by the same route to the steps at the stock chute he fell into the ditch, thereby receiving a deep cut in the head and fracture of the bones of one shoulder; the fracture causing the use of the shoulder and arm to become permanently impaired. Appellee’s injuries were received September 17, 1903, at night; it being quite dark and raining at the time. For the injuries thus sustained he sued appellant in the lower court and recovered a verdict and judgment for $5,200 in damages. It appears' from the allegations of the petition that appellee’s claim to damages rests upon the theory that he had not, before the accident, been upon appellee’s premises; that the existence of the ditch and the danger from walking near it in the dark were unknown to him, and could not, by reasonable diligence, have been discovered by him before he fell into same; and that his injuries were caused by the negligence of appellant in failing to provide the south wall of the ditch with a railing or other contrivance to prevent shippers of stock and others having business on its premises from falling therein. The answer of appellant contained a traverse, and averred contributory negligence on the part of appellee, and the latter plea was controverted by reply.
The' appellant did not introduce any evidence, and its counsel insists that that of appellee entitled it to the peremptory instruction asked of the trial court; *573that is, it is argued that the evidence failed to show any negligence on the part of appellant, but did show that appellee’s injuries resulted from his own negligence. This contention is based upon the idea that the ditch had existed for more than twenty years in the condition it presented when appellee was injured, that no other person had fallen in or been injured by it, that there was no necessity for appellee’s leaving the stock chute and going near the ditch at the time he was injured, and that he was negligent in doing so and especially in attempting to walk around the-oar and return to the stock chute without a light. It is also argued for appellant that appellee, in. going upon appellant’s premises where the ear was stand-in, became a trespasser; but we can not accept this-, conclusion. Under the contractural relations existing between appellant and appellee the latter had the right to go upon the former’s'premises to load his horses in the car furnished iiim for that purpose. Indeed, it may be said he was invited to do so as a customer of appellant. It oan not, however, be assumed that, because the chute had been erected for the purpose of loading stock on the cars, it was negligence per se for appellee to approach the car for any other purpose than the loading of the horses by leading-them through the chute into it.
It is conceded that it was the duty of appellee and' his fellow shippers to load their own stock on the car, and that they did so without assistance from any of appellant’s servants. But the loading was not complete until the vehicles and trappings of the shippers-, were also placed in or about the car, the horses haltered in their proper places, the doors of the car securely fastened, and its other openings closed to protect the horses from drafts, or so adjusted as to give-*574them necessary ventilation. All these duties had to he attended to by the shipper before the car started for its destination, and, if any of them could not be performed by appellee without approaching the car on the ground from the outside, he had the right to perform them in that way; and, in the absence of knowledge on his part of the condition of the premises, he also had the right to assume that they were reasonably safe for such use. But in such performance of his duties it was incumbent on him to use ordinary care for 'his own safety. He was not required to anticipate danger, but only to exercise the care that a person of ordinary prudent habits would have exercised under the same circumstances. Upon the other hand, a common carrier, like the appellant, is required to furnish shippers of stock over its road reasonably safe premises for loading same on the cars; and as stock is loaded for shipment at night, as well as by day, if a ditch is maintained on the premises by the carrier, about or near which a shipper, without knowledge of its presence, would have occasion to go in loading his stock on the cars at night, and by reason of the darkness he falls therein and is injured, the carrier should, we think, be held liable to him in damages, if guilty of negligence in failing to guard the ditch with a barrier or provide signal lights to prevent persons from falling therein.
As before stated, appellee was not upon appellant’s premises as a trespasser or licensee, but by invitation as a customer of appellant. The relation between him and appellant was, therefore, one of mutual advantage and common interest. The distinction between invitation and license is stated in Wharton on Negligence (book 1, sec. 349), as follows: “The principle appéars to be that invitation is inferred where there *575Is a common interest or mutual advantage, while license is inferred where the object is the mere pleasure or benefit of the person using it. ” As to the degree of care required of one who invites another to come upon his premises, Judge Cooley, in his work on Torts (604-607), says: “When one expressly or by invitation invites others to come upon his premises, whether for business or any other purpose, it is his duty to be reasonably sure that he is not inviting them into 'danger, and to that end he must exercise ordinary care and prudence to render the premises reasonably safe for the visit. ’ ’ In Bennett v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 102 U. S., 577, 26 L. Ed., 235, Mr. Justice Harlan reviewed the leading English and American authorities on the question here involved, with the conclusion that they are in thorough accord. From the authorities referred to this rule is announced: “The owner or occupant of land, who, by invitation, express or implied, induces others to come upon his premises for any lawful purpose, is liable in damages to such persons, they using due care, for injuries occasioned by the unsafe condition of the land or its approaches, if such condition was known to him, and not to them, and was negligently suffered to exist without timely notice to the public, or to those who were likely to act upon such invitation.” This court, in the case of Shelby’s Adm’r v. C., N. O. & T. P. R. R. Co., 85 Ky., 224, 8 Ky. Law Rep., 928, 3 S. W., 157, seems to have fully concurred in the doctrine announced by the authorities supra.
