Cleveland & Elyria Electric Railway Co. v. Hunter

10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 564, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 769
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 564 (Cleveland & Elyria Electric Railway Co. v. Hunter) 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
Cleveland & Elyria Electric Railway Co. v. Hunter, 10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 564, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 769 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Prior to July, 1896, the plaintiff in error had constructed a street railroad between the city of Cleveland and the city off Elyria, passing through the township of Ridgeville, and that time and ever since has been operating upon that road ears propelled by electric motors.

On July 19, 1896, the defendant in error was on her way from Elyria to Ridgeville, traveling in the highway, in a wagon drawn by one horse driven by her brother, in the-center of which highway was located the track of the railway company. In the [566]*566eastern limits of the city of Elyria .there was a collision between the wagon in which the plaintiff was traveling and the oar passing westward on the railroad track. In this collision the wagon was demolished, overturned, the defendant in error thrown out and sustained very serious injuries. She prosecuted iu the court of common pleas her action to recover of the plaintiff in error compensation for the injuries thus sustained, claiming that her injuries were caused by the carelessness and negligence of the railway company, through its agents in running and managing the car that collided with the wagon. A more definite reference to the specific allegations of negligence will be referred to as we consider the requests that were made by defendants of the court to charge the jury.

The action was tried in the court below, resulting in a verdict for the defendant in error in the sum of ten thousand dollars. A motion for a new trial was overruled and a judgment rendered on that verdict.

The entire proceedings had in the court below are brought before -this court for review by a hill of exceptions, covering something more than five hundred pages. Various errors are assigned to the rulings made by the court on the admission and exclusion of the evidence. It is only necessary to refer to a few of those rulings.

First. The defendant in error was permitted to give to the jury the statement of witnesses as to the time in which cars had been stopped upon this railroad at other times and at a different place from the place of this collision, for the purpose of showing within what time the car could have been stopped at this -time.

One of the material allegations of negligence was, that the motorman was negligent -and careless in omitting to check the speed of the train after he had observed or by reasonable care could have known .the peril in which the defendant in error was placed. It became, therefore, material to determine within what time the car could be stopped. This testimony we do not regard .as calling for an opinion of witnesses which they could not express as to the time within which the ear could be stopped. .It was the statement of a fact as to the time within [567]*567which .cars had actually been stopped. The majority of the court are very clearly of the opinion that such testimony was competent. For myself I see some objection to the testimony.

In order to have it a proper measure to apply to the case, it necessarily involved various items — the weight of .the car, condition of the motor, the grade of -the track, the condition of the track — that would raise independent issues in the case. But, as I say, we hold the testimony to be competent.

The testimony -in the case, both .on the part of the plaintiff and defendant, -agree upon the proposition that a ear could be stopped within 100 to 125 feet, running at the speed at which this car was running. It could have been stopped within a distance not to exceed 125 feet.

The jury, in a special finding, found ,at the time the horse started to cross the track the ear was 160 feet away from the point of collision.

The finding of the jury, therefore, shows that .at the time the motorman should have noticed the peril of this .defendant in error he had ample time to stop the car, and therefore that this testimony, whether competent or incompetent, was without any prejudice to the plaintiff in error, which affected the verdict.

A number of witnesses, some of whom were upon the ear and others who -observed the car were permitted to testify as to the speed that this car was running just before the accident. All of those witnesses, except two, testified only to the fact that just prior to the accident the car was running at its usual speed and that there was no slacking of the speed until the collision occurred. That testimony certainly was unobjectionable. It does not take an expert to determine, when riding in a ear, whether the speed has been slackened or -otherwise.

Two witnesses, Kuehne and Nieholls, were permitted to give opinions as to the speed this car was running.

Nieholls testified in his opinion it was moving from sixteen to eighteen miles per hour. Kuehne thought it was running at the rate .of twenty miles per hour.

These witnesses failed -to show much knowledge on the subject, entitling them to speak as experts and to give opinions.

The defendant’s motorman testified that -this car was running [568]*568from fifteen to sixteen miles per hour. Nicholls testified it was running from sixteen to eighteen. We do not think that the difference between the two statements is sufficient to reverse the judgment. And as to both' of those witnesses we are inclined to say that they showed such knowledge and such experience as to make the testimony barely competent, but that its weight was of little value.

The testimony given by the physicians in answer to the hypothetical questions is .also challenged and exceptions were taken. We see no objection to that testimony.

Wasson and Christy were examined on the part of the plaintiff in error as expert witnesses. Certain' questions were put to each of them which the court did not permit to be answered. In that we think there was no error. Both of .those witnesses gave to the jury all the information that was needed concerning the time ,in which a car could be stopped, the methods of stopping a ear, 'the' manner of applying .the brakes, and educated the jury to the full extent that was necessary and competent.

So far as the rulings upon the questions of evidence, we are of the opinion that there was no error committed by the trial court.

At the close of the testimony the case was argued, and it is claimed that there.was misconduct, on the part of the counsel for the- defendant in error. Perhaps the .argument of counsel extended to the full extent that should be authorized, but on interruption by counsel for the plaintiff in error the offending counsel very gracefully came down, and we do not see that any substantial injury was done to the case of the railway company by the remarks they are complaining of.

At -the close of the testimony -the court was asked by the defendant in error to instruct the jury in two special requests, which were given, the' second of which the plaintiff in error complains should not have been given. I find no exception noted upon the record by plaintiff in .error to the giving of this request, therefore we can not cay that it was error, but independent of that we .think the request was one that the court might well have given.

■ Complaint is made that it made too prominent certain facts [569]*569favorable to the defendant in error and omitted those favorable to the plaintiff in error. But that was fairly off-set by the request that they made on the other side.

The plaintiff in error .then requested ‘the court in a large number of requests to charge the jury, four .of which were given.

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10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 564, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-elyria-electric-railway-co-v-hunter-ohiocirct-1898.