Affirming.
From a judgment in favor of the appellee in the sum of $22,895.25, subject to a credit of $7,895.25, for personal injuries received by him while working as a brakeman on a freight train which appellee claimed the appellant was then operating, the latter brings this appeal.
The appellee, for a number of years prior to the accident of which he complains, was an extra brakeman and extra fireman in the employ of the Frankfort Cincinnati *Page 563 Railroad Company, which we shall hereafter refer to in this opinion as the F. C. The F. C. extended from Frankfort, Ky., through Georgetown, Ky., to Paris, Ky. On August 26, 1921, the appellee was working as a brakeman on a freight train bound from Frankfort to Paris. The F. C. possessed but one engine, and this engine was required to do all of the work which this railroad had to do, not only that of pulling its freight and passenger trains between termini, but also that of what little switching the road had to do. It is conceded that in the train which left Frankfort for Georgetown there was an interstate shipment, for which reason the appellee, while acting as brakeman at least on that train, was engaged in interstate commerce. When the train reached Georgetown, it stopped, and the engine was uncoupled.
What next happened is in dispute. The appellant claims that out of the train which came from Frankfort to Georgetown two empty box cars were removed, and then coupled to an empty box car which was standing at the Georgetown station. These three empty box cars were then pushed by the engine over to the Southern Railroad junction, about one-half mile away, for the purpose of delivery to the Southern Railroad. Appellant rests this claim on a conductor's report, which was filed by it over appellee's objection on the trial of this action, and which purported to cover the movement of this train from Frankfort to Paris. On this report there appears as moving in the train which left Frankfort box car "So. Ry. 16015." The appellant's conductor testified that he was on the cut of cars being pushed over to the Southern Railroad when the accident happened and was riding "on the third car from the end, which was Southern 16015."
From this appellant argues that it established that the three empty box cars being moved to the Southern depot comprised one of the cars that had moved from Frankfort to Georgetown, and, as this part of the trip was undoubtedly interstate, the character of the trip was therefore not changed by the movement from the Georgetown station to the Southern depot. On the other hand, the appellee, when put upon the stand in rebuttal, testified that these three empty box cars were picked up at Georgetown and pushed over to the Southern depot. There was earlier testimony to the effect that, when this *Page 564 train reached Georgetown from Frankfort, the crew first set out the loaded freight car containing the interstate shipment referred to, then cut the engine off from the train and coupled it up "to these three cars (the empty box cars in question) ahead of us, and then pushed them toward the Southern depot."
Thus we see the proof as to where these three cars came from was in conflict. If the jury believed the appellant's proof, then it was bound to find that this was an interstate movement. But, if it accepted the appellee's proof, then, as these three empty box cars comprised no part of the train bound from Frankfort to Georgetown or Paris, and as their sole movement was from the Georgetown station to the Southern junction, entirely intrastate, and as it was not necessary that these cars be moved in order that the Frankfort to Paris train could proceed on its way, and as the F. C., having but one engine, had to use it to move these three box cars, not for the purpose of expediting in any way the original journey on which this engine had started nor as any part of that journey, but only to perform a switching service in no wise connected with that journey, the jury was authorized to find, as it did, that appellee was engaged at the time of his accident in intrastate commerce. The court by instruction A peremptorily told the jury that, if the appellee was at the time of his injury engaged in interstate commerce, as defined in that instruction, then it should find for the appellant; but, if appellee was not so engaged in interstate commerce, then it should be governed in its decision by the other instructions given in the case.
No complaint is made that this instruction A, at least as far as it went, improperly defined interstate commerce. If the appellant under our practice desired any more ample definition of interstate commerce, it should have offered one, and this it did not do. Having failed to do so, it may not now complain of the lack of a more ample definition. Hatfield v. Payne, Agent,
Now, while the engine was pushing these three empty box cars from the Georgetown station to the Southern junction, the train collided at Penn's crossing with an automobile. The evidence shows practically without contradiction that this public crossing was a very dangerous one, for which reason the F. C. had erected a crossing bell there. This bell was out of order at the time of the accident and had been so for a couple of weeks. The collision was undoubtedly caused because of the failure of this crossing bell to ring and so warn the oncoming automobile of the approach of the train. As a result of this collision the box cars were derailed, throwing the appellee, who was riding on the top of one of them, into an adjacent field, breaking his leg. He was confined in the hospital from the 26th of August, 1921, to the 19th day of the following November, when he was allowed to go home, but he had to return to the hospital on the 15th day of December, and was not discharged until the 22d day of the following January. During this time he suffered very great pain, and underwent five operations in the effort to save his leg, but to no avail. The leg finally had to be amputated five and one-half inches from the center of the knee cap.
