Dickerhoff v. Athey

79 N.E.2d 377, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 430, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 774
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1947
DocketNo. 3155
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 N.E.2d 377 (Dickerhoff v. Athey) 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
Dickerhoff v. Athey, 79 N.E.2d 377, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 430, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 774 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

OPINION

By PHILLIPS, J.

Plaintiff appealed to us on questions of law from a judgment of the court of common pleas entered upon a jury verdict for defendant in plaintiff’s action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained about four o’clock on the afternoon of September 25, 1945, allegedly as the result of defendant’s negligence in “starting”, “operating”' and backing her “automobile against plaintiff” at or near the intersection of Mahoning and Sehenley Avenues within the corporate limits of the City of Youngstown, Ohio, without giving her “ample” or any-warning of her intention so to do, or “exercising proper diligence not to injure her”, and “without due regard for the safety and rights of the plaintiff and other pedestrians and persons lawfully using the same.”

Plaintiff testified that she stepped off the curb on the northerly side of Mahoning Avenue and was walking from the northerly to the southerly side thereof opposite the westerly sidewalk of Sehenley Avenue, and “had taken three or four steps up and got hit” six or seven feet from such curb; that defendant’s automobile struck her crutch “pretty hard and knocked” her crutch “from under on the right side”, threw her “down toward the left on the sidewalk onto the street on the left”; that her “crutch protected the right side of her body. [432]*432-wonderfully”; and that as the result of being struck she sustained personal injuries, the nature and extent of which are undisputed and accordingly will not be discussed further.

Defendant testified that her automobile was parked headed west on the north side of Mahoning Avenue, about fifteen- feet west of the westerly sidewalk of Schenley Avenue, immediately back of another automobile parked on the same side of Mahoning Avenue, and headed in the same direction; that she entered her automobile from the right or curb side, deposited a package on the rear seat, looked in the rear view mirror thereof, saw no pedestrians or traffic of any kind behind her automobile, started the motor thereof, released the brake thereon, and began to back it; that “the car couldn’t have moved any more than, well, a foot or two, no more than two Jeet’-’ when she “heard somebody holler and at the same time there was a man standing in the street and he said ‘hold it, lady,’ ” and she “stopped” her “car and got out and she (plaintiff) was then in the back of the car and two men were on each side, had a hold of her under her arm”; that plaintiff was a few feet west of the westerly sidewalk of Schenley Avenue at that time.

A disinterested witness, who was waiting for a bus at the intersection where the accident happened, testified inter alia that defendant’s car was ten feet west of plaintiff when ,she fell near a manhole, and “that after he saw plaintiff lying in the street” he could see the car backing up “just go easy, easy back, that’s all”, and that after he “saw the plaintiff” in “the street” he saw the car backing up.

Counsel for plaintiff claims, and while it is not before us it is not denied, that in his opening statement to. the jury he stated that he would prove defendant gave an account of what happened when she allegedly struck plaintiff to city police officer Bartholomy, which conversation with that officer defendant admitted. Counsel for plaintiff claims that in such statement defendant admitted .that while backing her car into the intersection mentioned herein she heard a “thump”, and when she stopped her car and went to the rear thereof she found she had struck plaintiff, which alleged admission defendant denied, and which claimed admission plaintiff’s counsel contends was a vital issue in the case.

Plaintiff issued a subpoena duces tecum for Officer Bartholomy to appear as a witness and bring the purported statement with him, but during the time that elapsed between the issuance of such subpoena and the witness’s commanded appearance in the court of common pleas he was injured, which [433]*433precluded him from responding to such subpoena, and during trial he so notified plaintiff's counsel, who then testified in behalf of plaintiff concerning the absence of such officer.

In his argument to. the jury counsel for defendant commented upon the failure of plaintiff’s counsel to produce or offer the purported statement in evidence, and said “if they don’t bring in Mr. Bartholomy, they could have brought the statement. Why didn’t they bring in the police report? It is a matter of public record.”

Plaintiff’s counsel objected, and said “it isn’t a matter of public record; it isn’t admissible in evidence”. The court overruled the objection, and said “the court is here to rule on the evidence when it is produced. I want to give the jury a short charge on the scope of the argument”. And after explaining the purpose of argument of counsel to the jury said inter alia “so the arguments of counsel aren’t evidence; they are not the evidence, but the law permits them to analyze, discuss, draw conclusions from anything in or not in the case; so long as it is related to some of the evidence in the case”; and permitted counsel to proceed with his argument.

Whether the purported statement was admissible or inadmissible in evidence presented a question for the determination of the trial judge when and if it was offered in evidence. Like the contents of the purported statement the ruling of the trial judge thereon accordingly is unknown to defendant’s counsel, this court and even to the trial court.

In the state of the record on this question, and a study of the law applicable thereto cited by counsel for the respective parties, and that resulting from independent research, we can not arrive at the conclusion which counsel for plaintiff asks us to reach that counsel for defendant was guilty of misconduct in his argument to the jury which prevented plaintiff from having a fair and impartial trial.

As suggested in the factual statement of this opinion, plaintiff charged defendant with negligence in three respects, on all of which the trial judge charged the jury fully, and on the first two apparently satisfactorily to counsel for plaintiff. However counsel for plaintiff claims that the charge of the trial judge with respect to the last specification of negligence was prejudicial to plaintiff because the charge failed to state that a violation of §6307-20 GC, constituted negligence per se, which the supreme court in the case of Scott v Hy-Grade Food. Products Corp., 131 Oh St 225, has announced “cdnsists of the violation of a specific requirement of law or ordinance”.

On the third specification of negligence the trial judge charged the jury as follows:—

[434]*434“Thirdly, in operating said automobile upon the said highway without regard to the rights of the plaintiff and other pedestrians and persons lawfully using the same. The section of the statute reads as follows, Section 6307-20: ‘No person shall operate a vehicle without due regard for the safety and rights of pedestrians, and so as to endanger the life, limb or property of any person while in the lawful use of the streets or highways.’ That statute requires the exercise of ordinary care by the operator of a motor vehicle to accomplish the purpose set forth in the statute. Whether or not the defendant was negligent as respects that claim is an issue of fact for the jury, under all the evidence in the case and under the law, as 1 give you the law.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 N.E.2d 377, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 430, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerhoff-v-athey-ohioctapp-1947.