City of Mingo Junction v. Sheline

196 N.E. 897, 130 Ohio St. 34, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 34, 3 Ohio Op. 78, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 280
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1935
Docket25204
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 196 N.E. 897 (City of Mingo Junction v. Sheline) 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 Mingo Junction v. Sheline, 196 N.E. 897, 130 Ohio St. 34, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 34, 3 Ohio Op. 78, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 280 (Ohio 1935).

Opinion

Jones, J.

In finding that tbe trial court erred in excluding “Exhibit A,” tbe appellate court in its opinion said:

“This court is inclined to think, although tbe proposed motion was not read into tbe record, that this testimony should have been received; * * *.
*37 “This court is of the opinion that if the interest of the plaintiff had been preserved and protected, especially by a proper offering of this testimony and preservation of exception thereto, that the plaintiff should have had the benefit of such testimony so offered.” This exhibit was offered by the plaintiff for the purpose of showing that the city council, more than two years prior to the date of the accident, had adopted some action relating to the placing of barriers on the city streets. What those proceedings of the city were, whether passed by resolution or- ordinance, whether they were permanent or temporary measures, and whether they imposed an authority upon the service director or other official, we do not know, for “Exhibit A” was not incorporated in the bill of exceptions. It is obvious, therefore, that its competency and materiality cannot be determined by this court; neither could they be determined by the Court of Appeals, which had before it the same record we have. It possibly may be that it had the council minute book before it in fact; but, if so, this gave the court no power to base its reversal on the failure of the trial court to admit the exhibit in evidence, for the exhibit is not contained in the bill of exceptions or vouched for by the signature of the trial judge. The appellate court, therefore, erred in finding, as one ground of reversal, that the trial court erred in the “exclusion of competent evidence.”

We will assume that the exhibit was admitted, showing that appropriate legislative action had been taken by the city council setting aside this street for coasting purposes, and that the service director had been delegated to provide such coasting places. Under the facts pleaded in the petition and disclosed by the evidence, is the city liable? In performing such duties, was the city exercising a governmental or a proprietary function ? In City of Akron v. Butler, 108 Ohio St., 122, 140 N. E., 324, we held that where the plain *38 tiff, in Ms action against a city to recover damages for personal injuries caused by the negligence of a servant of a municipality, fails to offer evidence tending to prove that the servant was engaged in a proprietary function, as distinguished from a governmental function, a motion for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s case should be sustained. Evidently acting upon authority of that case, the trial court, in the instant case, sustained the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiff’s case. In City of Wooster v. Arbenz, 116 Ohio St., 281, 156 N. E., 210, 52 A. L. R., 518, the first paragraph of the syllabus reads: “Streets and highways are public and governmental institutions, maintained for the free use of all citizens of the state, and municipalities while engaged in the improvement of streets are engaged in the performance of a governmental function.” In the same case, we stated the exception to that rule to be substantially as follows: that although a city was exercising a governmental function, still it would be liable for failure to discharge the duty of keeping the streets open, in repair and free from nuisance, as required by the provisions of Section 3714, -General Code. It is somewhat difficult to discover whether counsel for defendant in error relies upon that section for recovery from the city or whether he rests the city’s liability upon the fact that in the construction of the barricades the city was performing, as he states in his brief, a proprietary duty. The brief states: “This is not an action founded upon failure to exercise police powers nor one that comes within governmental powers, but one that comes within a proprietary duty.” It certainly cannot be said that the city was exercising proprietary functions as where the city acquires some benefit or profit from such exercise. The coasting places were provided for the pleasure and use of all and not for a part of the citizens. In providing them, the city was acting within its police power, and in that *39 respect its action was governmental and not proprietary.

This feature of the case, as well as that of nuisance to which we will refer later, was treated in Harris, Admos., v. City of Des Moines, 202 Iowa, 53, 209 N. W., 454, 46 A. L. R., 1429, and Burford v. City of Grand Rapids, 53 Mich., 98, 18 N. W., 571, 51 Am. Rep., 105, both involving municipal liability for permitting coasting on its streets. In the Harris case, supra, the suit was to recover damages for the death of a boy killed by a collision with an automobile while he was coasting on one of the city streets. It appeared that the Superintendent of Public Safety had temporarily set aside a street for coasting use by the children in the neighborhood, and had placed placards at the intersecting streets announcing that the street was reserved for that purpose. The case states that the negligence pleaded was to the effect that the city had permitted a dangerous condition to arise on the street and had failed to guard or barricade the street to-prevent automobiles from entering upon the street while it was being used for coasting. The Supreme Court held in its syllabus as follows: “ A city which temporarily sets aside a public street for coasting purposes is not liable in damages for an injury resulting to a person so using the street, from his coming in contact with an automobile which the city had failed to exclude from the street.” In its opinion, the court stated: “A governmental duty is one involving the exercise of governmental power, and is assumed for the exclusive benefit of the public. A sovereign act of government cannot be submitted to the judgment of the courts, since the government is not the subject of private law.” In the Grand Rapids case, supra, it appears that the common council of the city had designated one of a number of its streets for coasting purposes; that when the street was covered with snow and ice a large number of boys assembled on the street and partici *40 pated. in the amusement of coasting; that while coasting’, a horse of the plaintiff which he was then driving on the street was run into by a bob sled used in coasting. Cooley, C'. J., in. his opinion, states: “The sole question in the case is whether the declaration sets forth any cause of action against the city for this injury.

“The wrong attributed to the city is that, through its common council, it gave permission for the use of Fountain street for the amusement of coasting. This permission was given in assumed exercise of the legislative power conferred upon, the city to control the use of the streets, and the action raises the question whether a municipal corporation can be liable as for a tort, for injurious consequences resulting from an exercise of its legislative authority.” As in the Harris case, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.E. 897, 130 Ohio St. 34, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 34, 3 Ohio Op. 78, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-mingo-junction-v-sheline-ohio-1935.