Cincinnati, Georgetown & Portsmouth Ry. v. Burkhardt
This text of 20 Ohio C.C. Dec. 699 (Cincinnati, Georgetown & Portsmouth Ry. v. Burkhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The first error urged by the plaintiff in error is that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence; but upon an examination of the record we cannot so hold.
We do not think there was any error in the court in allowing the plaintiff to amend his petition by inserting the words thereih, “while plaintiff was sitting in said car with his arm upon the window sill, it [700]*700was thrown out of the window by a sudden jerk or movement of the-ear.” In other words, by this amendment the plaintiff states that his arm was not "intentionally and needlessly projected out of the window of the ear.” The amended petition, therefore, alleges a good cause of action.
The negligence complained.of is that "by reason of the dangerous construction of the tracks of the company” at the point where the' accident occurred, "and the dangerous proximity of the cars to each other” at that point, the arm of the defendant in error was injured without any fault on his part, the same being projected "unintentionally and needlessly out of the window of the car.”
This was the issue, and the case was tried upon that theory. This, being so, it was error for the court to charge the jury relative to the operation of the ears at an improper rate of speed, or as to the construction of the ears, as there was no evidence upon these points to-show improper speed or faulty construction.
We think charge No. 1 is too broad and includes in it matters, not set up in the petition or claimed by the evidence.
Charge No. 2 is erroneous in that the "knowledge of the plaintiff” is not the test, but the knowledge possessed by a person of ordinary care and prudence under the same circumstances.
Charge No. 6 is opposed to the rule laid down in Interurlan Ry. & Term. Co. v. Hancock, 75 Ohio St. 88 [78 N. E. Rep. 964]. We see no. objection to charges 4 and 5.
For above reasons the judgment below is reversed.
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20 Ohio C.C. Dec. 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-georgetown-portsmouth-ry-v-burkhardt-ohcircthamilton-1908.