Commissioners of Belmont County v. Brown

5 Ohio App. 394, 26 Ohio C.A. 377, 1916 Ohio App. LEXIS 172
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 Ohio App. 394 (Commissioners of Belmont County v. Brown) 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
Commissioners of Belmont County v. Brown, 5 Ohio App. 394, 26 Ohio C.A. 377, 1916 Ohio App. LEXIS 172 (Ohio Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Pollock, J.

The defendant in error, Effie E. Brown, brought an action in the court of common pleas of Belmont county against the plaintiffs in [395]*395error seeking to recover for damages which she claimed to have sustained by the failure of the county commissioners to provide guard rails on the sides of the approach to the bridge over the creek known as Capitana creek.

She claimed in her petition that she was riding in an automobile, driven by another person, and as the machine was going up the approach tov this bridge it went over the side of the embankment and she was injured. She further claimed that her injuries resulted from the negligence of the board of county commissioners in their failure to perform their statutory duty in providing guard rails along the sides of this approach.

To this petition an answer was filed, which alleged, among other things, that plaintiff was well acquainted with this highway, with the bridge and its condition, and that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; it also alleged that the driver of this automobile was guilty of negligence in approaching and attempting to drive on this bridge at a high rate of speed, and that the accident was caused by his negligence.

The case went to trial resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff below, and the county commissioners are now seeking to reverse that judgment because of errors which they claim occurred in the trial of the case.

The public road over which the automobile was traveling follows the creek bank to near the end of this bridge, and there makes almost a right-angle turn upon the approach to the bridge. The approach to the bridge is up an elevation of something like twelve degrees, and there was no guard [396]*396■ rail on the end of this bridge or on the sides of the approach, as required by Section 7563 et seq., General Code. It was admitted that this end of the bridge, and the approach, is more than six feet above the level of the ground, or more than six feet high.

The testimony shows that on the day of the accident a neighbor by the name of Owens was passing the house of Mrs. .Brown in his automobile, and that she was taken into the automobile; that they proceeded along this public road to the approach of this bridge; and that as they attempted to turn upon the bridge over the approach to the bridge the automobile went over the side of the approach to the bridge, and the plaintiff below was injured.

There is testimony tending to show that the automobile was driven along the public road at a rapid and dangerous rate of speed, and that the speed was not slackened as the automobile approached the end of the bridge or the elevation to the bridge, and that by reason of the rapid rate of speed the driver of the machine was unable to turn it sufficiently to go up the approach and on to the bridge; that Owens, the driver of the machine, was negligent in not checking the speed of the machine before he came to the angle in the road required to turn on to the approach to the bridge; and that his negligence contributed to cause the injury to Mrs. Brown.

Now, in this condition of the evidence, the court, at the close of the testimony, was requested by the defendant below to charge the jury before argument that if from the evidence the plaintiff’s in[397]*397juries did not result solely from the failure of the commissioners to erect these guard rails, the plaintiff below could not recover. Then, in further request, the court was asked to charge the jury before argument that if the accident occurred from the joint negligence of the driver of the automobile, Owens, and the failure of the. commissioners to erect these barriers, the plaintiff could not recover.

The court refused to give these requests, and in the general charge said:

“If the accident involved in this lawsuit would not have happened had there been such guard rails or hedge fence erected and maintained at the time along the sides of this approach, as we have stated to you the county commissioners were required to erect and maintain, then the failure to so erect and maintain the same was the proximate cause of the automobile falling over said approach, and in that event the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, unless you should further find, — under the rules hereinafter given you, — that she was herself guilty of contributory negligence.

“If the accident would have happened even though the defendants had maintained the guard rails and hedge fence which we have stated to you they were required to furnish, then the plaintiff could not recover in any event, for the reason that in that event the failure to so construct same would not be the proximate cause of the accident.”

Thus, the court refused to charge as requested, and charged that if the accident occurred by reason of the neglect of the commissioners to provide these guard rails, plaintiff had a right to recover. In other words, under the court’s charge to the jury [398]*398Mrs. ■ Brown had a right to recover even if her injury was the result of the combined negligence of both the board of county commissioners and the driver of the automobile.

The general rule prevails in nearly all of the American courts that where a person riding in a conveyance by the invitation of the driver, having no control over him, and no reason to suspect his want of due care, is injured by the concurring negligence of the driver and a third person, the negligence of the driver will not prevent a recovery of damages from the other tort feasor. 1 Thompson on Negligence (2 ed.), Section 502.

The plaintiff in error urges that as this recovery is based upon a statutory right'requiring the public to pay damages for the neglect of public officers to comply with provisions of the statute, and as at common law there could be no recovery against the county for failure to provide such guard rails, the county is not liable unless the accident occurred from its own sole negligence; that the general rule of the liability of joint tort feasors does not prevail against the county where the liability is created by statute. That is the principal legal question in this case to be determined.

The principle is well supported that where the party injured was in the exercise of ordinary care and the injury was caused by the neglect of public officials, either municipal or county, combined with some accidental cause, the party injured may recover damages against the public body which was negligent. (City of Crawfordsville v. Smith, 79 Ind., 308.) While that question has never been before the supreme court of this state,, yet that [399]*399court has approved this principle where the action was against a private corporation. (The Hocking Valley Ry. Co. v. Helber, Admr., 91 Ohio St., 231.) The railway company in building its road had excavated under and built a bridge across the public road, and was required to maintain the bridge. The horse drawing the wagon in which plaintiff’s decedent was riding stumbled and fell against the railing of the bridge, and the railing by reason of weakness gave way, resulting in the death of the occupant of the wagon, and the railway company was held liable for negligently causing the death of plaintiff’s decedent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio App. 394, 26 Ohio C.A. 377, 1916 Ohio App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-of-belmont-county-v-brown-ohioctapp-1916.