Burton v. Leiter

20 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41
CourtTrumbull County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41 (Burton v. Leiter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton v. Leiter, 20 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

(sitting at Warren).

'This is an action by plaintiff, an infant seven years old, by next friend, for personal injury.

Plaintiff’s father leased a farm from defendant and was occupying the same with his infant son and his family at the time of injury to plaintiff. The premises were out of repair when leased; that is, the barn doors upon the barn thereon leading into the cow stable were out of repair; the doors were hung on rollers which ran upon tracks, so that they were pushed back and forth upon the rollers when being opened and closed; these rollers were both out of repair prior and subsequent to the time plaintiff’s father took possession. They were broken so that the doors could not be operated upon the tracks. In using them, the doors had to be lifted and placed against the side of the barn in order to open them. In closing them they had to be lifted back into place and supported in position; they could not be otherwise opened or closed.

Prior to making the lease, and to induce the father of plaintiff to take the premises, defendant promised and agreed to place the doors, rollers and track in good repair. Defendant also promised and agreed to make such repairs after the lease was made-. Defendant reserved the right in the lease in writing to enter upon the premises to make the repairs.

Up to the 6th day of May, 1915, defendant had failed, neglected and refused to make the repairs and to put the barn doors in a reasonably safe condition for use; on that date some one attached a rope about the neck of a calf and tied the other end of the rope into a ring fastened to the barn sill. The rope was six or eight feet long. The ring to which the rope was attached was near to one of the doors which had then been [43]*43opened and placed back against the side of the barn, leaning against it.

The calf having gotten its leg entangled in the rope, plaintiff was seeking to free it from its entanglement, and in doing so in some manner the barn door was pulled over, and fell upon the plaintiff. His left leg was broken.

Plaintiff claims that his injuries are wholly due to the carelessness and negligence of defendant in suffering and permitting the nuisance arising from carelessly and negligently failing to put the door in repair and in a reasonably safe condition, and asks damages in the sum of $5,000.

Where property is out of repair and in ruinous condition, and at the time of leasing, as well as after possession taken by the lessee, the lessor promises to repair and injury occurs to a child of the tenant from the failure to repair, the lessor is liable therefor. (Shindelbeck v. Moon, 32 O. S., 264, 267.)

The facts stated in the petition present in novel form the question of proximate and remote cause. Being thus raised on demurrer it devolves upon the court to decide upon the admitted facts whether the proximate cause of injury to the hoy was probably the neglect of defendant’s obligation to repair the barn door, or whether the act of the one who tied the calf to the ring on the barn sill was an intervening cause, which should have been foreseen by the lessor as likely to have occurred in the natural and ordinary course of things; or whether such intervening cause could not have probably been foreseen and hence could not have been considered as a natural and ordinary result 'of the act or omission complained of. In other words, when the premises were leased to plaintiff’s father, in the light of existing circumstances with the barn doors leading to the cow barn out of repair and the natural and probable uses of the barn, should defendant have foreseen that such an intervening cause as a calf being tied to the sill of the barn and becoming entangled in the rope, and while a small boy is undertaking to release the calf the barn doors are in some way pulled down in the melee because of their defective condition, thus injuring the boy?

[44]*44Judicial expression concerning the relative function of judge and jury is not always clear and explicit.

'There is a sort of halo about the common type of statement that the question of negligence or of proximate cause is under the circumstances one for the jury. In the present age of judicial progressive enlightenment and regard for the rights of persons, the predominant thought seems to be that the final conjecture or guess is within the province of the jury rather than of the judge.

The rule that where the facts are undisputed, and there can be but one rational, sensible conclusion, it is a question of law for the court, frequently must give way to the doctrine that the question of negligence, of contributory negligence, and of proximate cause, is under the circumstances one for the jury.

The mental attitude and perception of the judicial mind when instructing a jury concerning the law applicable to the different phases of the evidence and claims of parties must be fully comprehended.

All judges called upon to decide legal questions arising in a law suit must put themselves in the position of a trial judge.

Disputed facts or facts concerning which different minds may disagree only come within the exclusive province of the jury. When the facts and circumstances, though not in dispute, are of such character or nature that reasonable minds might arrive at different conclusions, then the question is one for the jury.

But the statement that the question of negligence, contributory negligence and proximate cause is under the circumstances one for the jury, does not fully state the rule. It does not furnish adequate guide for trial courts. It is not in fact a statement of any rule of law.

So it is expressionless to say that the question of proximate cause is ordinarily for the jury. 29 Cye., 639. Likewise, it is inappropriate to say that where the negligence of two parties has contributed to an injury, it is a question for the jury to say whether the negligence of one or of the other was the proximate cause of the injury. 29 Cyc., 640.

The determination of the proximate cause as between two acts of concurring negligence present difficulty in many cases. Deci[45]*45sion of which act of two parties caused the injury must not depend upon mere conjecture. In all cases it can be determined upon reasonable probable grounds.

Trial courts submit disputed facts, and those concerning which rational minds may disagree, to the jury with appropriate instructions as to the law applicable to the different views of claims, so as to enable the jury to find the facts.

If rational minds may reasonably differ in determining the proximate cause, or if the ultimate fact may be definitely deduced from conflicting evidence, then it should not be decided by the court upon demurrer to the petition or upon motion for non-suit.

If it clearly appears upon demurrer to a petition from the admitted facts that the party committing the primary act of neglect could not in the light of all the circumstances have reasonably anticipated or foreseen the intervening act, then the court may apply the law to the rational and reasonable conclusion and decide accordingly.

Burket, J., in Railway v. Murray, 53 O. S., 570, 585, stated:

“If the evidence tends to prove that such negligence was the direct or proximate cause of the injury, it is for the jury; if the evidence does not so tend, a verdict should be. directed for the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-leiter-ohctcompltrumbu-1917.