Kasky v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co.

155 N.E. 174, 23 Ohio App. 185, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 769, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 382
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 155 N.E. 174 (Kasky v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co.) 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
Kasky v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co., 155 N.E. 174, 23 Ohio App. 185, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 769, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 382 (Ohio Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Pardee, P. J.

The parties stand in this court in the same relative position as they did in the court below, and for convenience will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

The action in the trial court was one for money, brought by the plaintiff to recover compensation from the defendant for an accident which she suffered when she was hit by one of the trains of *186 the defendant, on the 9th of April, 1925, when she attempted to cross Lake avenue in the city of Elyria at the place where the tracks of the defendant cross that avenue at grade.

Lake avenue is a public street in said city, extending in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, and the tracks of said company run in a northerly and southerly direction.

The defendant, for some time prior to the date of the accident, maintained a watchman’s tower on the north side of said avenue, adjacent to its tracks and on the easterly side of its right of way, and also maintained safety gates at said crossing, which were operated from said tower. Many trains are operated daily over said crossing, and it has been continuously used by pedestrians and vehicles passing upon said avenue.

The plaintiff, a woman 22 years of age, was an employee of a factory located on the southwest side of the company’s tracks, and for some time prior to the accident had daily at about 7 a. m. taken a street car, at a point in Elyria, to go to said factory. The tracks of the street car line are in the center of the avenue and cross the railroad tracks in about the same relative position as it does. The street car stopped on the east side of the tracks of defendant to permit the plaintiff and other passengers, employees of said factory, to alight therefrom.

On the morning of the accident, the plaintiff got off the front entrance of the car after the same had been stopped about 25 feet east of defendant’s tracks. Before she alighted from the car she looked to the north, and after she was upon the ground she again looked to the north, and saw no train *187 approaching. She then proceeded from the street car towards the tracks of the defendant, where she looked to the south before going upon the tracks of defendant, and as she looked to the north again, she was struck by a train of the defendant coming from the north.

The plaintiff testified that at the time she left the car, the gates were not lowered, but were in an upright position, and that she saw the railroad watchman, who was present, standing on the street curb north of the trolley tracks near the tower, with his face to the southwest, resting his warning disc on the ground and talking with another person. The evidence shows that no bell was rung, nor whistle blown. The engine, with a car and caboose, was coasting backwards towards the south across said street, without any guard or watchman on the caboose, it being in front and the first to cross said street. At or near the point where the plaintiff alighted, her view to the north might have been partially obstructed by two telegraph poles and the watchman’s tower. The plaintiff further testified that she knew the gates were there prior to the day of the accident, and had seen them raised and lowered when trains passed over the crossing, as they were in everyday use.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, upon motion of the defendant, the trial court directed a verdict for the defendant. A motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and judgment was entered upon the verdict in favor of the defendant. The case is now here on error to reverse that judgment.

The sole question presented for our consideration and determination is, Did the trial court err in *188 saying that, as a matter of law, the plaintiff, upon the evidence offered by her, was guilty of contributory negligence?

In deciding this question it is well to keep in mind the rule of law that applies when a motion is made to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant at the close of the plaintiff’s case, and that is:

“Such a motion involves an admission of all the facts, which the evidence in any degree tends to prove, and presents only a question of law, whether each fact indispensable to the right of action and put in issue by the pleadings has been supported by some evidence. If it has, the motion must be denied, as no finding of facts by the court, or weighing of the evidence, is permitted.”

It is also important to keep in mind in this connection another rule of law well established and fully recognized, and that is:

“Where there is no dispute or conflict in the testimony of different witnesses, but nevertheless the unconflicting testimony discloses a variety of circumstances from which different minds may reasonably arrive at different conclusions as to the ultimate facts shown by such evidence, then it is the duty of the jury to determine such ultimate fact, even though the trial judge should himself be convinced as to what the conclusion should be.” The motion of the defendant admits the plaintiff was injured at the place and under the circumstances as claimed by her; but the defendant claims, admitting its own negligence, the plaintiff was also guilty of negligence.

The duty rested upon the plaintiff to exercise that degree of care which pedestrians of ordinary caution and prudence are accustomed to exercise *189 under similar circumstances and conditions. So, what would an ordinary person do under such circumstances? Wouldn’t he assume, when the gates were up and a watchman standing there indifferently, that he would have a safe passage and that there was no danger present? Wouldn’t he be justified in assuming that this situation was a substantial assurance to him of safety and that he would be free from danger, in the absence of knowledge to the contrary?

But, assuming that the plaintiff saw the train, under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence she might have been justified in believing that the train had just crossed and that for that reason the gates were up and the watchman in the position he was. Or she might have thought that the train was standing still, or that it was moving southward and intended to stop before it reached the crossing.

The trial court, in passing upon this motion, applied the law which has been long established: That a person upon a public street, when approaching a steam railroad grade crossing, must look and listen for the approach of trains before crossing, and must do so at a time and place and in a manner that will be effective; also, that an injured pedestrian cannot claim to have looked and listened, when, if he had, the same would have been effective and would have prevented the accident. So, the question we have to decide is whether this rule applies in all its strictness to a city crossing which is guarded by safety gates and a railroad watchman, when the gates are open and the watchman is negligent in the discharge of his duties, and a pedestrian is injured by being hit by a train of the railroad company at said crossing.

*190

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 N.E. 174, 23 Ohio App. 185, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 769, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kasky-v-baltimore-ohio-rd-co-ohioctapp-1926.