Cincinnati Traction Co. v. Frank

6 Ohio App. 112, 30 Ohio C.C. Dec. 290, 26 Ohio C.A. 241, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 150
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 21, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 Ohio App. 112 (Cincinnati Traction Co. v. Frank) 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
Cincinnati Traction Co. v. Frank, 6 Ohio App. 112, 30 Ohio C.C. Dec. 290, 26 Ohio C.A. 241, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 150 (Ohio Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Gorman, J.

William Frank, a minor about 17 years of age, brought an action through his father as next friend, in the common pleas court of Hamilton county, to recover damages from the plaintiff in error for injuries which he claimed to have sustained about December 7, 1909, as he was alighting from a street car on Harrison avenue near McLean avenue, in the city of Cincinnati. He claims in his petition that the car had come to a stop at a point on Harrison avenue, about a hundred feet west of Spring Grove avenue, and that [113]*113there was a crossover at this point where the eastbound car running on the south or eastbound track on Harrison avenue was to cross over to the north or westbound track on Harrison avenue because of some street repairs that were being made on McLean avenue. He claims that as he was alighting from the car after it had stopped and before he had an opportunity to do so in safety, the conductor gave the signal to the motorman to start the car; that the car started with a sudden jerk and threw him to the ground; that he was rendered sick and dizzy and nervous, and continued to be in that condition for a long time.

The evidence tends to show that the car upon which the boy was a passenger stopped at a point about 100 or 150 feet west of the intersection of Harrison and Spring Grove avenues, as claimed in the petition; that 8 or 10 persons alighted from the car; that the boy was the last one; and that while he was alighting from the car and before he had an opportunity to .do-so in safety, he was thrown to the ground and was injured. He claims that as a result of these injuries appendicitis developed, and that about four months from the date of the injuries an operation was performed by Dr. Paul to remove the appendix, which operation was successful.

The jury returned a verdict for $1,200 in favor of plaintiff, and error is now prosecuted to reverse that judgment.

There are but two grounds of error presented in argument and in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error.

[114]*114It is claimed, first, that the court erred in its general charge to the jury on the question of the duty of the plaintiff in error with reference to the starting of the car. The court in substance charged the jury that if the car upon which William Frank was a passenger had stopped at the place alleged in the petition and in the proof, and he was attempting to alight from the car, and while in the act of alighting the agent of the defendant in charge of the car suddenly put it in motion, without giving him sufficient time to alight, and by reason of said starting of the car the plaintiff was caused the injury as alleged, then the defendant was guilty of negligence.

We think this charge is substantially correct, and follows the rule laid down by the supreme court in the case of Ashtabula Rapid Transit Co. v. Holmes, 67 Ohio St., 153. The first paragraph of the syllabus in that case is as follows:

“If a street car comes to a full stop for any purpose and a passenger is in the act of alighting, it is negligence for the conductor to start the car before such passenger has had a reasonable opportunity to get off safely.”

The same language employed in this paragraph of the syllabus is used by Judge Davis in the opinion of the court on page 155.

The evidence in this case shows that several passengers got off at this point, and the boy, William Frank, testified that it was customary for the car to stop at . this place while the crossover was laid in the street and the repairs were being made, and that the passengers usually got off at the point where he undertook to alight on this morning, [115]*115during the time when repairs on the street were being made. The boy came in on the Westwood cars every day to attend Hughes High School.

We think that the allegations as to the stopping of the car and the starting of the same, and the accident to the boy, were amply sustained by the proof, and that the court did not err in the general charge in the particular complained of by plaintiff in error.

The second ground of error urged by plaintiff in error is the refusal of the court to give a special charge requested, before argument, by counsel for the traction company, as follows:

‘T charge you that there is no evidence in this case which you are entitled to consider, that the appendicitis of the plaintiff, for which he was operated on in April, 1910, was caused by or in any way connected with a fall of the plaintiff, if any, from' the car of the defendant, in December, 1909, as testified to by the plaintiff; and the defendant is not responsible for such appendicitis of the plaintiff.”

Counsel for plaintiff in error excepted to the refusal of the court to give this charge.

Upon an examination of the record we are of the opinion that there is evidence from which the jury might infer that the appendicitis of the boy, William Frank, resulted from the injury sustained at the time he was thrown from the car in December, 1909. The boy testified that the same day, and generally almost every day, after he was hurt as the result of this fall, up to the time when his appendix was removed, April, 1910, he suffered great and excruciating pains in his stomach [116]*116and the lower part of his abdomen and in his right side. His father and mother testified that he continually complained of the pain in the lower part of his body about the abdomen. Dr. Paul removed the appendix in April, .1910, about four ■months after the boy was injured. He said he saw no evidence of the appendix having been affected as a result of a traumatic injury, that there was no scar on the appendix, and that in his opinion appendicitis did not result from the traumatic injury. Upon cross-examination he did say that appendicitis could result from a blow or injury about the region of the appendix on the right side of the abdomen. Dr. Musekamp, who attended the boy, testified that appendicitis could, and did' frequently, result from an injury or a blow or a fall. Dr. Webb, who made an examination of the boy after the operation, testified that he had never heard of a case of appendicitis resulting from a blow or an injury. Dr. Paul testified that manifestations of appendicitis frequently occurred in persons, continuing over a period of a year or two years, or longer, and that treatment for these manifestations consisted in applications of ice on the parts of the body adjacent to the appendix, and that frequently it was necessai~y to perform the operation of removing the appendix.

We think that the court would not have been warranted in charging the jury that there was no evidence from which they could infer that appendicitis in this boy resulted from this injury, and that it would have been error for the court to have given such a charge.

[117]*117While it is the duty of the court to inform the jury, if requested, when there is no evidence of a material fact, nevertheless, the slightest evidence from which the jury may properly infér the fact is enough to preclude such an instruction. Bond v. Warren, 53 N. C., 191; Kansas City, M. & B. Rd. Co. v. Burton, 97 Ala., 240, Syl. 10; Central Ry. Co. v. State, 82 Md., 647; Pomeroy v. B. & M. Rd. Co., 172 Mass., 92, and Warren v. Halley, 107 Mich., 120.

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6 Ohio App. 112, 30 Ohio C.C. Dec. 290, 26 Ohio C.A. 241, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-traction-co-v-frank-ohioctapp-1915.