Gaines v. Village of Wyoming

66 N.E.2d 165, 77 Ohio App. 373, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 9
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1946
Docket6602. and 6603
StatusPublished

This text of 66 N.E.2d 165 (Gaines v. Village of Wyoming) 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
Gaines v. Village of Wyoming, 66 N.E.2d 165, 77 Ohio App. 373, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 9 (Ohio Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

OPINION

By ROSS, J.

These appeals upon questions of law from the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton county were heard and considered together.

Service was made on the petitions April 19, 1943.

The first appeal is from a judgment of such court entered upon a verdict in favor of the father of a minor who incurred certain expenses, necessitated in furnishing medical and surgical care and hospitalization to his son, whose leg was amputated as a result of injuries alleged to have been received as a result of a nuisance permitted to exist by the defendant.

The second appeal is from a judgment entered upon a verdict in favor of such minor son, who sued through his next friend, for compensation for such injuries so received.

The issues presented to the jury were made up in each case, through the conflict in allegations of the third amended petitions of the plaintiffs as amended during the trial and the answers of the defendant in each case, as amended during the trial.

The cases were presented to the jury in the same trial. As the issues, except for the allocation of compensation, are identical in each case, the second case will be here considered. Conclusions as to the appeal in the latter case are dispositive of the controversy In the first case as well.

Prom the third amended petition, as amended at the trial, it appears that the defendant is the Village of Wyoming, a municipal corporation, that ,it constructed, owned, operated, used, and controlled a “police rifle range” for discharging pistols and rifles at targets, on public grounds belonging to such *11 village, that the plaintiff, a minor of fifteen years of age, was gathering “scrap rubber” in the vicinity of such range, and one David Bolton “a minor of tender years, standing within said rifle range” had in his possession a 22 caliber rifle, that “suddenly without notice or warning to plaintiff” Bolton discharged such rifle at. a target on said range, that defendant was negligent and had created, and was maintaining a nuisance “all by reason of the following, to-wit: said David Bolton had said rifle in his possession for a long time prior thereto and he, and other boys, and police officers of the Village of Wyoming, in accordance with the purpose for which defendant created said range, discharged, and were in the habit of discharging, rifles and pistols at targets on said target range, causing missiles to be projected through the air and the area to be dangerous to life and limb; children, including this plaintiff were in the habit of being, and on said day were, upon and around, and playing near, said range; defendant then, and for a long time prior thereto, knew all of the foregoing, but, notwithstanding the foregoing, defendant permitted, and took no steps and made no effort to prevent, the foregoing actions, nor to abate the aforedescribed nuisance; and as a direct and proximate result of all of which plaintiff was shot in the right thigh and right thumb, and an artery was severed and injured.”

The amended petitions contain thereafter allegations of the injuries and financial loss and prayers for compensation.

In the answers, as amended at the trial, of the defendant, it is admitted that defendant is a municipal corporation; that it owned “a part of and used a rifle range for target practice for the police of said village and that such rifle range is located within the corporate limits of said village.” Otherwise, such answers constitute general denials of the amended petitions.

From the bill of exceptions, it appears that the Village of Wyoming did construct and maintain a range primarily designed for the use of its police officers, that such range was used by such police force for the purpose of increasing their proficiency in the úse of fire arms, which were from time to t'me discharged at the targets upon such range. The range was located in an area owned by the Village, and used, in various forms, by the public.

It is true that a small V shaped parcel of ground privately owned entered slightly into the line of targets, but such fact is only incidentally involved in the consideration of the issues presented. The range was located directly adjacent to a pub- *12 lie baseball field, and a space used for picnics and other recreational purposes. It also was in close proximity to a public dump located on adjacent property owned by the Village. The whole constituted a municipally owned tract, over which the public was permitted to go and which the public was permitted to use with little supervision or control.

In the early part of the year 1942, through cooperation with the Chief of Police of the Village and the principal of the local high school, boys fourteen years of age and older were permitted to use the range and received instructions from Police Officers in the use of firearms while shooting at the targets on such range. There is evidence that the school boys were told not to use the range in the absence of a supervisor or instructor, but there is also evidence that they frequently did so, that Village police and those in authority, representing the Village, saw such frequent use of the range by such boys, saw them discharge firearms thereon at targets, in the absence of supervisors or instructors, that police actually stood on the range watching such unauthorized use and at no time forbade such use. It is perfectly apparent from the evidence that these children were permitted to use the range without any let or hindrance, without any supervision and that the Village, through its police force, had full knowledge that, such range was being so used.

The range was constructed along conventional lines. The targets were so constructed as to be lowered and raised by mechanical control at the butts or firing positions. The targets were placed in front of a back stop constructed of earth and timber. The butts or firing positions were located at 25 yards and 75 yards from the targets. There were five firing positions in each row of butts, the positions being approximately two feet apart. Small tables for the convenience of those firing at the targets were placed at the target end of each firing position.

On June 23, 1942, the plaintiff’s minor, Gaines, in company with another boy was searching in the city dump in the vicinity of the range for scrap rubber, when his attention was attracted to the discharge of firearms on the Municipal range. The boys went down to the range and found a number of boys and girls on the range. There were four guns being used by the boys and girls, one of them being used by David Bolton. The plaintiff took his position at the fifth butt, a firing position on the 25 yard line of butts, being the 5th butt from the west, resting partly on the small table, his hand on his knees. Bolton was standing at the second butt from *13 the west on the same line of butts. Gaines was almost directly east of Bolton. The evidence, however, indicates that Bolton was somewhat back of the table in front of the butt and this would place Gaines slightly forward to Bolton’s right — there being two butts intervening between them (Butts 3 and 4), This distance is placed at approximately six or eight feet, Just before the arrival of Gaines upon the range, the boys and girls had been shooting at tin cans.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E.2d 165, 77 Ohio App. 373, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-village-of-wyoming-ohioctapp-1946.