Bilikan v. Columbus Railway & Light Co.

10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561

This text of 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561 (Bilikan v. Columbus Railway & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bilikan v. Columbus Railway & Light Co., 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

A question is presented by a motion to separately state and number the alleged causes of action. It has received earnest and serious consideration by learned courts, concerning which there is sharp conflict of opinion. It is simple and unimportant so far as the consequences of this case are concerned. But its importance as a rule of practice in any jurisdiction is. so serious that it prompted a most careful examination and has been given the best deliberation which I have been able to bestow upon it. I have been impressed with the historical value of the old distinction concerning the formal common law actions as throwing light upon the principles and rules under the code. We still think and act in the spirit of the formalisms of the old system,, which is the vehicle of expression of our thoughts concerning rights and causes of action.

This action is brought by plaintiff to recover damages for personal injury suffered by being run into by defendant’s ear, as well as for damages done to his horse and his buggy in which he was riding. The total damage claimed is $1,200.

The act of defendant complained of is the single act of running its car into plaintiff’s vehicle without any warning or notice to him of the approach thereof, plaintiff being within plain view thereof.

' It is .urged in support of the motion that because a right of property, and a right of security of person 'has been damaged or injured, there are, therefore, two causes of action.

While the history of the common law shows that the distinction between torts.to the person and torts to property has always obtained, it is remarkable that no definite conclusion upon the question as applied to the facts presented by the motion can be found in English law earlier than Brunsden v. Humphrey, 142 B. D., 141 (1884). Chief Justice Coleridge dissented from the [563]*563decision in that case, and the decision of the court below was' placed upon the same ground as was the dissenting opinion. Lord Justice Bowen delivering the opinion of the court said:

“I feel great doubt and hesitation in differing from the judgment of the court below and from the great authority of the present Chief Justice of England.”

It is with much hestitation that the court now announces a rule at variance with that announced by a brother member of this court in a case where the precise question was involved, Stillman v. Columbus Railway & Light Company. But the judge delivering the opinion in that case with his customary princely manners has graciously consented to the rendition of this opinion at variance with his decision.

Brunsden v. Humphrey, 142 B. D., 141, and Reilly v. Paving Company, 170 N. Y., 40, both exhaustive and learned opinions, are the leading exponents of the rule that there are two causes of action upon the facts such as are involved in this transaction.

Opposed to the doctrine of those cases are the decisions in Doran v. Cohen, 147 Mass., 343, King v. Railway, 80 Minn., 83, Braithwaite v. Hall, 168 Mass., 38, supported by the learned jurist, Mr. Justice Holmes, which stand as leading cases.

The parmount legal principle decisive of this controversy is to be discovered in the true conception of the cause of action.

In the conception of what constitutes a cause of action courts have followed Mr. Pomeroy, eoneededly one of the most learned of American writers. His view of a cause of action, “the primary right and duty and the delict combined constitute the cause of action” (Pom. Con. Rem., Sec. 413), has been father to the thoughts of a majority of courts and writers upon the subject. It was of Judge Phillips and of others, mention of whose names modesty forbids.

At Section 347 (453) of his Remedies, Mr. Pomeroy gives the following definition:

“The cause of action, as it appears in the complaint when properly pleaded, will always be the facts from which the plaintiff’s primary right and the defendant’s corresponding duty have arisen, together uMh the fads which constitu,te the defendant’s delict or act of wrong.”

[564]*564As a lecturer for sixteen years on the subject, this author has been the idol and master of -the writer of this opinion.' I am impressed with the darkness on the way between theory and practice, which .disappears in the concreteness of procedure. A definition of a cause of action has a dual aspect, one concerning substantive law, and another in relation to adjective law. It has a meaning in law apart from the facts stated in the pleading. It may be defined so as to comprehend the whole legal conception of it, as well as to furnish a guide as a rule of pleading and a means of solving the -troublesome question so often arising touching the question whether -one or more causes are stated or involved in a statement.

The definition of Mr. Pomeroy correctly gives the comprehensive legal conception of a cause of action as it exists'in the mind of •the judge when he look-s at the facts stated in the pleading disclosing the delict, as well as of the law which is not there stated, and which determines whether a cause is stated, and how many.

There must be a practical definition of the cause as a pure rule of pleading by means of which a decision may be made whether a single cause is stated or whether more than one cause is stated.

The test prescribed by Mr. Pomeroy and by some courts, that a cause of action arises for each violation of a primary right, i. e., the right of the person, and of property, is the source of the difficulty lying at the basis -of the controversy about the pending question.

If all could unite upon the definition by Judge Bliss, that “the cause of action must necessarily be the wrong which is committed or threatened” (Bliss Pl., 151), there would be no difficulty whatever in solving this or any kindred problem. A proper conception of a cause of action is exclusively adjective. When -a wrong is done in violation of some right or duty a right accrues to the injured to resort to the adjective law'for-redress. This right is attended by certain consequences peculiarly within the province of that branch of law, with which substantive law has no concern, so far as relates to the statement in the pleading. Among -them is the question now before the court, others not being mentioned for economical reasons.

[565]*565If the test of the wrong complained of be adopted for determining the cause, instead of that of the right infringed, all difficulty and confusion vanishes. The necessity of adopting the former is imperative, because of the demands .of adjective law. The latter forbids the statement in the pleading of the substantive law as the legal right, or duty, permitting only a statement of the facts disclosing the wrong complained of.

The analysis of the gist of an action for negligence .adopted by the court in Brunsden v. Humphrey, supra, being the harm to person or property negligently perpetrated, does not appear to rest upon sound principle. The court in declining to discuss 1 ‘ the refinements of scholastic jurisprudence and the various uses that have been made * * * of the terms “injuria” and “damnum” ignores the well settled .conception of those terms by concluding as it does that the cause is the actual damage to person or property.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilikan-v-columbus-railway-light-co-ohctcomplfrankl-1910.