Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. v. Wheeling, Parkersburg & Cincinnati Transportation Co.

32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 116
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 116 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. v. Wheeling, Parkersburg & Cincinnati Transportation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. v. Wheeling, Parkersburg & Cincinnati Transportation Co., 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 116 (Ohio 1877).

Opinion

Wright, J.

The point first to be considered is the jurisdiction of the court. The B. & O. R. R. Co., defendant below, is a foreign corporation. The code provides (section 68), that when the defendant is a foreign corporation, having a managing agent in the state, service may be had upon such agent.

We agree with the view taken by counsel for defendant in error, that the tendency of legislation and the policy of the law is to facilitate the obtaining of service upon foreign corporations. Their business brings them in such close connection with the people of our state, that it is desirable they should be made amenable to our laws as far as practicable, instead of having our citizens to seek other jurisdictions in which to enforce their rights. The amendment in 1868, made to § 66 (S. & S. 542), shows this to have been the purpose of the legislature. This amendment affords additional facilities for suing domestic corporations and such foreign ones as are therein described.

The court below found that Heckert was a managing agent, and we can not say that it is proper to disturb that finding upon the evidence, and the case of American Express Co. v. Johnson, 17 Ohio, 641, leaves little to be said upon the law relating to this question.

There was therefore no error in overruling the motion to quash and set aside the service.

[136]*136Coming now to the general merits of the case, it is alleged in the petition, that the Bridge Co. or the B. & 0. R. R. Co. were chargeable with negligence in not having lights or signals or a watch upon the barge. Indeed this omission seems to be the only ground upon which the right of recovery is rested.

The court indicated pretty clearly its opinion to be that it was the duty of the Bridge Co. to keep such lights or signals. A charge was asked by defendant below to the effect that under the law authorizing the building of the bridge, the company was allowed to obstruct navigation so far as was reasonably necessary in the prosecution of the work, if they left sufficient waterways, plainly designated, for steamboats. To this request, the court appended a qualification, stating that such obstructions were allowable in a navigable part of the river, provided they were lighted so as to give warning of their presence. And in the proviso to the 7th charge, the court indicates htat the barge should havé been lighted.

We do not, however, deem it absolutely clear that the barge was bound to keep -a light. Without going into elaborate quotations from the authorities, we think the law may be held to be, that where a vessel is anchored at night, right in the usual pathway of other vessels passing and repassing, a light is necessary as an act of prudence; but when anchored out of this usual pathway, a light is not absolutely necessary, apart from harbor regulations. A vessel coming into port is bound to keep in the proper and usual track of navigation, and if, straying therefrom, she should run down another, it would not be sufficient excuse for her to say that the vessel she thus sank displayed no light.

These rules will be found established by an' examination of the following authorities: Culbertson v. Shaw, 18 How. 584; The Bridgeport, 14 Wall. 116; Ure v. Coffman, 19 How, 56; Blue Wing v. Buckner, 12 B. Mon. 246; The Granite State, 3 Wall. 310; Owen Wallis’ L. R. 4 Adm. Ex. 175; Simpson v. Hunt, 6 Whart. 324.

[137]*137In The Scioto, Davies 368, Ware, J. says “that a vessel lying in the channel, where vessels are often passing and repassing, ought, in common prudence, to show a light during the night time, though when out of the channel it may not be required.” And the English rule is that vessels anchored in the channel should he protected by lights. The Industrie, L. R. 3 Adm. and Eccl. 308; Saxonia, Lush. 410.

These rules and these authorities, however, apply more particularly to cases of simple collision between vessels, where their own acts aloné are considered. But in this case a consideration is involved, not existing in ordinary collisions, and that is the fact of the bridge and the rights arising under its authorized construction. Had there been no bridge there, and no construction of it begun, and had this barge been simply anchored out in the river, without lights, and in a place where it is usual for boats to run, it would doubtless be more difficult for her to defend herself from the imputation of neglect than it is under the circumstances being considered.

The construction of this bridge was authorized by act of Congress. Such things as were reasonably necessary to be done, in the progress of that construction, were lawful. Doubtless the Ohio river is a navigable stream, as the court held in 13 Howard; but it is also without doubt, that the bridge, being a structure authorized by law, it was but the exercise of a right to obstruct navigation, in so far as its erection occasioned a necessity therefor. This barge therefore might properly be used, and one of its prerogatives was, to interfere with the movements of other vessels, if its work could not be done without. It is hardly a correct use of language to speak of the barge as a nuisance, even moored where she was and without a light. She had a right to be moored, if in the prosecution of her work it was necessary, or even convenient, and the absence of a light did not make her a nuisance until it is shown that it was incumbent upon her to maintain one. The case is very different from that of Porter v. Allen, 8 Ind. 1. In that case a log endangered defendant’s property, and he [138]*138towed it to another part of the river and there left it, and a steamboat struck it and sunk. The log, indeed, was not left in the channel, but defendant was acting as a trespasser in doing what he did; for the court holds that he had no light to leave the log where boats could and did go. But the barge certainly bad a right to be in the river, and to be just where she was.

As has been remarked, it can not be said she was a nuisance where she was, at least, until it is shown that she was bound to display a light. If this be first satisfactorily ascertained, and this omission of duty solely occasioned the disaster, then there is a negligence for which defendant would be responsible. But in determining whether the absence of a light is such negligence, it should be inquired whether a person of ordinary prudence would consider a light necessary, then and there, to warn steamboats oft'. It was a place, it is true, where steamboats could go, so far as depth of water is concerned. But sufficient water is not the only thing necessary to successful steam-boating; circumstances of safety are also required. The ordinary channel was a long distance off — between piers 3 and 4. Boats rarely, if ever, came between piers 2 and 3 and this fact would be taken into account by a man of prudence, iu making up his judgment, as to the necessity of a light on the barge. He might well reason, that as boats never come in this vicinity, a light is simply useless. A light is to no purpose on a pathway that is never traveled.

The question of negligence is to be determined by the consideration, whether or not a party has guarded against those things which he might reasonably have cause to anticipate. Blackburn, J., in Smith v. Leuchie & S. W. R. R., L. R., 6 C. P. 14.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-co-v-wheeling-parkersburg-cincinnati-ohio-1877.