Fisher v. Tryon

15 Ohio C.C. 541, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 556
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. 541 (Fisher v. Tryon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Tryon, 15 Ohio C.C. 541, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 556 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Haynes, J.

A petition in error is filed by the plaintiff for the purpose of reversing a judgment of the court of common pleas rendered in a case wherein Catherine S. Fisher was plaintiff, and these defendants in error were defendants. The petition in the common ple^s was originally filed by plaintiff against George "R. Schultz and Washington W. Tryon, alone, and it set out, among other things, that said city was a municipal corporation and that certain streets in said city crossed each other; “that on the 22nd day of September, 1894, the defendants entered upon said St. Clair street, a little northwesterly of where it intersects with Monroe street, and removing the paving stones upon one side of said street, did excavate a large and deep hole in said street, for the purpose of making some kind of water or gas-pipe connection or otherwise, the exact nature of which to plaintiff is unknown.” It then states the duty of defendants in regard to the excavation; that “they negligently, wrongfully and carelessly, after making the said excavation in the roadway of said street, and while at work-thereat, failed to place either barriers or lights in, around and by the same, and left the same open and exposed in the night season of said day when it was dark, in such wise that persons passing upon and along said street, upon foot and in vehicles, were liable to fall therein, and be thereby greatly injured, as defendants well knew, or by the exer[543]*543cise of reasonable care might have known.” It then sets out that upon said day and in the evening thereof, the plaintiff was being carried, with her husband and her sister, in a carriage from the Boody House, in the city of Toledo, to the Michigan Central Railway Company’s depot in Toledo, along said street, and that while being so carried along said'street, ‘‘one side of said carriage suddenly dropped, down into said hole so made by defendants, throwing plaintiff forward and severely bumping and injuring her body, cutting and bruising her forehead above one eye, so that tlie same was caused to bleed profusely, Thereupon plaintiff, with the other occupants of said carriage, got out therefrom and were helped by plaintiff’s husband to the-sidewalk. It was very dark at said time, and neither plaintiff, nor her companions were able to see or distinguish the surroundings. After said carriage had been lifted up and moved forward, plaintiff’s husband came to plaintiff and undertook to assist her to again re-enter the said carriage, and while plaintiff was proceeding from where she was standing on the sidewalk to where said carriage was located, plaintiff suddenly stepped off into space, and was thereupon precipitated and thrown into the said deed hole then and there existing in the above part of said street as aforesaid. Said hole was about eight feet deep, and plaintiff fell to the' bottom thereof, falling against" and striking her body against the sides and bottom of the same, to her great in-j’ury and damage as hereinafter stated. It then proceeds to state the injuries that she received.

Subsequently, by leave of court, plantiff filed an amendment to her petition making the Toledo Transfer Company a party to the action, and in regard to that she says: ‘‘That .the Toledo Transfer Company is a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Ohio, and carrying on a general hack and vehicle transfer business in the city of Toledo, Ohio. Since filing her petition in this cause, the

[544]*544plaintiff has been informed and believes that the said The Toledo Transfer Company is a proper party defendant herein, by reason of its negligence in connection with the injuries inflicted upon and sustained by plaintiff as set forth in her petition. Upon the night of the 22nd day of September, 1894, when plaintiff was being transferred in a carriage upon and along St. Clair street, in the city.of Toledo, from the Boody House Hotel, to the Union Railway Station, in said city, as set forth in the petition, she employed for that purpose the defendant, The Toledo Transfer Company, who was then and there a common carrier of passengers, to carry and transfer her from said Boody House to said Railway Station. And in pursuance of said contract of carriage, plaintiff was riding in a carriage or hack of said The Toledo Transfer Company at the time she received her injuries, as set forth in the petition. As such carrier of the plaintiff, it was the duty of said The Toledo Transfer Company to carry plaintiff safely and without harm,and deliver her at the said railway station. In that behalf it was its further duty to have its agent driving the carriage in which the plaintiff was riding, keep a constant, prudent and careful lookout, ahead of said carriage, to see and to avoid any obstructions or excavations that might be in and along the way over which said carriage was to pass. And yet the agent of the said defendant who was driving said carriage, did not so keep a constant, prudent and careful lookout upon the street along which he was driving; but on the contrary, negligently, wrongfully and carelessly, without the exercise of ordinary or reasonable care, drove the said carriage into the hole or excavation made in said St. Clair street,as described in the petition. Plaintiff is now informed and believes that the said agent of The Toledo Transfer Company did not exercise ordinary and reasonable care to observe and avoid the said excavation in said street, or take warning thereof so as to avoid the same; but did drive his [545]*545said carriage so that the wheels thereof ran into the large hole excavated in St. Clair street as aforesaid, thereby proximately conducing to all the injuries and sickness and damages sustained by the plaintiff, as in her petition described.”

Tryon, in his answer- — niter making general denials'— says that he is the lessee of a store-room situate on the southeasterly corner of Monroe and St. Clair streets: “That in connection with his said business, and for the purpose of furnishing power to propel certain appliances used in and about said store, he has, and at the happening of the events hereinafter set forth, had in operation in his store, a water motor, which was furnished and supplied with water from the water main in St. Clair street, said water main being owned by the city of Toledo. That on or about the 22nd day of September aforesaid, there was a leak in his service pipe; that to prevent damage to property it was necessary to have it repaired immediately, and he employed the defendant, George B. Schultz, to repair-it. That said George B. Schultz is, and was at that time a plumber, engaged in such work, and who was regularly licensed and authorized by the said city of Toledo to perform such work, and to make the necessary excavations in the streets for the purpose of doing! the same, That thereupon said George B. Schultz proceeded to repair said pipe, and in so doing, it became and was necessary for him to make an excavation in order to reach said pipe where the same was broken and leaking, and also at the point or place, where said service pipe was connected with said waierpipe in St, Clair street. The said last-mentioned excavation was at the only point where the water could be turned or shut off from said service pipe while said repairs were being made, and that it was necessary for said water to be so shut off before said repairs could be made. This defendant further says that he in no wise directed, controlled, supervised or managed, [546]*546and that he in no wise attempted to direct, control or manage or supervise the mode or manner of making said repairs, or in making the excavation necessary in and about the carrying on of said work.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. 541, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-tryon-ohiocirct-1898.