After the appellee was hurt, the F. C. kept him on the pay roll, and continued to pay him his salary just as though he was working for it. It also paid his hospital bills. Under just what circumstances these payments were made is in dispute, and we will refer to this matter later on in this opinion. These payments amounted to the sum of $7,895.25, which is the credit given on the verdict as hereinbefore mentioned. In October, 1925, the *Page 566 F. C. went into the hands of a receiver, whereupon the appellee brought this suit against both the F. C. and the appellant, Louisville Nashville Railroad Company, to recover for the injuries he had received. The appellant was made a party to this suit on the theory that in fact and in truth it was operating the railroad between Frankfort and Georgetown at the time appellee was injured under the alleged fiction of the F. C. corporate entity. We are therefore met at the outset of this case with the question whether or not the appellant is responsible for the appellee's injuries, conceding for the nonce that the F. C. would be so. This question necessitates a more elaborate statement of the facts than has so far been given. Many years ago the people of Franklin, Scott, and Bourbon counties, desirous of obtaining freight and passenger competition for the benefit of their communities, built the F. C. It was financed largely through a bond issue. The capital stock of the F. C. road consisted of 1,600 shares, of the par value of $25 per share. The road at first was successfully operated. The appellant, operating a line from Frankfort through Lexington to Paris, was a competitor. In 1901, Chas. E. Lewis, representing the appellant, bought in the entire capital stock of the F. C., and finally transferred this stock to the appellant, which remained the undisclosed owner of it until the year 1909. About this time the appellant caused the F. C. to execute to it a deed embracing all of its property, including its rolling stock and terminals. The deed covering this property was duly placed to record, and the board of directors of the F. C. elected by the appellant installed as officers of the F. C. the same officers as those of the appellant. A suit was then brought by the Attorney General of the state to compel the appellant to give up the ownership of the F. C. on the ground that under our Constitution it had no right to own a parallel and competing line.
This case finally found its way to this court, which held that the appellant could not own, control, or operate the F.
C., and ordered the appellant to dispose of it. Commonwealth v. L. N. R. Co.,
Mr. Hoge, to whom the 801 shares were transferred, was an excellent business man of Frankfort. In selling him the stock, the L. N. guaranteed that the dividends to be paid on the stock would equal the interest on Mr. Hoge's notes. At that time all people knew that the stock was worthless, and the F. C. was not earning even the interest on its bonded debt. Mr. Hoge was never compelled to pay any interest or any principal of the debt, and on his death, at the request of his son, Mr. French Hoge, the appellant released its claim against the Hoge *Page 568 estate on the Hoge notes, and substituted Mr. French Hoge in place of the deceased. Still later, when Mr. French Hoge desired to be relieved of this liability, if such it can be called, the appellant substituted Mr. Harrison Hunter of Louisville, Ky., who bought this stock of a bankrupt road for the consideration mentioned without any investigation whatever. The evidence leaves no room for doubt but that the so-called sales of the 801 shares to the Messrs. Hoge and Hunter were but a pretense and a sham, and that in fact and in truth the appellant was at all times the owner of this stock. Throughout the period from 1912, until this road went into the hands of a receiver in 1925, the evidence overwhelmingly establishes that in truth it was the appellant which was operating this road under the corporate fiction of the F. C. name. The president and general manager of the F. C., Mr. Manning, was made such at the instance of the appellant. As such he took no action involving any matter of policy without first consulting the officers of the appellant. Practically all of the office supplies of the F. C. were furnished by the appellant. Mr. Manning reported monthly to the appellant the conditions on his road. When any new rolling stock was needed, requisition was made on the appellant, and the latter furnished it. The rules governing the operation of the trains were furnished by the appellant. When money was needed to pay operating expenses, Mr. Manning withheld without objection the freights ostensibly due from the F. C. to the appellant. Coal was furnished the F. C. by the appellant without being weighed. When the accident out of which this suit arose occurred, it was the appellant's claim agents and investigators who were sent to look into the matter. Finally, just prior to the receivership suit, the appellant caused Mr. Manning to make application