Burnside v. Cincinnati Street Railway Co.

114 N.E.2d 848, 94 Ohio App. 240, 51 Ohio Op. 398, 1953 Ohio App. LEXIS 752
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 13, 1953
Docket7703
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 114 N.E.2d 848 (Burnside v. Cincinnati Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnside v. Cincinnati Street Railway Co., 114 N.E.2d 848, 94 Ohio App. 240, 51 Ohio Op. 398, 1953 Ohio App. LEXIS 752 (Ohio Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Matthews, P. J.

This is an appeal on questions of law, resulting from a mistrial. After a hearing lasting for six days issues of fact were submitted to the jury which, after deliberation, reported its inability to agree and was discharged. Upon conclusion of the evidence the defendant had moved the court to arrest the case from the jury and for an instructed verdict which had been overruled. Immediately after the jury *241 ' was discharged the defendant moved for judgment in its favor. This motion was overruled also. This appeal is from those orders.

Originally, the city of Lockland was joined as a codefendant. Before filing his third amended petition, the plaintiff dismissed the city of Lockland from the action without prejudice and the case proceeded to trial against the defendant, The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, on the plaintiff’s third amended petition and the defendant’s answer thereto.

In this action, the plaintiff seeks to recover damages on account of serious personal injuries received by him in a collision between his automobile and defendant’s streetcar while he was operating his automobile eastwardly and the defendant was operating its streetcar westwardly on Wyoming avenue in the city of Lockland, a short distance west of its intersection by Cooper avenue. The collision was between the left front corner of the streetcar and the left front corner and left side of the automobile. The plaintiff alleged that The Cincinnati Street Railway Company was a common carrier of passengers and that it operated streetcars over tracks in the exact center of Wyoming avenue.

This collision occurred on the night of April 20,1947, during a hard rain and when visibility was low. The headlights of both vehicles were illumined, but the rays did not extend very far. As the plaintiff approached the point of collision, his automobile was astride the south rail of the streetcar track, which rail he alleged was south of the center of Wyoming avenue and that his automobile was south of that center, thereby placing it on his right side of the street.

In his petition, the plaintiff alleged that the streetcar rails and the surface of Wyoming avenue at the area in question had been constructed by the city and street railway company jointly; that in doing so they *242 used bricks in resurfacing the street; and that in laying them had made the surface of the street about two inches higher than the top of the rails, thereby leaving a trough or rut along both rails, the south trough being about two and one-half feet south of the center of the street. The plaintiff alleged also that for a long time prior to and on April 20, 1947, the bricks along the rails had become loosened or displaced, causing holes of a depth greater than the depth of the troughs. The plaintiff charged that the construction of the rails and surface of the street in this way was illegal.

The plaintiff alleged also that at about 10:45 p. m. on April 20, 1947, as already mentioned, he was proceeding along Wyoming avenue; that it was raining heavily and the surface of the street was covered with water; that the ruts and holes were filled with water and were not discernible by him; that as he approached he was on the extreme right until he came upon a parked automobile in his path; and that he turned into the last lane of travel just south of the center of the street and continued around a curve in the street when he observed defendant’s streetcar approaching toward him, the left wheels of which were on the rail of which his automobile was astride.

The plaintiff alleged also that upon seeing the streetcar he attempted to swerve his automobile to the right to avoid a collision, but that the left wheels of his automobile caught in the trough or rut whereby it was thrown into a sldd and swung broadside against the front of the streetcar.

The charges of negligence against The Cincinnati Street Railway Company were that it failed to keep Wyoming avenue open, in repair, and free from nuisance, in that it resurfaced the street in such a way as to raise the glazed-brick surface above the car rails, thereby placing the rails in a deep narrow trough, when it knew, or should have known that the wheels of *243 an automobile would drop into the trough making it difficult for the operator to extricate the wheels without skidding when the street was wet; in failing to repair the holes adjoining the rails; in installing the rails without lawful authority; in maintaining them in the center of the street without posting warnings to indicate the condition of the street; and, finally, in creating an absolute nuisance by thus placing the rails in a public street.

Both defendants filed motions to strike and to make definite, which were sustained, resulting in the filing of an amended petition and a first amended petition. Upon the filing of a second amended petition, the defendants demurred. The demurrers were overruled, whereupon they filed separate answers. Upon dismissal of the city of Lock! and, a third amended petition was filed, to which the defendant, The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, filed an answer, and it was upon these pleadings that the ease went to trial. The charges of negligence remained substantially the same in all of plaintiff’s pleadings. The principal difference between the petition and the third amended petition is that the third amended petition sets forth the terms of the agreement between the city of Lockland and The Cincinnati Street Railway Company, whereby the latter became bound to keep the street within the rails and for a distance of 18 inches outside the rails in good repair, and allegations showing that the rails were allowed to sink by reason of the rotting of the wooden ties upon which they rested.

The allegations that the track was in the exact center of Wyoming avenue, and that the south rail was ‘ ‘ about ’ ’ two and one-half feet south of the center of the street were repeated in the plaintiff’s petition and amended petitions.

In broad outline, there was very little dispute developed at the trial and the plaintiff was clearly en *244 titled to have the issues submitted to the jury unless his own testimony showed that he was negligent as a matter of law in operating his automobile on the left side of the street and that such negligence caused or contributed directly to cause the collision. The defendant asserts that the plaintiff repeatedly by pleadings, by deposition taken before the trial, and by his testimony at the trial asserted or admitted that he was operating his automobile before and at the time of the collision to the left of the center of Wyoming avenue, in violation of Section 6307-25, General Code. This contention requires an analysis of the pleadings, the deposition, and the plaintiff’s testimony to determine their true construction and legal effect.

(1) Let us consider the pleadings. It is true that the plaintiff repeatedly alleged that the tracks were in the exact center of Wyoming avenue at the point of collision. Webster defines track, in this connection, as parallel lines of rails with the fastenings, ties, etc., for a railway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 N.E.2d 848, 94 Ohio App. 240, 51 Ohio Op. 398, 1953 Ohio App. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnside-v-cincinnati-street-railway-co-ohioctapp-1953.