City of Elyria v. Meacham

148 N.E. 689, 113 Ohio St. 138, 113 Ohio St. (N.S.) 138, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 362, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 272
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1925
Docket18445
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 148 N.E. 689 (City of Elyria v. Meacham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Elyria v. Meacham, 148 N.E. 689, 113 Ohio St. 138, 113 Ohio St. (N.S.) 138, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 362, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 272 (Ohio 1925).

Opinion

Kinkape, J.

This is an aetion to recover damages for injuries received in a collision by two automobiles, both touring cars — one a Buick and the other a Ford. The accident occurred October 28, 19Í9, about 7 o’clock in the evening, on the north side of East Bridge street, in the city of Elyria, Ohio, and near to the east side of the overhead railroad bridge across that street. There were two persons in each car in addition to the driver. Grace L. Meacham, the plaintiff in the trial court, was riding in the Buick car, and that car was being driven by her brother, who was a joint owner of the car with her. The third person in the car was the wife of the driver; the two ladies occupying the rear seat. The Ford car was being driven by its owner, the defendant B. W. Baird. There were two boys aged, at the time of the trial, 12 and 15 years, respectively, occupying the back seat of the Ford car. The collision demolished the rear half of thé Buick car. The greater part of the damage was to the right side of the ear, and was occasioned by the car coming *140 in contact at the time of the collision with an iron pier of the overhead railroad bridge. The front end of the Ford oar came in contact with the left side of the Buick, a trifle to the rear of the center. The collision broke the right front wheel of the Ford car entirely off, and knocked all of the spokes of the left front wheel out, thereby dropping the front of the body of the Ford to the pavement. Other parts near the front of the Ford car were otherwise damaged.

Shortly prior to the accident the Bnick car was moving westerly on the north side of Bridge street, and the Ford was moving easterly on the south half of Bridge street. The collision occurred when the driver of the Ford car made a left-hand turn across Bridge street to the north, for the purpose of going north on East River street, which began at the north line of Bridge street at a point near to the east side of the overhead railroad bridge. By the collision Mrs. Meacham received injuries which were serious in the extreme, including the total permanent loss of the sight of one eye and the permanent impairment of the sight of the other eye, to such an extent as that at the time of the trial she was only able to distinguish between light and darkness, and was not able to indentify by sight persons well known to her, even though they were standing near her. The injury to this eye is progressive in character, and in all probability, as shown by the evidence, will soon result in total permanent loss of vision.

Mrs. Meacham brought an action in the court of common pleas of 'Cuyahoga county against the city of Elyria, the Lake Shore & Michigan ’South *141 •ern Railroad Company, the New York Central Railroad Company, the Director General of Railroads, and B. W. Baird. No service was ever made on the Director General of Railroads, and during the trial, by the consent of all parties, the court dismissed from the ease the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railroad Company. She averred that the joint negligence of the defendants was the direct and proximate cause of her injuries, and prayed judgment against all of the defendants in the sum of $200,000.

The defendants, other than Baird, who filed no pleading in the case, by demurrers, and later by answers, raised the question of misjoinder of parties defendant and also the question of the sufficiency of plaintiff’s petition. The answers of these defendants denied all acts, of negligence and averred contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Meacham; and the answer of the New York-Central Railroad Company presented the further defense that, at the time of the accident, the railroad property involved was in the sole and exclusive possession and control of the federal government.

These questions were again urged by the same defendants at the beginning of the trial by motions to exclude all evidence, and later, at the close of the plaintiff’s case and at the close of all the evidence, by motions for directed verdicts in favor of the defendants, and also by requests to charge. Th<» rulings of the trial judge upon these questions so raised were adverse to the defendants, and exceptions were saved.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the *142 plaintiff and against the defendants, other than Baird, for $50,000, and also a verdict in favor of Baird and against the plaintiff, for costs incurred by Baird. Motions for new trial were overruled, and judgments entered upon these verdicts.

The defendants, other than Baird, prosecuted error to the Court of Appeals. That court unanimously reversed the judgment against the New York Central Railroad Company, and entered final judgment in its favor, but affirmed the judgment against the city of Elyria. The city of Elyria prosecutes error to this court, naming the plaintiff, the New York Central Railroad Company, and B. W. Baird, as defendants in error. The city assigns many grounds of error. In the view we, take of this case, we deem it unnecessary to set out all these alleged grounds of error in detail.

We think counsel for plaintiff entertained several untenable theories not only in the drawing of plaintiff’s petition, but throughout the trial of the case, which were largely concurred in by the trial judge, and which no doubt account for many of the errors that are found in the record. In the first place, it seems to have been the view of counsel that every one in any way connected with the erection of the overhead railroad bridge, said to have been the cause of the accident, must not only be jointly liable as between themselves and the plaintiff, but that they must also be jointly liable to the plaintiff with Baird, the driver of the Ford car. While the acts of these people are somewhat related they fall very far short of being joint wrongs.

*143 In the next place, it seems to have .been the theory of plaintiff’s counsel, and of the trial judge as well, that the city and the railroad company were without authority to place any piers in the street, in view of the fact that it was practicable to have constructed the overhead bridge without piers, and that necessarily the placing of piers in the street constituted a nuisance and a violation of the legal duty of the city to keep the street open, in repair, and free from nuisance, and counsel seem also to have gone forward upon the theory that the jury was the sole judge of whether these piers in the street constituted a nuisance; and, if the jury so found, that must of necessity establish the liability of the city and the railroad company to the plaintiff for placing the piers there. The trial court charged the jury to this same effect, and under the charge of the court it is not surprising that the jury found in favor of the plaintiff and against the city and. the railroad company.

Several years prior to the time of this accident the city determined that it was necessary for the safety of public travel to cause a separation of the grades of East Bridge street and East Biver street from the grade of the railroad tracks that crossed these streets. As a first step in effecting this change of grade, the city duly vacated that portion of East River street that fell between the north and south boundary lines of Bridge street, and changed somewhat the location of the segregated parts of East River street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 N.E. 689, 113 Ohio St. 138, 113 Ohio St. (N.S.) 138, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 362, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-elyria-v-meacham-ohio-1925.