Cole v. New York Central Rd.

80 N.E.2d 854, 150 Ohio St. 175, 150 Ohio St. (N.S.) 175, 37 Ohio Op. 459, 1948 Ohio LEXIS 362
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1948
Docket30975
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 80 N.E.2d 854 (Cole v. New York Central Rd.) 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
Cole v. New York Central Rd., 80 N.E.2d 854, 150 Ohio St. 175, 150 Ohio St. (N.S.) 175, 37 Ohio Op. 459, 1948 Ohio LEXIS 362 (Ohio 1948).

Opinion

Matthias, J.

The claimed errors specifically assigned are: Overruling the motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence; overruling defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings and the evidence, notwithstanding the verdict; and overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial.

In addition thereto is assignment designated No. 4 which is as follows:

“The Court of Appeals erred in affirming and not reversing the Court of Common Pleas for error in its charge to the jury after argument in the following respects :
“(a) In submitting to the jury and reading from the second amended petition the first four specifications of alleged misconduct, although defendant specifically moved and requested the court both before argument and after argument to withdraw said specifications from the jury.
*180 “(b) In charging the jury that misconduct meant that if defendant failed to exercise ordinary care the plaintiff could recover.
“(c) In failing to properly charge the jury on the issue of misconduct.”

The following physical facts are disclosed by the record:

The defendant owns and operates a line of railroad tracks through the city of Toledo, two of which run underneath the bridge on Oak street. These two are main tracks and run generally in an easterly and westerly direction.. Just north of the bridge and on the same grade as the bridge, defendant owns and maintains five switching tracks, immediately south of which is a signal tower, which is equipped with signals, red lanterns, red flags, and other warning devices, and also a telephone which is directly connected with a telephone in the defendant’s traffic tower located at the Maumee river bridge about 2,000 feet to the west and also connected with telephones maintained by the defendant at other points. The duty of the employee in the signal tower at Oak street was primarily to raise and lower the gates for the protection of pedestrian and vehicular traffic crossing these five switching tracks and his duties were in no way related to the operation of trains on the tracks which passed under the overhead bridge, but to warn children and other trespassers from using the path from Wilmot street down to and on the tracks of the defendant.

Passing under the overhead bridge on Oak street are not only the two tracks owned and maintained by the defendant but also one track owned and maintained by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company. The defendant’s tracks were nearest the tower but the tower was above these tracks and about 70 feet from the nearest New York Central track.

There was testimony tending to show that there was *181 a path leading from Wilmot street, which is at the end of the Oak street bridge opposite the tower, and that this path extended down to the tracks of the defendant beneath the Oak street bridge and was used by railroad men and sometimes by children.

As developed by the plaintiff’s case, the record shows that at about 4:45 p. m., on July 5,1944, a child, which afterwards proved to be the plaintiff’s decedent, was discovered to be lying between the rails of the defendant’s eastbound main track. A witness, Mrs. Cherry, directed the attention of the defendant’s employee, the watchman in charge of the signal tower at the Oak street bridge, to the situation, who immediately came from his tower and hurried down the embankment to within 20 feet of where the boy was lying, being accompanied part way by the witness, Mrs. Cherry. She testified that the boy was lying on his left side, his back toward her; that she saw no signs of blood, cuts or other injuries, but that he was lying perfectly still.

The witness, Mrs. Cherry, asked the watchman if they could not take the boy off the track, to which inquiry he replied in the negative, saying that “it was railroad property and not to go down there.” Either the witness or the watchman suggested calling the city’s rescue squad. Both immediately returned up the embankment, the defendant’s employee to his place of duty in the tower and the witness, Mrs. Cherry, to a pay station in a nearby business place from which she called the city’s rescue squad. This witness testified there was a path down the embankment on the tower side and also a path on the Wilmot street side of the bridge, extending down to a level of the tracks, which path she had seen children use but she did not think there was any path extending across the tracks.

The second witness called by the plaintiff testified that he was in the business place from which Mrs. *182 Cherry telephoned for the rescue squad; that he immediately ran to and down under the Oak street bridge; that a passenger train, headed east, was standing there; and that the plaintiff’s decedent was under one of the cars lying on his back. The witness later observed a large gash on the back of decedent’s head. It was stipulated that the death of plaintiff’s decedent resulted from a fractured skull. Evidence was also offered showing that the face, hands, body and legs were covered with grease, sand, cinders, etc., and that the knees were skinned, cut and lacerated, but that there were no broken bones.

Evidence was adduced by the defendant in substance as follows:

About 4:30 on the afternoon of July 5th, the Auer boy and another boy named Kay Klotz left their homes on Utah street, which is two blocks west of Oak street, and walked east along Wilmot street and down into the cut or gorge in which defendant’s tracks are located. They reached that point by a path that leads from Wilmot street, which is at the end of the bridge opposite the signal tower, and went down under the bridge. The Klotz boy testified he had never been down there or played around the bridge before. They crossed all the tracks to the north end of the bridge until they reached the abutments there and the Klotz boy climbed about on the girders of the bridge and found some sparrow’s eggs, a nest and one or two little birds. The boys then came down the embankment from the north end and according to the Klotz boy started to cross the defendant’s tracks, moving generally south. He testified that he saw an eastbound passenger train coming from the Maumee river. The Auer boy was ahead of the Klotz boy and near the center or eastbound track as the train approached, and according to his testimony the plaintiff’s decedent, when last seen by the Klotz boy, was walking toward *183 the eastbound track. At that moment, and when plaintiff’s decedent was close to the eastbound track, the Klotz boy thought he had dropped his bird and looked back and heard a scream. After the passenger train passed, the Klotz boy saw the plaintiff’s decedent lying on his back between the rails of the eastbound track, approximately under the center of the Oak street bridge; be did not see him get hit by the train.

The Klotz boy ran home, which was two or three blocks away. His parents returned with him to the Oak street bridge where other spectators had gathered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.E.2d 854, 150 Ohio St. 175, 150 Ohio St. (N.S.) 175, 37 Ohio Op. 459, 1948 Ohio LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-new-york-central-rd-ohio-1948.