Hamilton v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.

4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249
CourtLorain County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 25, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249 (Hamilton v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co., 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

This case is submitted to the court oh motion to set aside the verdict of the jury and to grant a new trial. At the trial of the case the defendant submitted the case to the jury upon the testimony of the plaintiff, and without argument. The facts about, which there was positive testimony are not much in dispute, and briefly stated they are as follows:

The defendant railway company owned and operated a gravity switch-yard at Collinwood, Ohio; in that siviteh-yard was a track known as track number twelve, which, so far as the part involved in this case is concerned, had a slight descending grade to the westward; said track to the west connecting with a lead track, and was slightly lower at the westerly end connecting with said lead track than the easterly part of said track back twenty-five or more car lengths from where it connected with said lead track.'

[250]*250On the night in question a flat ear loaded with steel rails, which so far as the positive testimony is concerned, was comparatively a new car on that day, was standing on said track number twelve, some four or five car lengths east of its intersection with said lead track; said ear was not attached to any other cars, and it was either held in place by its brake being .set or because the track was level enough for it to stand there without running to the westward; and considering the grade of the track and what happened afterwards, the most natural inference is that the brake on said car was set; but there is no direct evidence that the brake was properly set, that is, set so that moving the ear would not release it, even if it was not defective.

Soon after dark a certain switching crew, desiring to use the west end of track number twelve, backed some twenty cars and a caboose, which was on the easterly end of said twenty car train, up track twelve and against this ear, and the brakeman, who without orders from any one else," but upon his own discretion used said track, testified that he did not let off the brake of said flat car when it was backed up, and that from the grinding noise when it was backed up, he is sure that the brake was set, although he at no time examined said brake, and says that he at no time released it or set it.

He further testifies that after the car was backed up some twenty car lengths, and the caboose was coupled to it, he cut oil the rest of the train on the west, except said caboose and four cars, and left said caboose and said four cars attached to said flat car, with no other brake set except the one on said flat car, and was engaged in making up his train for about fifteen minutes, and then the train as made up was backed in on track number twelve and attached to said four ears and caboose, and that he then uncoupled the caboose from said flat car and the train pulled out to the west.

The plaintiff’s decedent, Harley W. Hamilton, was then upon a switch engine headed eastward on a track a little to the west of where said track number twelve connects with said lead track; and immediately upon the passing of said train west, said, switch [251]*251engine on which the said Harley W. Hamilton was standing moved in an easterly direction and on to said lead track and along the same, and when it got to the point where said track number twelve leads into said lead track a collision occurred between said switch engine and said flat car which was moving of its own momentum in a westerly direction about two miles an hour, and in said collision said Harley W. Hamilton was killed.

With the exception of what has been said, so far as the evidence is concerned, nothing is known as to the actual condition of said brake before the collision. At the time of the collision the load of rails on said flat car shifted and broke the brake-staff of said car and detached it from the car.

On cross-examination of one of the plaintiff’s witnesses the defendant brought out the fact, that within a few hours after the accident said car was inspected by one of the inspectors of the defendant company, and he testified' that the car was a comparatively new one, and that with the exception of the broken brake-staff, the brake was in good order and not out of repair in any particular.

The important issue in the case was as to whether or not the brake on said car was defective, for if it was defective, and that defect caused the collision, the defendant having failed to introduce any testimony showing that it used due diligence to ascertain the existence of such defect, then under the provisions of Section 3365-21, Revised Statutes, the company in law knew of such defect, and was therefore negligent.

At the trial of the case the court felt that under the scintilla rule in this state, the question of whether or not said brake was defective should be submitted to the judgment of the jury; and under the charge the jury must have found that the brake was defective. And now the question for the court is, whether or not that finding is so clearly wrong as to justify the court in setting aside the verdict.

The only negligence submitted to the jury in this case, was the use by the defendant of said flat ear when the brake was in a defective condition.

[252]*252There is no direct evidence in support of such negligence. That is, no witness who saw and examined the brake has testified that the same was defective, and no particular defect in this particular brake was pointed out or even hinted at in the evidence. The circumstances, and the only circumstances in the case which justified the inference that said brake was defective, is the fact that the car escaped and ran down the track, and that would have little force and effect, unless it was a fact that when said car was left the brake thereon was properly set.

If the brake was set, ’ then thé car having escaped so soon after the train left it, the inference would be natural that there was some defect in the brake, or that the brake was not properly set, or that some one released the brake.

On the other hand, if the brake was examined immediately or soon after the accident, and found not defective then, the inference would be just as strong that the brake was not defective before that time, in fact it would be a more natural inference, because if soon after the accident the brake was found to be not defective, it very likely was not defective a few minutes before, while there might be some circumstance, other than a defect in the brake, which would account for its releasing, such as the improper setting of it.

The burden of proving that the brake was defective is upon the plaintiff, and that is so, notwithstanding the provisions of the statute hereinbefore referred to. Under that statute a prima facie case of negligence is only established when “the fact of such defect shall be made to appear in the trial. ’ ’

In a very recent case where this statute is considered, it is said that—

“The rule is, that he who affirms must prove, and when the whole of the evidence upon the issue involved, leaves the case in equipoise, the party affirming must fail.” 74 O. S., page —; Ohio Law Reporter Supplement, page 67.

‘ ‘ Where an injury may have been caused by one of two things, one of which might have happened through causes without negligence on the part of the defendant, the jury will not be per[253]*253mitted to guess that it happened on account of the other.” 13 Ohio Decisions, page 208.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-lake-shore-michigan-southern-railway-co-ohctcompllorain-1906.