to the Interstate Commerce Commission for permission to abandon the road. If there ever was a case of the hands of Esau and the voice of Jacob, this was one. The appellant insists that the mere ownership of all of the capital stock of one corporation by another does not render the latter corporation responsible for the liabilities or acts of the owned corporation. Whether that proposition of law be true or not, it certainly has no application to the facts of this case. This question of whether the appellant was the real party in interest was submitted to the jury under appropriate instructions, *Page 569 and the evidence leaves no doubt whatever that its finding that the operation of the F. C. under the fiction of its corporate entity was but a sham and pretense on the part of the appellant to avoid and to get around the judgment of this court in the case we have above referred to is correct. The appellant was in truth and in fact operating the F. C. as much as it was operating its road from Frankfort through Lexington to Paris. Courts do not hesitate to ignore the corporate fiction and to draw aside the veil of corporate entity where necessary to reach justice and prevent fraud.
In State v. Standard Oil Co.,
"So long as a proper use is made of the fiction, that a corporation is an entity apart from its shareholders, it is harmless, and, because convenient, should not be called in question; but where it is urged to an end subversive of its policy, or such is the issue, the fiction must be ignored, and the question determined, whether the act in question, though done by shareholders — that is to say, by the persons united in one body, was done simply as individuals and with respect to their individual interests as shareholders, or was done ostensibly as such, but, as a matter of fact, to control the corporation and affect the transaction of its business, in the same manner as if the act had been clothed with all the formalities of a corporate act. This must be so, because the stockholders having a dual capacity, and capable of acting in either, and a possible interest to conceal their character when acting in their corporate capacity, the absence of the formal evidence of the character of the act, cannot preclude judicial inquiry on the subject. If it were otherwise then, in one department of the law, fraud would enjoy an immunity awarded to it in no other."
In Thompson on Corporations (3d Ed.), sec. 10, it is said:
"The courts will certainly refuse to recognize the doctrine of separate entity where its recognition would operate as a shield for fraudulent or criminal acts, or be subversive of the policy of the state. Courts of equity will look through forms to the substance *Page 570 of things and ignore the fiction to preserve the rights of innocent parties. This may be done in cases where one corporation is owned or controlled by another corporation. But it would seem that the separate identity will be respected unless the holding or controlling company is a mere sham."
In the case of U.S. v. Lehigh Valley R. Co.,
In Commonwealth v. Southern Ry. Co.,
"In the light of the foregoing authorities, and many others which could be cited, and looking at the proposition from a logical and common-sense standpoint, we cannot escape the conclusion that in each of the years involved defendant Southern Railway Company was the owner of and actually operated the lines of the 'Southern Railway Company in Kentucky,' not in its name, but in that of the latter company, which latter fact was the shadow, but the actual operation was the substance. Defendant could not have more effectually operated these lines if it had done so in its own name. Every act looking to the control and management of them during the times mentioned was set in motion and actually executed by the same brains which conducted the operation of its admittedly owned lines, and the income from the Kentucky operation was sent to and presumably disbursed by the same officer who received and disbursed the income from the Southern Railway system proper. The defendant gave out to its stockholders and announced to the traveling public that it owned the lines of the 'Southern Railway Company in Kentucky,' and to allow it to escape taxation on its just proportion of its intangible property subject to taxation in Kentucky, because of the mere shell or hull in whose name it was operating its Kentucky division would not only be surrendering the substance to the shadow, but would *Page 571 demand of us that we shut our eyes to the facts, and to thus permit one whom the statute was intended to reach to escape taxation through the disguise produced by the figment of the Kentucky corporation, and to thereby enjoy in this commonwealth special privileges not allowed to individuals without contributing its just proportion to the burdens of government. This is a practical age in which we live, and facts are regarded more than fiction, and courts recognize things as they are, and not as they appear when clothed in a disguised garb."
