Cullison v. B. & O. Railroad

4 Ohio N.P. 360
CourtLicking County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 360 (Cullison v. B. & O. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Licking County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cullison v. B. & O. Railroad, 4 Ohio N.P. 360 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

WICKHAM, ,1.

Margaret Cullison,as administratix of the estate of SLarvey Cullison, deceased, brought her suit against the Baltimore &Ohio Railroad Company, under the statute, to recover the sum of S1999. 99 as damages for negligently causing the death of her decedent.

In her petition she charges that she is the duly appointed and acting administratrix oE the estate of Harvey Cullison, deceased ; that Harvey Cullison died, leaving-no children, or their legal representatives; that she is the widow and next of kin of the decesed, and, therefore, the sole and only beneficiary for whom she, as administratrix, brings her action.

The Railroad Company files its answer to the plaintiff’s petition, and, for its second defense, it says:

“That the said decedent, at the date he entered into the service of the defendant, to-wit: on the 24th day of November, A. D. 1891, us one of the conditions of employment by the defendant, made application, in writing, to the defendant in its relief department for membership in the relief- feature, and thereby consented and agreed to be bound by all the regulations of the relief department then in force, and by any other regulations of said department thereafter adopted applicable to the relief feature, for which regulations then in force reference was had to any copy of the last edition of the book of regulations of said department, issued by the superintendent; and decedent thereby agreed that the defendants, by its proper agents, and in the manner provided in said regulations, should apply monthly in advance from the first wages earned by him under said employment, in each calendar month, sums at the rate of 82.00 per month as a contribution to the relief features of said department, for the purpose of securing the benefits provided by said regulations for a member of Class B to himself, or, in the event of his death, to his wife, Maggie (who is the plaintiff) subject to all the provisions and requirements of said regulations.
“That said decedent thereby further agreed that said application, when accepted by the superintendent, should constitute a contract between the decedent and this defendant as a condition of his employment by the defendant, governed in its construction and effect by the laws of the state of Maryland, and, as such, be an irrevocable power and authority to appropriate the said amounts from his wages,and apply the same as aforesaid.
“That the decedent further thereby agreed that, in consideration of the contributions of said company to the relief department, and of the guarantee by it of the payment of the said benefits, the acceptance of the benefits from said relief feature for the injury or death should operate as a release of all claims against said company for damages by reason of such injury or death, which could be made by or through decedent and that the superintendent might require as a condition precedent to the payment of such benefits, that all acts by him deemed appropriate or necessary to effect the full release and discharge of this defendant from all claims be done by those who might bring suit for damages by reason of such injury or death.
“That decedent understood and agreed that the said application, when accepted by the superintendent, should constitute a contract between decedent and this defendant by which his right as a member ot said relief features and as an employe of said company should be determined as to all matters within its scope.
“And defendant further says, that the said applicaion was accepted in writing at the office of the superintendent of the relief department, in Baltimore City, Maryland, by the superintendent thereof, on the 27th day of November 1891; and thereby the said application became and was a contract between the decedent and the defendant, and said contract was in full force and effect up to and including the day of the death of decedent.
“And defendant further says, that on the 5lh day of January, 1892, and after the death of decedent, the said Margaret Cullison, using the name “Margaret E. Cullison, ’’ as the wife and beneficiary of decedent in said contract, executed and delivered to said defendant a paper writing, under her hand and seal, whereby she recited that the decedent was a member of the relief feature of said relief department, under applicaton No. 22473, and the death benefit payable from the said relief department on account of said membership, amounting to one thousand dollars, was payable to his wife, Margaret (or correctly Margaret Elvira Cullison) ; that therefore she, the said Margaret, did theieby acknowledge that the payment of the said amount by baid relief department, which payment was thereby acknowledged, was in full satisfaction and discharge of all claims or demands on account of, or arising from, the death of decedent, which she then had, or might, or could have, against the relief department, the said Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, or any other company operating its branches or divisions,and did thereby release and forever discharge said department and said companies from all said claims and demands.
“That thereby and in consideration of the premises and of the payment of said sum [362]*362of one thousand dollars, the said Margaret Cullison did wholly and fully release and discharge the defendant from any and all claims and demands growing out of or on account of the death of decedent while in the service of defendant.
“That this action is brought and prosecuted by said Margaret, through decedent, solely for her benefit, and not for the benefit of said estate, and she is in law estopped and barred from further prosecuting this action, and this action ought to be dismissed. And defendant prays judgment accordingly”.

To his defense, the plaintff filed her reply ; and the cause was submitted to the court on a motion to strike out, by sections substantially all of the reply.

Without taking the time to read the reply as it is quite lengthy, covering four closely type written pages, we will take up and consider, in their ordei, the points upon which the plaintiff relies for her answer to the new matter set up as a second defense to the plaintiff’s petition. Is, That the defendant, being a corporation, incorporated and chartered for the purpose of building and operating a railroad, has no authority to organize and put into operation a department to its railroad business known as the relief department, or to conduct or carry on any such department, and never had any authority thereunder to release itself from liability for negligence of its officers or agents, to extend rolief to its employes, and by so doing release itself from liability for its negligent and careless acts.

That the defendant, ever since it has organized and carried on said relief department, has exercised the full management and control thereof, and that before it will pay out any benefits to the person entitled thereto, it exacts and receives from the person entitled to such compensation, under and in pursuance of what it claims was a previous contract to release it from liability for its negligent and careless acts, a full release from all liability for such damages.

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10 Daly 406 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cullison-v-b-o-railroad-ohctcompllickin-1897.