In the case at bar appellee had no assistance from appellant’s servants, none of them were about for him to command, and he and his fellow shippers had everything to do in loading the stock and preparing the car “for its journey. Obviously, appellant should *576have furnishel appellee with reasonably safe premises for this purpose; and if the ditch thereon was-, dangerous, because concealed by the darkness and not guarded with a nailing for the protection of persons entitled, as was appellee, to go upon the premises, in the nighttime, it should have notified him of the danger, that he might have 'avoided it. It was averted in the petition, and proved by appellee without contradiction, that he had never been at appellant’s stock pen or on the adjacent premises before, and that he had never seen and did not know of the existence of the ditch. It also conclusively appears from the evidence that appellee received no notice or warning-from appellant of the existence of the ditch, though two of its servants set the car at the chute that night for the use of appellee and his fellow shippers, and left, knowing that the stock, vehicles, etc., would immediately be loaded.
It is contended by counsel for appellant that appellee’s negligence was establishel by the fact that he-went upon the ground and .around the car without a light, though he had a lantern in the car, which he-might have carried with him, and, furthermore, that in leaving the chute to go to the car he was warned by a fellow shipper, McGarvey, of the danger of doing so. We have already said that in going upon the-ground and about the car it was the duty ,of appelleeto use ordinary care for his own safety, and if he failed to do so, and by reason thereof received the injuries complained of, he can not recover, although appellant may have been negligent in failing to provide the ditch with a railing or in failing to warn him of its presence. It is true that there was some testimony that tended to prove appellee guilty of contributory negligence, such as his failing to provide him*577self with a light and the statement of McGarvey that he warned him of the danger. McGarvey called to appellee from the car. His statément was: “I hallooed to him to be careful; that there was a dangerous place down there.” He did not, however, claim to have told appellee of the ditch, or what the danger was. Appellee testified that the lantern could not. be taken from the car, because it was needed to enable James, McGarvey and appellee’s servant, Jenkins, to secure the horses in their places, and store the vehicles and trappings that had to be shipped in. the car, and he flatly denied that he received any warning of danger from McGarvey. James, who-stood between McGarvey and the appellee at the time the former said he gave'the warning, testified that he (James) did not hear the warning. The facts relied on by appellant as showing negligence on the part of' appellee were not so conclusive as to justify a peremptory instruction. ‘“A peremptory instruction is only proper when, after admitting every fact proven by plaintiff’s evidence to be true, as well as all reasonable inferences that can be drawn therefrom, the plaintiff has failed to establish his case.” (Miller v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 89 S. W., 183, 28 Ky. Law Rep., 223.)
As to his conduct on the occasion in controversy, appellee further testified, in substance, that in going-from the chute to the roadbed and along the way between the track and the ditch, as well as in returning, he exercised the greatest care possible, both because of his ignorance of the premises and the darkness of' the night. When he thought he had gotten back to-the steps, he felt for them with his foot. Failing to-find them, he took another step, and fell in the ditch. We think the question of whether he was guilty of *578negligence and whether it contributed to his injuries to such an extent that, but for such negligence, they would not have been received, was properly left to the decision of the jury by the court, as also were the questions of whether the existence of the ditch made the appellant’s premises dangerous at night, and whether appellant was guilty of negligence in failing to guard it with a railing or other contrivance, to prevent injury to appellee and others entitled to go upon the premises.
We do not think it was error for the court to permit the testimony given in rebuttal by appellee and James. They were reintroduced to contradict McGarvey, a witness for appellee, who, on cross-examination, and apparently to appellee’s surprise, had testified that he gave appellee warning of the danger of going to the car fat the time of the accident. As his statement in respect of the warning was brought out by appellant’s counsel, McGarvey as to that matter was its witness. A party, by introducing a witness who gives evidence against him, is not concluded by such evidence. Tie may call other witnesses to prove that the facts are otherwise than as stated. (Civil Code Prac., sec. 596.)
We are, however, of opinion that the lower court erred in instructing the jury that they might allow appellee punitive damages. The evidence found in the record fails to show on the part of appellant, or in the conduct of its servants, any of the elements of wrongdoing that would justify the infliction of punishment in the shape of exemplary damages. It is well settled that the question of whether there is any evidence in a given case to justify the assessment by the jury of exemplary damages is for the determination of the court. (Lexington Ry. Co. v. Fain, 80 S. W., 463, *57925 Ky. Law Rep., 2243; McHenry Coal Co. v. Snedden, 98 Ky., 686, 17 Ky. Law Rep., 1261, 34 S. W., 228; Sedgwick on damages, sec. 387.) Under the facts of this case, the recovery, if any, should have been confined by the court to compensatory damages; that is, such a sum in damages as, according to the evidence, will fairly and reasonably compensate appellee for the mental and physical suffering, if any of either, the necessary and reasonable expense in the way of medical bills he incurred, if any, and for the permanent impairment, if any, of his ability to earn money that may have been caused by, and directly resulted from, the negligence of appellant complained of, the damages, altogether, not to exceed the amount •claimed in the petition. Instruction No. 1, except in the matter of its allowing the finding of-punitive damages, is, we think, substantially correct. It should, however, confine the jury to compensatory damages, defined as above indicated. Instruction No. 2, as to contributory negligence, is unobjectionable. The court should also give an instruction defining negligence and ordinary care.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial and for further proceedings consistent with the opinion.