See, also, Southern Railway Co. v. Thomas, 90 S.W. 1043, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 951; Chesapeake Stone Co. v. Holbrook,
The operation of the railroad between Frankfort and Paris under the corporate fiction of the F. C. entity being but a sham to avoid the effect of this court's ouster decision, and the appellant in reality being the operator of the road, it follows from what we have said that it is responsible to the appellee in this case in the same fashion as the F. C. would have been.
This being true, did the appellee here, by resting his case on the failure of the crossing bell to ring, establish any breach of duty owing him by the appellant? The appellant insists that it was under no duty to maintain a crossing bell for the appellee; that the duty to maintain such a bell was one owing only to the traveling public. The appellant, however, has not analyzed what is the real issue here present. The appellant must concede that it owed as much a duty to its employees on the train not charged with the discharge of such duty to exercise ordinary care to avoid colliding with a traveler on a public crossing, by reason of which the employees might be injured, as it did to the traveler to avoid colliding with him whereby he might be injured. The duty was to avoid the collision. Now in the discharge of that duty it was incumbent on the carrier to exercise ordinary care. Due to the dangerous condition of this crossing, ordinary care required the appellant, in addition to the ordinary statutory signals, to maintain a crossing bell or some other device reasonably calculated to warn the public of the approaching train. The sole purpose of such a device *Page 572
was to avoid a collision. The duty to exercise ordinary care was owed as much to the employee as it was to the public. The measure of this duty was the maintenance of some warning device in addition to the statutory signals that would reasonably tend to prevent collisions. Therefore, when the device maintained became out of order, and remained out of order, the carrier was not exercising ordinary care to avoid a collision, and for such failure the employee had a right to maintain this action. It was so held in the case of Cleveland, C., C. St. L. R. Co. v. Mann,
The case of Randall v. B. O. R. Co.,
The present case is entirely unlike these fencing cases. Here the carrier owed the common-law duty to avoid a collision on a public crossing, which duty it owed to the traveler and its trainmen not concerned with the discharge of that duty. The maintenance of the bell was not imposed by statute, but was a measure of the requirement of the exercise of ordinary care to avoid a collision at this public crossing. This measure was as plainly applicable to the trainmen to whom the duty was owing as it was to the traveler. We are therefore of opinion that there was ample evidence to go to the jury in this case on this question of negligence on the part of the appellant. Conceding this, however, we must then determine whether or not appellee is barred because of the claim of "assumption of risk." He admitted that he knew for two weeks prior to the accident that this crossing bell had been out of order, for which reason appellant argues that he assumed the risk. In answer to this the appellee contends, and we think correctly so, that the appellant may not rely on this plea of assumption of risk because it was not pleaded. The appellant insists, however, that under the case of L. N. R. Co. v. Lewis,
In 39 C. J. 953, it is said:
"This (the plea of assumption of risk must be specially pleaded) is undoubtedly the rule where the risk is an extraordinary one created or enhanced by the master's negligence and which the servant voluntarily assumes by continuing in the employment with actual or constructive knowledge of the defect and danger."
A long list of cases cited support the text. Appellant insists, however, that, although this may be the state rule, it is not the federal rule, and that in cases arising under the federal Employers' Liability Act (45 U.S.C.A. secs 51-59; U.S. Comp. St. secs, 8657-8665) assumption of risk of whatever character may be relied upon. although not pleaded. We need not inquire whether such is the federal rule or not, since, as we have seen, the jury found that the appellee, at the time he was injured, was engaged in moving the three empty box cars from the Georgetown station to the Southern depot, and this was an intrastate movement. Under the jury's finding, the cars thus moved were not a part of the train which started out from Frankfort to Georgetown. The movement of these cars was not connected with, and had nothing to do with, the promotion of the movement of the train from Frankfort to Paris. The engine on the Frankfort to Paris train was simply detached from that train, and used to move these cars because there was no other engine on this road to do that work. These cars moved only one-half mile, and entirely within the state of Kentucky. It therefore follows that the cases of Youngstown Ohio R. Co. v. Halverstodt (C.C.A.)
