Cleveland Railway Co. v. Heller

15 Ohio App. 346, 1921 Ohio App. LEXIS 171
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 15 Ohio App. 346 (Cleveland Railway Co. v. Heller) 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
Cleveland Railway Co. v. Heller, 15 Ohio App. 346, 1921 Ohio App. LEXIS 171 (Ohio Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Vickery, P. J.

This cause comes into this court on a petition in error to the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county, the purpose of which proceeding [347]*347is to reverse a judgment obtained , by tbe plaintiff below, Ivy . Heller, against The Cleveland Bailway Company and the city of Cleveland, in the .sum of $20,000, for alleged personal injuries.

It seems that on the date on. which the accident occurred Miss Heller and five young ladies were visiting on West .58th .street in the city of Cleveland, north' of Detroit avenue. At about midnight the six young ladies started out with an automobile, (the sister of the owner of the car at the wheel, three of the young ladies being in the front seat, one the driver at the wheel, and at her right.a young lady with another young lady sitting on her lap. The automobile had been standing f or some time and the carburetor did not work properly as they started, and evidence in the record shows that the machine sputtered some and ran a little irregularly. They proceeded south on 58th street and then turned east on Detroit avenue, with the left wheels of (the automobile in the devil-strip and the right wheels between the rails of the east-bound track. Coming toward them on the west-bound track was a street car owned, controlled and operated by the railway company. As they got to about 54th street,, the evidence shows that the driver, of the automobile turned to the right so as to avoid striking, or being struck by ■the oncoming street car, when the automobile ran into ia hole over near the south rail of the east-bound car tracks, and this jar threw them toward the street car, and the automobile and the street car came into collision, which resulted in a wreck of the automobile and the injuries complained of to . plaintiff in •this action; to say nothing of other injuries, which, I believe, are claimed, to the other occupants of the car.

[348]*348On trial of this case before the common pleas court, a verdict, as above stated, was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, for $20,000.

In their efforts to reverse this judgment several errors are urged by plaintiffs in error, but the only one that was argued before this court, so far as the city is concerned, was that the court erred in its charge to the jury with respect to the doctrine of contributory negligence. The court, as a matter of law, told the jury that there was no contributory negligence of the plaintiff in this case, and this is urged as error, as being a question for the jury to determine.

We have announced ourselves so often on the question of the doctrine of contributory, negligence that it is useless to repeat or even to quote our own decisions upon that proposition. Suffice it to say that we have repeatedly held — and I think this to be the law in Ohio, at the present time — (that if there is contributory negligence brought into the case by the pleadings, supported by evidence, or by the evidence, where it is not pleaded, it is the duty of the court to charge upon contributory negligence and to submit that question to the jury, and that when he charges upon it he must correctly charge; and we still adhere to that doctrine.

But was there any contributory negligence shown in this record against this young lady, which in any way contributed to this injury? It must be remembered that she was a passenger in the automobile and she was not sitting in the front seat. She was sitting in the back seat, and I believe the curtains were down, as it was in the month of March. There was nothing wrong with the driver. There was apparently nothing wrong with the machine, any more [349]*349than with most machines when they stand for a bit. The only argument made was that inasmuch as she saw the driver driving in the devil-strip, astride the north rail of the east-bound track, that fact should have called forth a remonstrance from her; but the evidence in the case shows that that was not the eause of the accident. The evidence shows that the driver undertook to turn to the right so as to give tiie street car a wider margin, when the wheels were precipitated into a hole and the automobile was thrown up against the street car, and so the driving in the devil-strip was not at all the cause of the accident, as we get the evidence. But even if it were, what must a passenger in an automobile do? Must he keep remonstrating with the driver, telling the driver to do this or do that? It seems to us that it might be safely assumed by the passenger that the driver knew how to handle the car, and was driving it in a proper manner, and would be able to take care of it, and the passenger is not called upon to remonstrate or to talk to the driver constantly, and we do not think there was a particle of evidence in this ease to show that the plaintiff was in any wise negligent in getting into this car or acting just as she.did aet.; so that eliminates from the discussion the only error that was argued before us or complained about on the part of the city.

It is nowhere claimed that this verdict is excessive, or at least it was not argued to the court, and the above is the only error that the city of Cleveland urged here why this verdict should be reversed.

We come now to the attitude of the railway company. It has a more serious matter to complain of, and one which has caused the court no little concern.

[350]*350It will be noted that the railway company and the city are sued jointly, and.the proximate canse of the accident was a defect in ¡the street, within that part of the street over which the railway company, by virtue of a contract with the city, has assumed control, and which it has promised to pave and keep in repair. That part of the Taylor Grant which refers to this is as follows:

“The company [meaning the railway company] shall maintain in constant repair the pavement within a space of seven feet in width for a single track and for a double track the entire space between the outer rails of both tracks, including the space between the two tracks, and one foot outside of each outer rail, but in no event to exceed eighteen feet.”

On Detroit avenue there is a double track, and, therefore, by virtue of this provision in the Taylor Grant, which Avas accepted by the railway company and became a contract between it and the city of Cleveland, the railway company obligated itself to keep in repair that portion of the track where this accident occurred, which was between the rails of the east-bound track. Now the question arises whether by virtue of this contract of the city of Cleveland, ¡the railway company can be held responsible in damages because of any defect arising by want of repair within the space which the railway company had agreed to keep in repair. Of course it is conceded that the city of Cleveland cannot divest itself of its liability to the public. It is made a statutory duty of the city of Cleveland by the statutes of Ohio to keep the streets open and in repair, and free from nuisance, and whether the railway company was responsible or not the city of Cleveland would surely be if the hole in the street was the [351]*351proximate cause of the injury and the other necessary elements were present to render the city liable.

It is argued, and with much force, that the contract is one between the city of Cleveland and the street railway company, made only

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio App. 346, 1921 Ohio App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-railway-co-v-heller-ohioctapp-1921.