Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad v. Bradhsaw

10 Ohio C.C. 645
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. 645 (Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad v. Bradhsaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad v. Bradhsaw, 10 Ohio C.C. 645 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Haynes, J.

This petition is filed for the purpose of reversing the judgment of the court of common pleas, and to set aside a verdict, in a case wherein Bradshaw was the plaintiff and the railroad company the defendant. A demurrer was interposed to the petition, which was overruled, and an answer was filed, and the case came on for trial, and during the trial numerous exceptions were taken to the action of the court. A verdict being returned in favor of the plaintiff below, a motion was made for a new trial, which was overruled, and [646]*646exception is taken to that. 'The evidence is embodied in a bill of.exceptions, and brought before us in that manner.

It is claimed that the petition did not set out sufficient facts to eonsitute a cause of action, and that the demurrer should have been sustained. The petition is not very closely drawn; but suffice it to say, we think the court did not err ■in overruling the demurrer.

The real test of the case comes upon the evidence of the plaintiff himself, and the question as to whether there is in fact a cause of action against the defendant below, the railway company; and that has occupied our time and attention quite closely.

It appears that Bradshaw was a brakeman upon the train of the defendant company, and that on a certain day he ran with his train from Lima to Deshler as a regular train, and then it started back as an extra. They proceeded south until they arrived at. Leipsic Junction, and at that point they were to take cars upon the train for the purpose of hauling them south. There are several tracks connected at that point, and there are also switches, or side tracks, or curves whereby the respective roads are enabled to take their cars from one road to the other; that is to say, from the C. H. & D. to what is called the Nickel Plate, and vice versa. A car had been brought north in some train of the defendant company, and had been set off on a side track to be delivered to the Nickel Plate; or, as some of the witnesses said, was billed to the Nickel Plate. It stood at any rate upon the side-track of the defendant company for a little time, and then was taken out and put in upon another side track of the company. In running the train upon wffiick the plaintiff below7 was employed in upon this side track, which they did, it became necessary to attach to it certain cars, including this car which had thus been set in, and the attachment was.madeto that car with four or five others, and the engineer started [647]*647with his locomotive to take the car forward. The train parted at this precise car, wilich was soon discovered by the rear brakeman, who signalled to the plaintiff below, and he signalled to the engineer to back np. It was Bradshaw’s duty to attempt to couple that car again, and ns the car slowed up,he approached the car that -was standing upon the track, and. according to his testimony — which is given in various forms on direct and cross-examination, and at consid-' erable length — as he approached the car he saw that the pin was in the drawbar. He went up to the drawbar and took the pin out, and placed it in its proper position for making the coupling. As the car on the approaching train was being backed up and came near,he stooped down, took hold of the link, and attempted to guide it into the drawbar. About that time he discovered that a portion' of the draw-bar was gone — broken off, indeed, quite, a large portion of the under part of the drawbar was gone, and the absence of that portion of the drawbar, evidently, was what had caused the train to break asunder or pull apart. The plaintiff guided the link into the drawbar, and at that moment noticed thé broken drawbar and being fearful, as he states, that he would receive an injury, the moment he guided the link into the drawbar,he dropped his hand down, and as the parts of the train were coming together, he started back, fearing that there was some other defect from which he might receive an injury, as he states. He started suddenly and quickly, and as he did so, his hand was caught between the deadwoods of the two cars, and a portion of the hand was taken off. He says that he dropped his hand in about the same manner that lie would if the drawbar had been whole and the link had gone into it, but he claims that he raised up or started back quickly, under the influence, of some excitement and some fear that in the condition of the car it was probable there was some other defect in it, and he was in danger of being injured. That is substantially his testimony.

[648]*648It is contended very strongly here on behalf of the plaintiff in error that there was no actionable negligence on the part of the railway company; and it is contended that the break inthe drawbar was not the immediate cause of the injury to the plaintiff below. That is very earnestly and ably argued by counsel for plaintiff in error. The liability of the railway company really turns upon this question. While it is denied that there was any negligence on the part of the company in regard to the drawbar, and while it is claimed that the car had been carefully inspected by the proper agents or inspectors of the railway company, still, we think the evidence tends to show negligence on the part of the company. The evidence certainly tends to show that when this car was put in upon the other tracks a day or two before, it was inspected by the chief inspector or one of the inspectors at that point. The testimony tends to show that the car was inspected by the chief inspector where it was set in upon the other track where it was found, and that he made the inspection within a short time prior to the accident; yet there is testimony tending to show that the broken pieces of the drawbar were found soon after the accident, lying where the car had stood a day or two before, indicating that the car had been broken at that point, perhaps, after the inspection as made upon that side track, and that it was brought around with a broken drawbar to the track where the accident happened, and that the inspection that was made by the inspector upon the afternoon or a short time previous to the accident was not a thorough and proper inspection; that while the inspector testifies that he made the inspection, and that the car was in sound condition, yet that the drawbar was in fact broken, and had been broken twenty four hours previously. We think, therefore, that the jury were warranted in finding that there was negligence on the part of the company through its officers and agents in inspecting the car.

[649]*649It is claimed that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. (I speak of that before coming to the main question again, and partly in connection with it.) It was claimed that he should have seen the condition of that draw-bar when he went in to make the coupling, and that if he did not see it, it was negligence on his part that he did not, because he might have seen it, if he had used reasonable care and caution in looking, when he went in to make the coup•ling.

The cars belonging to the Delaware and Lackawanna Co,, and the evidence shows that they had double deadwoods. These deadwoods are very large — I suppose from eighteen inches to two feet through in one way, and six inches the other. They are formed on each side of the drawbar, and are made for its protection, as it was testified here, and made for use in a hilly country, where the cars are expected to go up and down steep grades and around sharp curves.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio C.C. 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-hamilton-dayton-railroad-v-bradhsaw-ohiocirct-1895.