Glinsey v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co.

356 F. Supp. 984, 69 Ohio Op. 2d 344, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14254
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 30, 1973
DocketC 70-735
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 356 F. Supp. 984 (Glinsey v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glinsey v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., 356 F. Supp. 984, 69 Ohio Op. 2d 344, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14254 (N.D. Ohio 1973).

Opinion

*985 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

BATTTSTI, Chief Judge.

This cause presents a question of law which must be determined prior to trial: Whether the absence of statutory railroad signals imposes strict liability upon the defendant railroad for the loss proximately caused by violation of ORC §§ 4955.32 and 4955.34, so that contributory negligence is not a defense.

Section 4955.32 reads:

“Every company shall attach to each locomotive engine passing upon its railroad a bell of the ordinary size in use on such engines and a steam or compressed air whistle. When an engine in motion and approaching a turnpike, highway, or street crossing or private crossing where the view of such crossing is obstructed by embankment, trees, curve, or other obstruction to view, upon the same line with the crossing, and in like manner where the railroad crosses any other traveled place, by bridge or otherwise, the engineer or person in charge of such engine shall sound such whistle at a distance of at least eighty and not further than one hundred rods from such crossing and ring such bell continuously until the engine passes the crossing.”

Section 4955.34 reads in pertinent part:

“Every engineer or person in charge of an engine who fails to comply with section 4955.32 of the Revised Code is personally liable . . .
“ . . . The. company in whose employ such engineer or person in charge of an engine is, as well as the person himself, is liable in damages to a person or company injured in person or property by such neglect or act of such engineer or person.” (Emphasis added)

If a particular state prescribes a standard of care which all persons, or a general class, must exercise, then violation is generally considered negligence per se. Where liability is bottomed on negligence, contributory negligence and assumption of risk are valid defenses, and one who participates in the prohibited activity cannot recover.

These statutes read together by their very terms impose a standard of conduct and impose an absolute liability. Therefore, should the plaintiff show that the activity occurred, contributory negligence may not bar any recovery.

Ohio has several such absolute liability statutes. One is Section 3719.30, prohibiting the deposit of poison on a street, common alley or in another’s yard. It concludes: “Whoever violates this section shall be liable to the person injured for all damages sustained thereby.” This statute, however, has never been interpreted in any injury case, so it gives us no guideline for decision.

A second statute has been interpreted in cases similar or analogous to the case at bar. The so-called “Dog-Bite” statute is an absolute liability statute. The old form of the statute, Section 5838 Gen. Code, provided:

“A dog that chases, worries, injures or kills a sheep * * * or person, can be killed at any time or place * * * The owner or harborer of such dog shall be liable to a person damaged for the injury done.”

The Dog Bite Statute said simply “liable” which is exactly the words used in § 4955.34. In Bevin v. Griffiths, 44 Ohio App. 94, 184 N.E. 401 (Lorain County Court of Appeals, 1932), a domestic servant in the household, who herself fed and tended the dog for the owner, was injured by the dog. The servant sued the owner, under the Ohio statute. The defense contended that the servant, who was a harborer of the dog, could not take advantage of the strict liability against the owner. The Court of Appeals, at page 98, 184 N.E. at page 403, held that strict liability must be applied :

“There is no language in the statute that tends to indicate an intention that a servant shall not be considered *986 ‘a person’ to whom a right of action is given by the statute.
“In the case at bar, we sympathize with counsel for defendant in their contention that the Legislature did not intend by said statute to make the owner or harborer of a dog liable to his servant for the consequences of an injury caused by a dog in the manner in which this injury was caused, but whether an owner or harborer of a dog should be liable for an injury inflicted or caused by his dog under any and all circumstances is a legislative and not a judicial question.”

In Siegfried v. Everhart, 55 Ohio App. 351, 9 N.E.2d 891 (Summit County Court of Appeals, 1936) where contributory negligence was urged as a defense to the old Dog Bite Statute, the Court said at 353, 9 N.E.2d at 892:

“The language of the statute is plain and unambiguous and contains no such exception. The general rule is that, where the Legislature has made no exception to the positive terms of a statute, the presumption is that it intended to make none, and in such case it is not the province of a court to introduce an exception by construction.”

The Supreme Court of Ohio passed on this same statute in Dragonette v. Brandes, 135 Ohio St. 223, 20 N.E.2d 367 (1939). In that case plaintiff went between two fighting dogs to separate them, trying to protect his son’s dog. Defendant’s dog bit off part of his thumb. Plaintiff recovered in the trial court. The Appellate Court reversed, saying that the statute “[did] not contemplate liability under the facts of this case where * * * the plaintiff was at fault in bringing the dog bite upon himself.”

The Supreme Court reversed, quoting the language that the owner “shall be liable to a person damaged for the injury done” and saying:

That section imposes an absolute liability upon the owner of a dog, and scienter, fault, negligence or contributory negligence are not involved in a proceeding thereunder.” 135 Ohio St. 224, 20 N.E.2d 368 (Emphasis added)

The Dog Bite Statute has since been amended by ORC § 955.28 to say that the owner or keeper is liable “unless such damage or injury was to the body or property of a person who, at the time such damage or injuries were sustained, was committing a trespass on the property of the owner, or was teasing, tormenting, or abusing such dog on the owner’s property.”

It is notable that under § 955.28 which spells out certain exceptions, that plaintiffs in Dragonette and Bevin would still recover.

The amendment to the statute has relevance on the point of statutory construction. The rule of statutory construction which obtains in Ohio is that if the language used is' clear and unambiguous, then no interpretation is necessary. The function of the Court is not to determine what the Legislature might have intended to enact if it had thought about an exception, but rather to determine the meaning of the language of the statute.

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356 F. Supp. 984, 69 Ohio Op. 2d 344, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glinsey-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-co-ohnd-1973.