Hunt v. Caldwell

22 Ohio C.C. 283, 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 562
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. 283 (Hunt v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Caldwell, 22 Ohio C.C. 283, 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 562 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Hull, J.

This action is brought by Hunt, receiver of the Clover Teaf railroad, so-called, to reverse a judgment of the court of common pleas. Prank H. Caldwell, the plaintiff below, defendant in error here, was a brakeman in the employ of the Clover Teaf road on and prior to October 14, 1896. On that day he was injured by falling from the top of a car, where he was engaged in the performance of his duties. Por the injuries then sustained he brought suit, claiming negligence on the part of the company in the construction of a brake. The case was tried once in the common pleas and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff for something over $3,000 A motion for a new trial was then allowed. The case was tried again and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff for $4,000. After the latter trial a motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered against the railroad company; to which judgment, error is prosecuted in this court.

[284]*284The negligence complained of is, that certain parts of the brake were improperly constructed and in a defective condition at the time of the accident and that this caused the injury that the plaintiff below suffered. The things particularly complained of were, that the .brake-chain was somewhat too long and that the eye-bolt which holds the chain and to which the chain is fastened was too large and too long and that, on thac account, the brake was defective and that the chain wrapped around the eye-bolt and slipped off while the brake.was being opened by Caldwell, and that he was in that way jerked and thrown off the car.

The accident happened at the city of Marion, Indiana, about ■•daylight on the morning of October 14, 1896. Caldwell was the headbrakeinan on the train, and as they were passing through the city of Marion, it was noticed that he did not open •a gate, which it was his duty to open, and, on investigation being made, it was found that he had disappeared from the train. Search was made and he could not be found, after which the train proceeded eastward without him, and he was afterwards found lying near the track in a street of Marion, in an unconscious condition, he having been injured about the head by his fall from the train. The conductor of the train went over the train after they left Marion, and a witness by. the name of Danner, who was also a brakeman on the train, testified that at the town of Vanburen, about ten miles from Marion, he looked over the train. The lantern of Caldwell was found on the fifth car from the locomotive and it was supposed that he fell from that car.

There were no reasons discovered at the time of the accident, that is, no reasons made known, accounting for the accident. for his falling off the train. Mr. Danner, the witness to whom I have referred, was at that time in the employ of the ■ company, but some three days after that he was discharged from the service of the railroad company. He testified that he looked over the car on the morning of the accident and he claims thac he found heel-marks or scratches on the top of the fifth car indicating that Caldwell had slipped on that car. He also claims that he discovered at that time that the eye-bolt was too long and the chain somewhat too long. He said nothing to [285]*285the. conductor or to the engineer, or to any other person, about these things, if he discovered them as he claims to have done. He, himself, claims only that he did say, that he could tell, or knew, what was the cause of Caldwell falling off the train. This is denied by the engineer, and the conductor, to whom he claims he stated it, and he does not claim that he stated to any person upon this train what he says he discovered at that time, nor, so far as the record discloses, did he say anything at all about it to any one until about the time this action was •commenced, which was some fifteen months after Caldwell’s injury.

Caldwell’s injuries, as it appears from the record, of course were not fatal, and he afterwards recovered so as to be about, but he claims to have sustained serious injuries.

Danner’s deposition was taken, ad he testifies that at Vanburen, Indiana, shortly after Caldwell disappeared — after it was found that he had fallen from the tráin — he went back ■over the train, and that the fifth car from the engine was a double-decked stock car, that being the car upon which it was said that Caldwell’s lantern was found, and he says that he examined the brake and turned it and the chain appeared to be somewhat longer than they usually were, and he says further that the eye-bolt was larger and longer that they usually were; he testifies that it was larger than was necessary and longer than necessary. Upon that being ruled out and he being pressed, upon cross-examination, he stated that he did not measure the length of the eye-bolt, but should think it was four and a half inches long, and he says that he tried the b¡ake and when he turned it the chain would wrap around the eye-bolt and after he had given it a few turns the chain would be thrown off from the eye-bolt and that would jerk him off the brake, and the claim of the plaintiff below was that it was in this way he was jerked off the train.

The chief ground of complaint here is, that the verdict is not sustained' by sufficient evidence, is contrary to law, and, further, that there is no evidence in the record to show negligence on the part of the railroad company, or to show if there was any defect in this brake, that Caldwell’s injury was ■ caused by such defect.

[286]*286Caldwell himself does not testify to any defect in the brake-of this car. No witness testifies upon the subject except Mr. Danner. Caldwell testifies that he was turning the brake on the car from which he fell, which appears to have been the fifth one from the engine, and he says: “The last I remember doing on the car is that I gave the brake a turn or two of the wheel to take the slack out of the chain,'then I applied my strength to the wheel to turn it tight as much as I could, and when it became tight, as it required all the strength I had, something gave way and gave me a terrible jerk and I fell off the side of the car. That is the last I remember anything about it.”

So that, as appears, he had no knowledge of the cause of this jerk which he says threw him off the car. Danner testifies that the dog was in the ratchet and the brake set on this car when he went back there.

Danner was asked whether he examined the eye-bolt, and he says “I did after I found out how the brake acted.”

“Q. How long was the eye-bolt?” “A. I didn’t measure.”

“Q. Well, about?” “A. Well, sir, I should judge that-the entire bolt was about — oh, four inches and half.”

“Q. How long are eye-bolts usually on other cars?” “A. Well, it is not necessary for them to be over three inches.”

We think the record shows that this eye-bolt must have been at least three inches and a half long to perform the service for which it was intended.

Then he was asked this: “I am not asking what is necessary, I z.m asking you how long they usually are?” “A. I never measured them.”

“Q. Then you never measured any other eye-bolts?” “A. No, sir.”

“Q And you don’t know from actual examination how long the usual eye-bolts on cars are, do you?”“ “A. Well, I know from experience they are not all the same length.”

“Q. That is, some are longer and some shorter?” “A.

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22 Ohio C.C. 283, 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-caldwell-ohiocirct-1901.