Breuer v. Frank

3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 581
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedOctober 7, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 581 (Breuer v. Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breuer v. Frank, 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 581 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinions

[582]*582Plaintiff in error was defendant below. The action was for damages for injuries sustained by falling through an elevator shaft on premises owned by plaintiff in error.

The facts may be briefly stated, as follows: Defendant in error was a traveling salesman employed by a company that was a tenant of Breuer and occupied one of the upper floors in the building where the elevator in question was located. Breuer, the owner of the building, operated and controlled the elevator; on the day of the accident defendant in error came into the hallway of the building; he saw the elevator man sitting on a chair in the hallway; the man got up and followed Frank to the elevator; Frank walked directly to the elevator with the elevator man close behind him; he was so close behind him “he almost came on top of me”: the door of the elevator was “wide open,” and Frank was looking “straight ahead”; Frank stepped forward, expecting to step into the cab, but instead stepped into an open space. The cab, it seems-, was not in its place but had crept up the shaft; the hall wias “semi-dark”; as a result plainiff below was precipitated to the bottom of the -shaft and suffered permanent injuries; the verdict was for nine thousand six hundred -and seventy-five dollars ($9,675), and in due course judgment was rendered upon the verdict.

Error is prosecuted to this court, and it is claimed that the verdict is grossly excessive; that the court erred in its general charge, and in refusing to give certain special charges requested by plaintiff in error.

It is earnestly contended by plaintiff in error, that the court erred in its general charge. At pages 363-4 of the record the court used the following language:

“If the plaintiff was rightfully entitled to the use of the elevator, then the defendant owed to the plaintiff the duty of having the elevator so constructed and -operated as that one could use it with safety, and' if you should find from the testimony the elevator was in good condition at the time of the accident, in good repair, not out of repair; that the conduct of the operator was in all respects what it should have been; 'that there was no negligence anywhere on the part of the defendant or -his employes; that the accident was caused entirely by the want of due [583]*583care on the part of the plaintiff, then, of course, the plaintiff can not recover. ’ ’

Plaintiff in error argues, that if the combined negligence of plaintiff and. defendant caused the accident, there can be no recovery, but that this charge, in effect, instructs the jury that there can be no recovery, if the defendant is free from negligence, unless the injury is caused entirely by the negligence of the plaintiff. We do not think the language used by the court warrants the interpretation of the learned counsel for plaintiff in error. In that part of the charge immediately preceding, the court correctly instructed on contributory negligence, and, without attempting to in any way qualify or limit that which had been previously said on that subject, the court was proceeding to devote attention to such matters, as went to preclude recovery—not that warranted recovery. This is the obviously plain purport of the paragraph objected to, for the court in so many words says, “if the plaintiff * * * then, of course, the plaintiff can not recover.” Instead of being in any way prejudicial to plaintiff in error, quite the reverse was true, for the court stated the law, if anything, too strongly in favor of plaintiff in error as against defendant in error. It will be observed the court said: “If the accident was caused entirely by want of due care on the part of the plaintiff, then, of course, the plaintiff can not recover.” Counsel objected to the use of the word “entirely.”

Suppose, for the sake of argument, that there had been some negligence on plaintiff’s part, as, for instance, where he had been lulled into believing he was in a place of security, when in fact he was entering a place of danger left open by defendant, or where the plaintiff’s negligence is not the proximate or direct cause of the accident—in such event plaintiff would still have been entitled to recover, and the court in the part of the.charge now criticised as being prejudicial to plaintiff in error, said that “if the accident was caused entirely by want of due care on plaintiff’s part, then, of course, plaintiff can not recover.” Could the jury have been misled to plaintiff in error’s prejudice? The construction for which counsel contends is not only not war[584]*584ranted by the plain language of the charge, but is not possible at all, unless the charge is read in connection with the word “unless,” which counsel ao-guendo interpolates. If the court were to adopt the construction contended for instead of harmonizing the charge as- becomes its duty, it would.find in this construction a flat contradiction of that which precedes. It is scarcely possible that the court intended to contradict that which it had previously clearly expressed, or that, in view of that which it had said before, in plain unmistakable language, the jury could have misunderstood. "We construe the charge objected to as though the court instructed the jury that the plaintiff could not recover if there was no negligence on the part of the defendant or his employes, or if -the accident was caused entirely by want of due care on the part of the plaintiff. It was not instructing the jury, as plaintiff in error claims, that the plaintiff can recover even though the accident was caused by the combined negligence of plaintiff and defendant, for if there was no negligence anywhere on the part of the defendant, there could be no combined negligence. In addition to which the court had -already pointed out the following: “If upon the full evidence of the case it appears that the injury was caused directly by want of ordinary care by both parties, there can be no recovery, for the law can not apportion between them.” By no implication, unless it be a violent one, aided by the interpolation of words not used by the court, can the charge be interpreted into a condition whereby the plaintiff might recover if combined negligence existed. Considering what preceded, it was simply a recital of a certain state, of facts- that would debar plaintiff from a recovery. In Ohio & Indiana Torpedo Co. v. Fishburn, 61 O. S., 608, the court said:

“A charge to a jury is to be construed as a-whole, and if construing the whole charge the law of the case -appears to have been correctly given to the jury, and in a way that will reasonably enable them to understand the rules of law which they are to apply to the evidence before them, the charge will not be held erroneous simply because every condition to -a recovery of a defense is not embraced in each paragraph, and the paragraph excepted to is not in itself calculated to mislead.”

[585]*585In Curry v. Cincinnati, 12 Ohio C. C., 736, Swing, Judge, for the court said:

“The charge should be read -as a whole and the parts bar-, monized if possible. It will not do to fish out a clause here and there in a charge -and give them an independent meaning, when, if taken in connection' with other parts of the charge they would have a different meaning. ’ ’

See also Price v. Cobblitz, 21 C. C., 732; Toledo Railway Co. v. Gilbert, 2 C. C.—N. S., 432; Railway Co. v. Haws,

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breuer-v-frank-ohsuperctcinci-1905.