Dubecky v. Horvitz Co.

582 N.E.2d 1087, 64 Ohio App. 3d 726
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1990
DocketNo. 13-103.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 582 N.E.2d 1087 (Dubecky v. Horvitz Co.) 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
Dubecky v. Horvitz Co., 582 N.E.2d 1087, 64 Ohio App. 3d 726 (Ohio Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Christley, Presiding Judge.

On August 14, 1985, around 4:00 p.m. or 5:00 p.m., Scott Schiavoni and his wife went to visit Michael A. Dubecky at Dubecky’s apartment in Mentor, Ohio, where they had dinner and three or four beers each. At approximately 8:00 p.m., Patty Lee joined them and had between one and three beers. Around 11:00 p.m., Patty Lee drove the group to the Bridge Tavern in nearby Willoughby, Ohio. When they left the apartment, Dubecky wanted to drive Patty Lee’s car, but she refused. The group stayed at the Bridge Tavern approximately one hour and ten minutes. Patty Lee had two shots of liquor and one beer and took one beer with her to go. Dubecky and Schiavoni had two beers and two shots each. When the group left the bar, Patty Lee did not appear drunk or intoxicated to Schiavoni; she was not swaying, staggering or slurring her words. However, once again, Dubecky asked to drive, but Patty Lee refused. During a five-minute ride from the tavern to Schiavoni’s wife’s parent’s home, Patty Lee let go of the wheel to turn around to talk to the Schiavonis and Dubecky took the wheel. After leaving Schiavoni’s wife at her parents’ home, Dubecky, Patty Lee and Schiavoni went to a gas station. The group then proceeded on to Route 2 to drive towards Painesville to another *731 bar. On Route 2, Lee accelerated to seventy or eighty miles per hour, changed lanes a few times, drove close to the center line and swerved all over the roadway. She came close to a truck once or twice. Dubecky and Schiavoni told Lee to slow down, but she just giggled in reply.

As the group approached Painesville, Lee exited Route 2 and drove out Route 44 South. At the end of the ramp, there was a construction area set up by appellee, the Horvitz Company. Lee’s car was diverted by negligently positioned traffic barrels. Lee lost control of her car and hit a guardrail which went through the windshield and partially decapitated Dubecky. At trial, two police officers who were at the scene testified that they observed Patty Lee and concluded that she was intoxicated.

Appellee was the general contractor on the resurfacing project that was underway at the scene of the accident. Appellant, Denise M. Dubecky, is the administratrix of Michael Dubecky’s estate. Appellant settled out of court with Patty Lee’s insurance company and sued appellee for negligence. Appellant also sued the Ohio Department of Transportation in the Ohio Court of Claims.

In January 1988, the case went to a jury which found that Michael Dubecky had suffered $910,000 in damages and that appellee was twenty percent negligent. However, the jury also found that Michael Dubecky was eighty percent comparatively negligent.

On February 18, 1988, the court entered judgment in favor of appellee. On February 28, 1988, appellant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. On March 25, 1988, the court denied this motion. On April 22, 1988, appellant timely filed a notice of appeal and assigned the following as error:

“1. The verdict and judgment on the issue of comparative negligence was contrary to law and against the manifest weight of the evidence because: (A) there was no evidence of duty, breach of duty, proximate causation, damages, and reasonable foreseeability of cause and result and (B) plaintiff’s decedent was a step removed from causation by his driver (Patricia Lee).
“2. The verdict and judgment on the issue of comparative negligence was contrary to law and against the manifest weight of the evidence because: (A) defendant failed to prove, as a matter of law, that plaintiff’s decedent, as an ordinary person, should have left the automobile at the only two opportunities available prior to the crash and (B) even if decedent should have left the automobile at either of these two opportunities, no proximate causation of his death resulted.
*732 “3. The verdict and judgment on the issue of comparative negligence was contrary to law and against the manifest weight of the evidence because there was no evidence that decedent’s driver (Patricia Lee) was intoxicated and impaired and that such was known or should have been known, in the exercise of reasonable care, to decedent.
“4. The verdict and judgment on the issue of comparative negligence was contrary to law and against the manifest weight of the evidence because the jury failed to obey the court’s instruction on intervening and superseding negligence and causation and, had the jury followed and applied this instruction, it would, as a matter of law, have found plaintiff’s decedent not at all negligent or at fault.
“5. The court erred to the prejudice of plaintiff in giving the instruction on Patricia Lee’s driving status because: there was no evidence that Lee was not licensed as an operator by the registrar of motor vehicles, there was no evidence that Lee’s license to drive was suspended, the instruction, a criminal traffic statute, applies only to the owner of a motor vehicle, and not to a mere passenger, and the instruction charges negligence per se without there being any nexus between a violation of the traffic statute by a passenger and negligent operation of an automobile by a driver.
“6. The court erred to the prejudice of plaintiff in giving the instruction of per se negligence by plaintiff’s decedent for riding with one under the influence of alcohol because such an instruction, especially in conjunction with the instruction on Lee’s driving status, imputes Lee’s negligence to plaintiff’s decedent, disallows evidence of protestation to cut off comparative fault, and defendant admitted that Dubecky was not ‘voluntarily’ in Lee’s automobile.
“7. The verdict and judgment on the issue of comparative negligence was contrary to law and against the manifest weight of the evidence because there was no evidence that plaintiff’s decedent voluntarily rode with Lee, and defendant admitted and elicited uncontroverted testimony that plaintiff’s decedent plead [sic] with Lee to slow down or stop and let him out of the automobile.
“8. The court erred to the prejudice of plaintiff in failing to grant plaintiff’s motions for directed verdict made at the close of defendant’s case and at the close of all the evidence on the issue of comparative fault.
“9. The court erred to the prejudice of plaintiff in failing to grant plaintiff’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the issue of comparative fault.
“10. The court erred to the prejudice of plaintiff in failing to grant a new trial on the issue of comparative negligence.
*733 “11. The court plainly and fundamentally erred to the prejudice of plaintiff in giving its instruction on comparative negligence.
“12. The court plainly and fundamentally erred to the prejudice of plaintiff in giving verdict and interrogatory forms which were misleading, confusing, and prejudicial to plaintiff.
“13.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
582 N.E.2d 1087, 64 Ohio App. 3d 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubecky-v-horvitz-co-ohioctapp-1990.