Hubbard v. Cleveland Columbus & Cincinnati Highway, Inc.

76 N.E.2d 721, 81 Ohio App. 445, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 78, 37 Ohio Op. 279, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 607
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 20, 1947
Docket3999
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 76 N.E.2d 721 (Hubbard v. Cleveland Columbus & Cincinnati Highway, Inc.) 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
Hubbard v. Cleveland Columbus & Cincinnati Highway, Inc., 76 N.E.2d 721, 81 Ohio App. 445, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 78, 37 Ohio Op. 279, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 607 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

OPINION

By THE COURT

This is an appeal on law. from the judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Franklin County, Ohio. This is an action for wrongful death, brought by Blanche Hubbard, Administratrix of the estate of Maynard H. Hubbard, her husband, who was killed in a collision between two tractor-trailer outfits. The essential facts appear in the special -verdict of the jury.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case the defendant rested. Upon request of the defendant the Court gave before argument special instructions to the jury. At the conclusion of ail the evidence the defendant requested the Court to direct the jury to give a special verdict in writing upon all of the issues which the case presented, as provided by §11426-16 GC. The plaintiff submitted a form of special verdict in narrative form. The form of special verdict submitted by the defendant contained interrogatories.

The special verdict returned by the jury is as follows:

*80 “We the jury in this case, by the concurrence of nine or more of our number, as shown by those signing below, do find the facts in this case, by «the greater weight of the evidence as follows:

“On February 15, 1945, about 3:30 o’clock A. M. there was a collision between two trucking outfits ‘on State Highway No. 42 a short distance north of the city of Mansfield, Ohio, as a result of which, Maynard H. Hubbard, the plaintiff’s decedent, was killed.

“One of the trucking outfits, consisting of a tractor and one trailer, was driven by said Maynard H. Hubbard, and was traveling on said highway No. 42 in a northerly direction. Said highway No. 42 runs in a north and south direction; .it is about :31 feet in width of the improved portion, which is divided into three lanes of traffic at the place of the accident, which Janes are marked by painted lines on the roadway and each lane .is about 10 feet in width. The lane on the west side of said highway is for south moving traffic; the lane on the east side .is for north moving traffic, and there is a center lane.

‘»At the time of the collision there was a coating of ice over the improved portion of the roadway. The trucking outfit of the defendant consisted of a tractor and two trailers, was being driven by Jack Finn, an employee of the defendant, he then being engaged upon the business of the defendant, and said trucking outfit was being driven in a southerly direction on said highway No. 42.

“The plaintiff has not proven that the defendant’s tractor or trailers were being operated on the wrong side of the road .at the time of collision with the tractor and trailer being driven by.Mr. Hubbard.” (emphasis added)

The Court rendered judgment on the verdict' in favor of the defendant. Plaintiff-appellant assigns as error:

“1. That the special verdict failed to find any ultimate facts giving rise to the accident; did not determine proximate cause and was not sufficiently complete upon which a judgment could have been entered.

“2. That the Court of Common Pleas erred in entering judgment in favor of defendant on the special verdict of the jury.

“3. That defendant, by its counsel, was guilty of misconduct in submitting special instructions to the jury dealing with .legal principles when they knew that a special verdict in the mase would be requested by them.

*81 “4. That defendant, by its counsel, was guilty of misconduct in treating tlje jury to a lunch.

“5. The Court erred in not more fully submitting the issues of fact to the jury.

“6. For errors apparent on the face of the record.”

The appellant in her first assignment of error strongly contends that the jury failed to find any ultimate facts and did nop determine proximate cause; that the finding of the jury that the plaintiff failed to prove that the collision occurred “on the wrong side of the road” was a conclusion of law. Sec. 11420-14 GC, provides:

“A special verdict is one by which the jury finds facts only as established by the evidence; and it must so present such facts, but not the evidence to prove them, that nothing remains for the court but to draw from the facts found, conclusions of law.”

Does the special verdict meet the requirements of §11420-14 GC? The two charges of negligence made against the defendant on which evidence was offered and the case submitted to the jury were: That the defendant “failed to keep said tractor and trailers under control,” and, that the defendant “failed to keep said tractor and trailers on its right side of the road, but instead thereof, it came across to the left side of the road and struck the truck operated by plaintiff’s decedent near his right curb, being defendant’s left side of the road.” The highway on which the trucks were traveling was a three-lane highway and properly marked as such. Under the provisions of §6307-33 (b) GC, neither driver was permitted under the law to use the center lane except under certain conditions, which it is conceded do not exist in this case. The plaintiff based her action on the claim that her decedent was traveling north in the east lane of said highway at the time of the collision, and that, if the collision happened on that side of the highway, the defendant’s tractor-trailer would have been traveling on the wrong side of the highway. The only place where the collision could have occurred which would have permitted the plaintiff to recover was in the east lane; if the collision occurred in the center or west lane, obviously, under the pleadings and the evidence, the plaintiff had no right of recovery. Throughout the trial the expression “the wrong-side of the road” was frequently used to refer to the east or northbound lane-of traffic; the location was definite. Under the charge of negligence and the evidence it could mean nothing but *82 the east lane of traffic. In the form of special verdict submitted by the plaintiff is found this language:

“That defendant’s said tractor and two trailers, or a part thereof, thereupon came over onto the wrong or its left side of the road and into the most easterly lane occupied by the vehicle driven by Maynard Hubbard, deceased.” (emphasis added.)

In the special verdict the jury found that the plaintiff did not prove that the collision occurred “on the wrong side of the road”; this was tantamount to a finding that the collision did not occur in the east or northbound lane of traffic as claimed by the plaintiff. This was the ultimate fact which the plaintiff was required to prove in order to recover. In our opinion the finding was not a conclusion of law nor a mixed finding of fact and law.

The jury having found against the plaintiff on the one determinative ultimate fact, the jury had discharged its full duty. No other finding was required. The jury was not required in view of its special finding of fact, to go further and determine the proximate cause. Where there is a judgment for the defendant, proximate cause is not a necessary element of finding in the special verdict. If there is no finding of fact in the special verdict from which the Court could conclude the defendant was negligent, the element of proximate cause is clearly immaterial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 N.E.2d 721, 81 Ohio App. 445, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 78, 37 Ohio Op. 279, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-cleveland-columbus-cincinnati-highway-inc-ohioctapp-1947.