King v. Herb

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 797
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJune 10, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 797 (King v. Herb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Herb, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 797 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Hare, J.

The following tacts are either conceded or clearly proven :

'The plaintiffs in error owned a building fronting on Euclid avenue, known as the King and Uhl Block. Extending from the basement of this building, under the sidewalk, are six vaults, one of which is used for the reception of coal to be used in the heating of the building. There is an opening in the sidewalk sixteen to eighteen inches in diameter for the reception of coal into the vault, and, when not in use, is usually protected by an iron cover. Most of the building is occupied by lessees, but King and Uhl have the care of the hall-ways, stairs, elevators and basement or at least that portion of the basement occupied by the boiler and heating apparatus. They furnish heat for the entire building.

At the time of this transaction King and Uhl employed an engineer or fireman whose duties were to run the boiler and receive and receipt for the coal needed for that purpose. They also employed a man by the name of Babcock, whose conceded duties were to mn the elevator and care for the halls and stairways. Other employees, if any, had no part in this transaction and need not be noted.

The Zettelmeyer Coal Company had for several years furnished all the coal used by King and Uhl in heating the building. On the night of this accident the coal company had by its agents, under its arrangement with King and Uhl, delivered to them at that building a load of coal. The driver came to the building with the coal, and took the bill for the same to the fireman in the basement, who receipted for the same. The driver then returned to his wagon. The fireman went to the vault and assisted in the removal of the cover of the coal-hole; he did this at a signal from Babcock, then on the sidewalk, who, after the cover had been loosened by the engineer, removed it from the hole for the receipt of the coa. Scantling were kept in the vault, which were used to form a bridge from the street to the top of the curb, to prepare the way for the wagon to back up to the coal-hole. These the engineer passed out, either to the driver or Babcock, and they were used for the purpose intended. After the cover was removed and before the wagon was in place for dumping the coal, the defendant in error, passing along the sidewalk, stepped into the hole and was quite seriously injured.

So far there was no substantial conflict in the testimony. Upon other issues, there was a conflict of testimony.

[799]*799It was claimed on the trial, although not specifically so alleged in the pleadings, that the coal company had been put in the exclusive 'possession and control of the coal-hole under a contract with King and Uhl, by the terms of which it had assumed all responsibility for its care and the whole duty of protecting the public from the dangers incident to its use, and that King and Uhl by such contract were relieved from any responsibility or duty to the public in its use for the purposes for -which it was then used.

The only evidence given in support of the contract which it is claimed, thus exempted King and Uhl irom responsibility, is found in the testimony of Mr. King, one of the plaintiffs in error, on pages 280, 281 of the record. Mr. King, after stating that he made the arrangement for the purchase and delivery of the coal with Mr. Zettelmeyer, was then asked:

“What was the talk, if any, between you and Mr. Zettelmeyer about furnishing the coal for your vault, how to put it in, and what was said about it by him as the representative of that company ? ”
Answer. “Mr. Charles Zettelmeyer came to my office about the first of November, 1893, and we talked over the matter of furnishing coal, and finally came to an agreement — .”
Question. “What was said ? ”
Answer. “He said he would furnish coal at $1.30 for slack coal delivered in the vault. I asked him how he would put it in the hole, seeing the coal holes were so far from the curbstone. He said they would bring a chute to run the coal from the wagon into the hole. I said, ‘There is danger of people tumbling into that hole when the chute is there, I’m afraid, because they are so far from the curbstone.’ He asked me • ‘How large is that vault ? ’ I told him it might hold a carload and might not quite hold a car-load of coal. He said, ‘We will send two teams at the same time when coal is brought, and one can watch the hole and the other unload, and vice versa.’ I says, ‘Go ahead, furnish the coal.’”

This is substantially all that was said by Mr. King about the contract. It further appears irom his testimony that, at first the coal company did send two men in accordance with that talk, but latterly omitted to do so, and much of the coal was delivered by one man.

This testimony of King was .denied by Zettelmeyer, an officer of, and a witness for the coal company.

Upon the subject of this contract, after stating the claims of exemption made by King and Uhl, the court charged :

“It is denied by the coal company that any such contract was made by them ; but I say to 3'ou that the defendants King and Uhl would n-ot be released from liability by reason of said contract, if such contract you find there was, if, under the rules I shall give you, you find that on November 24, 1896, the defendants King and Uhl were negligent and that such negligence of said defendants was the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff was not negligent, then I say to you that King and Uhl would be liable.”

The effect of this charge was, that no contract had been made 'between King & Uhl and the coal company, whereby they were released from such responsibilhy.

If the evidence fairly tended to prove a contract that would relieve King and Uhl from the duty which, in the absence of such contract, they owed to .the public to guard those travelling upon the sidewalk, from [800]*800danger incident to the use of this coal-hole, permitted to be made in the side-walk by the city authorities, then the charge relating to the subject of this contract was erroneous. It may well be doubted, however, whether King and Uhl could, by a contract, relieve themselves from the duty of guarding the public from the dangers incident to the use of this opening in the sidewalk, when used for the purposes for which it was then being used.

If this hole was left open and unguarded, it was dangerous to those travelling upon the sidewalk, and the duty of guarding the public from such danger it is conceded was primarily upon King and Uhl. They were the owners of and in possession of the abutting property; the vault under the sidewalk was constructed by them and for their use; the permit to open into the vault through the sidewalk, was given to them and was opened for their use' If it be granted that the contract of the coal company required it to deliver the coal in the vault, it could only be so delivered through this hole upon the premises of King and Uhl for their use.

It is not analogous to those cases in which the entire premises are put into the possession of a lessee or the control of an independent contractor for the purpose of repair or construction of some building or other structure upon the premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-herb-ohcirctcuyahoga-1899.