Harpham v. Northern Ohio Trac. Co.

16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 253, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 257
CourtSummit Circuit Court
DecidedApril 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 253 (Harpham v. Northern Ohio Trac. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harpham v. Northern Ohio Trac. Co., 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 253, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 257 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

McCARTY, J.

This cause comes into this court on a petition in error to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas for alleged error occurring in the trial of this case in that court. The action was to recover damages for the alleged negligence of the defendant below, and defendant in error here. It was tried at the April term of the court in 1903, to a jury. On motion of the defendant^ at the conclusion of the testimony, the jury was instructed to return a verdict for defendant, which it did, to which exceptions were taken. The cause of action stated in the petition below was as follows so far as I need read it herein:

“At the date next hereinafter named the defendant owned and operated a line of street railway in the city of Akron in said county and in and over the various streets and public ways thereof, and which said railway was then and there equipped with tracks, single as to some streets and double as to others, upon and over which tracks the defendant used cars for the carriage of its passengers, propelled by electricity as the motive power thereof. One of the streets so occupied and used by the defendant with its said tracks and ears moving on and over the same, at said date, was East Market street, so-called, upon which at the point next hereinafter named the said defendant used and operated a double tracked railroad for its said purpose.
“At a point on said East Market street two other public streets of said city, to wit, Arlington street and Kent street, come into the same from the north and intersect it at a common center, and at which point there is a sharp descent on said East Market street from west to east.
“Among the cars so owned and operated by the defendant, and propelled as aforesaid, at the date hereinafter named, was car No. 79, which car was at the time provided and equipped with a gong or alarm, by the seasonable and proper use of which the motorman in charge of the running of said ear could warn travelers upon the highways and streets over which the same was run, against danger to be apprehended from coming in contact with said car, and which gong or alarm on said last-named ear, was at the date next hereinafter named under the sole control of the said motorman engaged in running said car.
[255]*255"Said last-named ear was, at tbe date next herein named, also equipped and provided with an appliance called a fender, which was at the time in like manner under the exclusive control of the motorman then engaged in running said car. Said fender was attached to the forward end of said car, extending across its entire front, and when not needed for the protection of travelers in dangerous proximity to said car, the same was raised and suspended at some distance above the level of the said street car tracks. But the said motorman could at will, and immediately in case of necessity, lower the same to or near the level of said tracks, and thus and thereby could catch or pick up any person who might be on said tracks in front of said car while in motion and hence in danger of being run over by the same, and carry such person safely and keep him from being run over by the wheels of said car, until the same could be stopped and such person rescued from peril.
"It was the duty of said motorman in charge of said car to sound said alarm or gong at all times when travelers upon the streets of said city traversed by said car were, or were likely to be, upon or so near said tracks as to be in danger of coming in contact with said car while in motion, and to be vigilant and watchful to discover and warn such travelers in time to avoid such danger of collision with said car, and to lower the said fender in all cases when the said car was in dangerous proximity to travelers upon said streets so traversed by said tracks, the use of electricity as a motive power in propelling such cars being the use of a highly dangerous agency upon streets and public thoroughfares traveled also by pedestrians, animals and vehicles.
“ On September 25, A. D., 1901, the plaintiff was lawfully upon said Bast Market street, and was then crossing the same from the southerly to the northerly side thereof, at or about the said point of intersection of Arlington and Kent streets with the same. At the same time said car No. 79, propelled as aforesaid, was coming down said hill on Bast Market street from west to east, in charge of the motorman and other agents and servants of said defendant, and equipped with the gong and fender aforesaid.
"At the time the plaintiff was crossing said street, as aforesaid, there were, congregated and moving around a watering trough located on the northerly side of said East Market street, at or near said point of intersection, and in and upon said Bast Market street, immediately in front of and near to the plaintiff at the time, a number of teams, wagons and carts, whereby he was obstructed from hearing the approach of said car No. 79, as it came down said hill, until too late to prevent or avoid [256]*256its striking bim, as hereinafter set fo'rth, although he was not careless or heedless in that respect, and his not hearing the approach of said car was not owing to any negligence of his.
“The said motorman in charge of the running of said car as aforesaid, had a clear and unobstructed view of the track in front of him at the time, down said hill, for a long way before reaching the point where said car struck this plaintiff, as hereinafter alleged, and to and beyond such point. The plaintiff, without negligence on his part, and in the exercise of due and reasonable care for his own safety in crossing said East Market street, as aforesaid, came upon said track of said defendant in front of said care at the time approaching him, but which he did not see or hear, for the reasons above set forth, in time to prevent his being struck by the same; and said ear in coming down said hill then and thereupon struck this plaintiff and knocked him down upon said tracks, and ran over him with its wheels, whereby his right leg was bruised, crushed, mangled and cut off below the knee, and by reason thereof he was thereafter compelled to have the same amputated above the knee.
' ‘ The said motorman in charge of the running of said car as aforesaid, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have seen, and, the plaintiff says, did see, him (that is to say, this plaintiff, upon the said tracks) in time to warn him by sounding said gong, so that he could have got off from said track, and so have avoided said collision. But wholly neglecting his duty in that respect, the said motorman did not, nor did any other officer or servant of the defendant, sound said gong, or by outcry or otherwise warn or apprise the plaintiff of his dangerous position and proximity to said car at any time, nor did said motorman or any one check the'speed of said car prior to its striking this plaintiff, but unlawfully and negligently ran into and injured him, as above set forth.
“While said car was approaching the plaintiff as' aforesaid, and ever after its collision with him had become inevitable, the said motorman, seeing the plaintiff was upon said track in front of him, had time to lower said fender, and could have lowered it, and thereby could have caught the plaintiff and prevented him from going under the wheels of' said car, whereby the latter could have saved his leg and escaped bodily injury.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 253, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harpham-v-northern-ohio-trac-co-ohcirctsummit-1904.