Carter v. Erie Railway

10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 292
CourtRichland County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedAugust 27, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 292 (Carter v. Erie Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richland 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
Carter v. Erie Railway, 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 292 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Manseield, J.

This was an action to recover damages for death of plaintiff’s decedent, an infant about twelve years of age, on account of the alleged negligence of the defendant, the Erie Railroad Company.

The cause was submitted to a jury and the jury having returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $1,500, the matter is now for hearing on the motion of defendant for a new trial. - .

[293]*293At the time the ease was submitted to the jury, the court was somewhat in doubt as to whether, conceding all the facts to be true, that they were sufficient in law to fasten liability upon the defendant. But the court submitted the case to the jury, reserving the right to further dispose of the question involved by the motion of defendant to direct a verdict at the conclusion of all the testimony or order a non-suit.

The facts briefly stated are about as follows:

Plaintiff’s decedent was a minor about twelve years of age; he was a newsboy, and with another newsboy, on the date of the accident, went to Hunt’s news stand in this city, to secure their usual allotment of papers which they expected on a Shelby car then about due.

The car being late, as young Terman claims, they went to the Baltimore & Ohio Railway depot to meet the car which crossed the railroad tracks at that point; while there the plaintiff went upon the platform and was ordered by the agent of the railroad company to get away from the platform for fear they might get hurt; they then proceeded to go across Mulberry street and thence down on the track and right-of-way of the Erie Railroad Company. Young Terman says that it was their intention to go to Main street, which lies east of Mulberry street, but for what purpose it is not disclosed by the testimony. Anyhow, they did not go to Main street, but, after being along the right-of-way of the Erie Railroad Company, which crosses Mulberry street, almost parallel with the Baltimore & Ohio Railway track at that point, the boys hearing the train whistle, started to run west from their present location, crossing over the Erie Railroad track, as young Terman says, to reach the Baltimore & Ohio depot, to watch passengers get off the train which they thought was coming on the Baltimore & Ohio track, and while going over the tracks of the Erie Railroad Company east of Mulberry street, plaintiff’s decedent, the Carter boy, was run over and killed.

It is alleged in the petition of plaintiff that as the Erie Railroad train was going along said track and for a long distance east of the point from where the accident occurred, the agents and servants in charge of its locomotive failed to sound the whistle [294]*294or ring the bell or give other warning of the approach of said train to plaintiff’s decedent or others, who were using said right-of-way as foot pedestrians, and-that their failure to give such-warning was negligence upon the part of the company, as plaintiff’s decedent was in the exercise of due care for his own safety, and that by reason of the alleged negligence of defendant plaintiff’s decedent was run over and killed.

It is alleged in the answer that -plaintiff’s decedent and the Terman boy went upon said right-of-way of the defendant for the purpose of playing, and it is further alleged in the answer that at the time of the accident the engineer and servants in charge of said railroad locomotive of defendant, did not see the boy at and prior to the time that he was injured.

The right-of-way of the Erie Railway extends from Main street south of the property of the Aultman & Taylor Machinery Company’s land in a westerly direction to Mulberry street, going thence westerly along the north side of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad station. About midway between Union depot and the Baltimore & Ohio depot, Main street crosses the tracks of the Erie Railroad Company, and about midway between Main street and Mulberry street in that locality, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company coming in from the north crosses the tracks- of the Erie Railroad Company and after crossing to the west run practically parallel to the Erie Railroad Company in easterly direction on the south side of the Baltimore & Ohio station. A short distance east of this junction of the Baltimore & Ohio and Erie tracks, the Baltimore & Ohio freight track crosses the Erie tracks at almost right angles, then proceeds in a southerly direction to its freight depot located south of Sixth street. Between Mulberry street and Main street along and- adjacent to the main tracks of the Erie and the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad company are numerous other side-tracks and switches, and these extend in an easterly and westerly direction for the .accommodation of their business between Main street and Mulberry street. And this right-of-way between Mulberry street -and Main street has been used and was used up and until the time of this accident by the public in general as a convenient way in going to and from points east and west of Mulberry street and Main street, and [295]*295that this use had continued uninterruptedly for a period of about twenty-five or thirty years; however, it appears that the railroad company had a sign posted on its right-of-way just as you enter it from Mulberry street, notifying persons not to trespass upon its property.

And this was the situation; all these facts and circumstances as heretofore detailed as appears by the testimony that existed at the time of the accident to plaintiff’s decedent. It appears by the testimony further that the whistle on the engine was blown at a point considerably east of the junction of the Erie and the Baltimore & Ohio tracks, at exactly what point does not appear clearly by the proof, but that no further or other signals were given by the servants of the company up to the time of the accident.

Taking this state .of facts, and they aré substantially as above set forth, the question arises under .the law of Ohio, whether any liability can attach to the defendant for the deplorable accident that happened to plaintiff’s decedent.

To determine this question inquiry must first be had as to what duty, if any, the defendant company owed to plaintiff’s decedent at and prior to the time of the accident, for, if there was no duty under the circumstances owing by the defendant to plaintiff’s decedent, then there can be no recovery.

In the case of Erie Ry. Co. v. McCormick, 69 Ohio St., 45, the first division of the syllabus lays down the rule:

‘ ‘ The omission of a duty is not the foundation of .an action Unless it results in injury to one for whose protection the duty is imposed. ’ ’

A railroad company is bound to exercise reasonable care for the protection of those to whom it owes a duty, and the question now arises, this accident having occurred on the right-of-way of the defendant company other than at a public crossing, and the children having been on that right-of-way for the purpose of playing and not on any business connected with the company itself, or in which any mutual interests'were involved between the business of plaintiff’s decedent and that of the company, whether a duty was imposed upon the railroad company such as [296]*296would require it to keep a vigilant lookout for persons in the situation of plaintiff’s decedent, and give warnings and signals of the approach of its trains along the track just prior to the time of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-erie-railway-ohctcomplrichla-1910.