Gray v. Gibson

12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 673, 22 Ohio Dec. 326, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division
DecidedFebruary 28, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 673 (Gray v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Gibson, 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 673, 22 Ohio Dec. 326, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 14 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

I may say to counsel that I spent the best part of the night working on this problem, because it is an important question.

Whenever a judge is unable to satisfy his mind in preparing a charge to submit the case to the-jury, .it is pretty clear that under such circumstances there isn’t anything to submit, and it becomes the duty of the judge then to decide the matter.

[674]*674I have reached the conclusion at a very considerable effort made in studying the matter, that this plaintiff has no right to recover, and, for the purpose of making the record, I will give my views.

Plaintiff alleges that the defendants are the county commissioners, and that this action is brought against the .defendants in their official capacity as the board of county commissioners of the county.

He avers that on the 25th day of July, 1910, while he was in the lawful and peaceable pursuit of his business, and being in the front yard.of the place of residence at 518 West Broad street in the city of Columbus, in the county of Franklin, he was injured by one or more persons who were a part of a large collection of people who had previously assembled together in the immediate vicinity of said place for an unlawful purpose and with the intention of doing damage to and of injuring certain people whose names are unknown to this plaintiff, and who were then and there passing along and upon the said street in front of the above mentioned place of residence, and also fpr the purpose of doing damage to and injuring people whose names are unknown to this plaintiff, who were then and there riding upon the cars of the Columbus Railway & Light Company, which were passing on the said street in front of the residence named and which said people so assembled together were then and there pretending to exercise correctional powers over said persons who were so passing along and upon said street and who were so riding upon the cars passing on the street, by violence, and without authority of law, and contrary to law.

It is alleged that all of these facts were well known to the defendants, that is the 'county commissioners, and that defendants neglected and failed to use and employ the reasonable and proper means at their disposal to protect the plaintiff from the injury.

The question is whether plaintiff is entitled to maintain this action upon the pleadings and the evidence offered in support thereof.

It appears that about twenty-five or thirty persons had 'collected- together' near á bill board and near .a saloon on the op[675]*675posite side of the street from where the plaintiff was sitting out in front of the place where he took his meals. The evidence is that the plaintiff was struck on his knee while sitting down at the place stated. No one testified that he saw the piece of brick which struck plaintiff when it was thrown or saw where it came from, or even saw it at all until after it had struck the plaintiff. All testify .that it came from the opposite side of the street from where plaintiff was sitting, that is, from the south, and that they heard a crash in a street car which was moving along between plaintiff and the crowd on the opposite side of the street. The inference is that because of the pending strike and because of the operation of the street cars during the said strike, that the small crowd of persons collected together on the opposite side of the street from where plaintiff was sitting was antagonistic to the railway company and to the persons operating the ear. The evidence discloses that there were cries of “scabs” made to those running the car. There is no positive evidence that any one in this collection of persons threw the piece of brick which hit the plaintiff. There is only a possible inference that such was the case.

The original enactment for the suppression of mob violence was no doubt designed to make the county liable for acts of violence unlawfully and intentionally exercised by them against the body of .the person whom they intended to damage or injure.

The original act provided that any person assaulted by a mob and suffering lynching at their hands, may recover damages. It now reads “A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover from the county in which such assault is made.”

Th’e statute provides- that an act of violence by a mob upon the body of any person shall, constitute a lynching. Now to constitute a mob, there must either be a purpose and intent of the collection of the people to damage or injure someone, or there must be a pretense by a collection of persons to exercise correctional power over other persons by violence and without authority of law to give rise to any liability in favor of one assaulted.

It is clear, therefore, that to give rise to any liability on the part of the county, there must be either the intent to injure, or [676]*676to • exercise correctional power over persons by violence; and lynching can only be committed within the statute when it is accompanied or characterized by either one of these purposes and intent.

The plaintiff can recover under Section. 6283 only when he has suffered injury from a mob attempting to lynch another person. There can be no question about that. It is the plain reading of the language of the statute, and lynching is defined in the first section of this mob statute. I may say that lynching has always been understood to mean a certain thing, and it has'been given a qualified meaning in this statute in order to cover cases where the person who is assaulted and attempted to be lynched does not suffer death. In other words, a recovery can be had by the third person only when under Section 6281 a person has been assaulted and lynched by a mob under such circumstances as will give rise to an action in favor of such person so assaulted, and not otherwise, unless it may be concluded that by the terms of Section 6283 he may recover when a collection of persons intending to damage or injure anyone, or when pretending to exercise correctional, power over other persons by violence and without authority of law, which may be considered a mob, "are attempting to lynch another person.”

Now that statute giving a third person a right to recover is peculiar. He may recover when anyone has been assaulted and lynched, or when a mob, within the meaning of the statute, has assembled and assaults a person, or attempts to lynch someone. The lifaitation of the third person’s right of recovery seems to be only when such a mob has merely attempted to lynch another person. Now, there isn’t anything of that hind in this case.

The right of the third party to recover under Section 6283 being dependent solely upon an attempt being made by a mob to lynch another person, such right of action can not be maintained, unless there is at least an attempt by a mob, having “the intent to damage or injure a particular person,” or pretending to exercise correctional power over other persons by violence, to commit an act of violence upon the body of any person.

[677]*677Chapter 20 of the code, and that is this moh statute, must be taken and considered together as it was in its original enactment in order to arrive at its correct meaning.

As originally enacted April 10, 1896 (92 O.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 673, 22 Ohio Dec. 326, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-gibson-ohctcomplfrankl-1912.