Joseph v. Larkworthy

15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 146
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561 (Joseph v. Larkworthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph v. Larkworthy, 15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 146 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Foran, J.

This case came into this- court on error from the municipal court. The parties will be here referred to in the same relation in which they stood in the court below.

The plaintiff, Fred Joseph, was the owner of a large touring locomobile seventeen feet long and weighing approximately two and one-quarter tons. The defendant, Fred J. Larkworthy, was the owner of an automobile of considerable less weight and size. During the afternoon of January 26, 1913, the plaintiff’s car, in charge of one Sherbondy, his servant, was' being driven westerly on Quincy avenue, an avenue running in a generally east and west direction, and a public thoroughfare in the city of Cleveland. Quincy avenue crosses and intersects East 79th street, also a public thoroughfare running in a generally north and south direction in said city. As the plaintiff’s car approached East 79th street the defendant, driving his- car in a northerly direction, approached Quincy avenue. Both cars reached the intersection of these highways at approximately the same time; both attempted to cross at practically the same moment, and' as they apparently were going at right angles, the inevitable happened. The plaintiff’s car was overturned and was badly injured. The defendant’s car was also damaged, but not so seriously but that it was able to limp pff and away from the scene of the collision on its own power.

The plaintiff began an action in the municipal court, alleging in the statement of claim that the collision was caused solely by the negligence of defendant. In a statement of defense the deféndant denied that he was negligent, and averred that the collision was wholly due to the negligence of the driver of the plaintiff’s car, and by way of counter-claim he asked damages from the plaintiff for the injuries sustained by his car. This' was to be expected, for in a collision between two motor vehicles the man who is willing to admit that his own negligence was the sole cause of the collision has not yet been discovered.

' Over two hundred pages of testimony were taken, all of which has been read and considered by the court.

The collision was witnessed by a number of persons on the street and in adjacent windows; but as the presence of an auto[563]*563mobile on the streets is no longer a novel or an unusual thing, persons are not paying much attention to them, and the testimony of onlookers as to what occurred just before a collision is of little or no value.

• Among other things, the plaintiff claims' that, even admitting that both cars reached the intersection of the streets at approximately the same time, his servant had the right-of-way; and to 'support this contention he introduced certain paragraphs of an ordinance approved by the mayor November 13, 1912, being Section 1341 of the Revised Ordinances of the city of Cleveland. These paragraphs read as follows:

“12. Yehicles going on main thoroughfares shall have the right-of-way over others going on intersecting streets.
“13. Yehicles going on main thoroughfares running in a general east and west direction shall have the right-of-way over those going on intersecting main thoroughfares.
“14. No vehicle shall cross any main thoroughfare or make any turn thereon at a greater speed than one-half the legal speed limit upon such thoroughfares.”

These paragraphs provide new novel features in traffic regulations. They are not found in Babbitt’s Summary of Rules, which embody all the generally prescribed rules for traffic regulation adopted by municipalities at the time his work, “The Law Applied to Motor Vehicles,” was issued late in 1910. As changing or modifying the law of the road, so far as we know, the rules in question have never been construed. From the construction placed upon them by the plaintiff’s servant in this case, as well as from common observation in their observance and operation in this city, we are of the opinion they are of doubtful wisdom and expediency. If, when the drivers of two motor vehicles reach the intersection of two streets at practically the same time, the driver having the right-of-way insists upon crossing first, under all circumstances and irrespective of existing conditions and of the right of others to pass over the street intersection, a rule giving the right-of-way is a menace rather than a blessing. The tendency seems to be that the party having the right-of-way believes, or affects to believe, that the other party, even if he reaches the crossing first, has no rights which [564]*564the right-of-way- man is bound to respect, and he, as a general rule, either wholly ignores them or superciliously grins at him as he dashes across the intersection. Reprehensible conduct of this kind should be checked, and every man made to understand that he must respect the rights of his fellow men. The' old Latin maxim, “Sic Hiere,” etc., which says to each and all, enjoy your own rights as you please, but take care not to molest others in the lawful exercise of their rights, seems to have fallen into' “innocuous desuetude.” If the driver of an automobile would bear constantly in mind that he ought to be a gentleman, and that his rights end where the rights of his neighbor begin, there would be comparatively few automobile accidents and injuries on the public streets. As Benjamin Franklin once said, we lose more from lack -oí care than we do from lack of knowledge.

The law applied to motor vehicles has been often defined in the recent adjudications of courts, and is nothing more than the application of common law principles to a more highly specialized and vastly more dangerous instrumentality than slow-moving vehicles. An automobile, especially the touring car variety, is much mor.e dangerous on a street than an electric street car, and should be operated with a greater degree of care (Kreutzer v. Weil, 134 Ky., 563). The space within Avhieh a street car is operated is limited to the rails on which it travels. The operation of an automobile is often limited only by the brick or stone walls of the buildings abutting on the street. You know the line of direction in which a- street car moves, and can govern yourself accordingly; but no man living knows the line of direction of an automobile under control of an incompetent and reckless driver.

In Railroad Company v. Keary, 3 O. S., Judge Ranney, in his opinion at page 209, said:

“No one has the right to put in operation forces calculated to endanger life and property Avithout placing them under the control of a competent and ever-active superintending intelligence.”

This dictum applies with peculiar force to an automobile going at high rate of speed. Surely such a vehicle going fifteen [565]*565miles an hour through a much traveled street in the built up portions of a city is manifestly a dangerous force; and it may be said to be such dangerous force, even if the thoroughfare through which it is running does not run through a congested portion of the city. An automobile going at a reasonable rate of speed, under proper control and under normal conditions, is easily managed; but when driven by reckless or incompetent persons, at a high rate of speed, under abnormal conditions, such as a wet, greasy, uneven roadway, it may volte face

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 561, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-v-larkworthy-ohctcomplcuyaho-1913.