Greer v. Board of Commissioners

169 N.E. 709, 33 Ohio App. 539, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 330
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 709 (Greer v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Greer v. Board of Commissioners, 169 N.E. 709, 33 Ohio App. 539, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 330 (Ohio Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Houck, J.

This case comes into this court on error from the common pleas court of Knox county, where the plaintiff in error, James A. Greer, administrator, recovered a judgment against the defendant in error in the sum of $1.00 for damages alleged to have been caused plaintiff by reason of an accident wherein plaintiff’s decedent was killed. Suit was for $30,000. The parties hereafter will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

The case was tried below to a jury from Delaware county, and the trial consumed five days, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff in the said sum of $1.00.

Decedent was a young man 22 years of age. Decedent’s parents and brothers and sisters suryive.

*541 While numerous grounds are stated in the petition in error, as reasons for a reversal of the judgment entered below, yet but one claimed error was urged in oral argument, to wit: “That the judgment is inadequate and against the manifest weight of the evidence. ’ ’

This action was instituted under favor of Section 10772, General Code, which reads:

“Such actions shall be for the exclusive benefit of the wife, or husband, and children, or if there be neither of them, then of the parents and next of kin of the person whose death was so caused:
“It must be brought in the name of the personal representative of the deceased person and the jury may give such damages as it may think proportioned to the pecuniary injury resulting from such death, to the persons, respectively, for whose benefit the action was brought.”

The verdict of the jury was as follows: “We, the jury, being duly impaneled and sworn find the issues, in this case, in favor of the plaintiff and assess the amount due to the plaintiff from defendants, the said The Board of County Commissioners of Knox County, Ohio, at the sum on One Dollar ($1.00).”

The legal effect of such verdict, as it appears to us, is:

(a) That the defendant was negligent and the same was the proximate cause of the death.
(b) That the decedent committed or omitted no act or acts on his part, which caused his death.
(c) That the damages awarded the plaintiff ($1.00) are adequate.
“Where an issue of fact is submitted to a jury, and, by their verdict, they find for the plaintiff or *542 defendant, such verdict is to be regarded as a finding upon the issue joined between the parties.” Fries v. Mack, 33 Ohio St., 52.

Learned counsel for the defendant in their brief say: “We must remember that this jury was composed of residents of another county (Delaware), that they sat for five long days and listened carefully to all the testimony, that they had the opportunity of seeing all the witnesses and weighing their testimony, and if they felt that there was a liability on the part of the defendants and that the relatives had been damaged there was no reason why they would not have so found. There can be no other inference from the verdict than that the jury found that there was no liability and simply became more than generous and returned the dollar verdict that the costs might be paid.”

We cannot acquiesce in this line of reasoning, and the conclusion reached by counsel for defendant.

It certainly will not be seriously disputed that the jury by its verdict found that the defendant was negligent in some one or more of the particulars charged in the amended petition, and that such negligence was the direct and proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s decedent.

The jury did not find that the death was caused directly or indirectly by decedent’s own carelessness and negligence; and by this verdict it did not find that he was guilty of any negligence directly contributing to his death. Yet under these findings a verdict of only $1.00 was returned for the death of Richard Dale Vincent, a young man of twenty-two years and in good health.

The case before us may be clearly stated: If the *543 defendants were negligent and decedent’s death was caused as a direct and proximate result thereof, while in the exercise of due care, then a recovery should be had by plaintiff to fully and completely compensate the beneficiaries of Richard Dale Vincent for such death directly resulting from said negligence.

The jury by its verdict found the plaintiff should recover, and the trial judge by sustaining it thereby approved same.

If the record is truthful, and we believe it is, then the defendant is satisfied with the verdict of the jury, because no motion for a new trial was filed in the court below and no cross-petition in error filed here by the defendant.

Is the verdict and judgment for $1.00, in a death claim such as the one now in review, adequate and sufficient, and is it responsive to the record facts and the law pertinent to them?

In the books we find that damages are defined as the pecuniary compensation, recompense, or satisfaction for an injury sustained, or, as sometimes expressed, the pecuniary consequences which the law imposes for the breach of some duty or the violation of some right.

It is a sound and just principle that, where one wrongfully or negligently does an act which in its consequences is injurious to another, he is liable for the damage caused by such wrongful act.

Only nominal damages were allowed. It is usual, where nominal damages are awarded, that the amount is fixed at $1.00, as in this case.

This is a death claim, and it is hard to conceive how a jury, under the facts before it, and after it *544 had found all of the issuable facts in favor of the plaintiff, could have reached the conclusion that $1.00 was the full and just amount due the beneficiaries of the decedent. Certainly the rights of those entitled to be compensated for the negligent and unlawful taking of the life of Richard Dale Vincent were either ignored or lost sight of.

We can derive no benefit from an attempt to speculate upon how the jury reached its verdict. What was said and done in the jury room, or what was in the minds of the jury, we do not know. Nevertheless it did return a verdict for $1.00 as the full and complete recoverable damages for the unlawful death of plaintiff’s decedent.

Learned counsel for the defendant urge in their brief:

“We insist that upon a careful reading of the evidence, in this case, there was none upon which a jury could render a verdict for damages.
“In this case there is no evidence that the deceased ever furnished any financial aid to parents or brothers,” etc.

Our reading of the evidence does not lead us to concur in the statements thus made, but rather leads to the contrary.

The proven facts, when measured by the rules of law laid down in the first syllabus of the case of Cincinnati Street Ry. Co. v. Altemeier, Admr.,

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 709, 33 Ohio App. 539, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-board-of-commissioners-ohioctapp-1927.