Whether or not appellant is correct in this contention, or whether or not such a contention could be successfully refuted by a plea of estoppel, such as was here presented, we need not inquire, because, as stated, we are of the opinion that the appellee was engaged in intrastate commerce at the time of his accident. On this idea, appellee, in answer to the appellant's plea of limitations, replied that the appellant had through the F. C. promised him first after his accident that, if he would not immediately sue, it would pay his hospital and doctor's bills, keep him on the payroll, and would later on settle his claim; that it continued to make such promises from time to time and up to when the F. C. went into the hands of the receiver, and that appellee, in reliance on these promises, had not brought suit. This estoppel pleaded by the appellee if sustained by the proof, was a complete answer to the plea of limitations. Chesapeake Northern R. Co. v. Speakman,
Appellant makes a great many complaints of the instructions. Most of these complaints are grounded on its theory that the appellee was hurt while engaged in interstate commerce. This we have seen is incorrect, and, this being so, such criticisms necessarily fall. Some of its criticisms are directed to the instructions on the idea that there was no evidence to show that the F. C. was in fact and in truth but an alter ego of the appellant. Whether it was so or not was suitably submitted to the jury, and, as we have pointed out in the earlier portion of this opinion, the evidence overwhelmingly sustains that finding.
Appellant also complains of instruction No. 2 because the court said that it was the duty of the carrier to maintain at Penn's crossing an electric crossing bell in good condition and repair, "or to use such other means as ordinary care might require to prevent vehicles and trains from colliding on the crossing." Conceding, without deciding, that the appellant is correct in claiming that under the pleadings in this case, which relied only on the failure of the appellant to maintain the crossing bell in good repair as constituting negligence, the trial court should not have used the expression "or used such other means as ordinary care might require to prevent vehicles and trains from colliding on the crossing," we are yet of the opinion that under the facts of this case the insertion of these words in the instructions was not prejudicial. As we read the record, there was practically no dispute but that the collision on the crossing was occasioned by the failure of this crossing bell to ring, and so warn the driver of the automobile with which this train collided of its approach. It was not denied that the crossing bell was out of order and had been so for over *Page 577 two weeks. It is very hard to see how there was much, if any, issue to submit on the question of how this accident happened, for which reason the complained of expression was plainly not prejudicial.
The instruction on damages is complained of because the court there told the jury that, if it should find at all for the appellee, it should credit any finding by the sum which had been paid him theretofore by the F. C. by way of wages and salary. Appellant insists that this payment was made as a settlement of appellee's claim, whatever it was. However, this point was in dispute. Under instruction No. 1 the appellee could not recover at all, unless the payments made were only paid by the way of credit. If they were not so paid by way of credit, appellee under this instruction had no cause of action. Instruction No. 4 therefore, when read in the light of instruction No. 1, is not subject to the criticism which appellant now makes. Other minor criticisms are made of the instructions, but they are without merit.
Appellant lastly contends that the verdict is excessive, and says that no verdict for the loss of a leg amounting to $22,895.25 can be found in our reports. Appellant, however, must remember that of this amount $2,059.25 was for the actual expenses of the appellee incident to his injury; $5,756 represents what his pay would have amounted to from the time he was injured until he brought suit. It is shown that he was unable to work during all of that time. Hence this sum really represents compensation for his loss of time. The $15,000 remaining covers the pain and suffering of the appellant, together with the permanent impairment of his power to earn money. It is shown that the appellant underwent five operations before his leg was finally amputated, and that he endured great suffering during that time. The fact that he has been unable to work for so many years, is a good indication of what the future has in store for him. He is less than 30 years of age, and has a long expectancy of life. He was at the time of his accident earning between $125 and $150 a month. Under all of these circumstances we cannot say that $15,000 is an excessive amount for such pain and suffering and such impairment of the power to earn money.
Perceiving no error prejudicial to appellant's substantial rights, the judgment herein is affirmed.
Whole court sitting. *Page 578