Kramer v. Blake

32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 604, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 77, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 349
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 604 (Kramer v. Blake) 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
Kramer v. Blake, 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 604, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 77, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 349 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

MAEVIN, J.

Blake was plaintiff below and Kramer the defendant and though the parties are here reversed they will be spoken of as they stood in the ease below.

On May 30, 1908, the defendant was operating an automobile upon the public highway in Springfield township, Erie county, Pennsylvania. At the same time the plaintiff was driving a horse hitched to a wagon, upon the same highway. This was a much traveled road. The vehicles, in which were these two parties, met at a place in this highway; the automobile going southerly and the horse and wagon northerly. The place of meeting was in a hollow, between a slight elevation of the road to the north, and another slight elevation to the south from such hollow; at the eastern side of the road, the side on which the plaintiff was driving, there was immediately at the east of the traveled road a steep declivity of eighteen or twenty inches. At the place where the two vehicles passed one another the road [605]*605was wide enough so that by careful driving on the part of both' they could have passed without a collision. Indeed, there was sufficient room to the east of the easternmost part of the automobile, at the place of meeting, so that the wagon of the plaintiff could have passed the automobile without a collision. As a matter of fact, the horse of the plaintiff was turned so far to the right at the point where the vehicles met as that the wagon overturned and the plaintiff was severely injured.

Suit was brought by the plaintiff charging that his injuries were the direct result of the negligence of the defendant; that defendant was driving his automobile at a terrific rate of speed, and a speed that was greater than was reasonable and proper; that he came down in the valley from the hill at such speed toward the plaintiff that the plaintiff’s horse frightened and turned to the right, resulting in the accident. The plaintiff further alleges that when he saw the automobile approaching him, he raised his hand to indicate to the defendant that he, the plaintiff, was in danger from the automobile, and that this warning was wholly unheeded by the defendant, but that he came on without slackening his speed at all, thus forcing the plaintiff over the declivity.

The result of the trial was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. After the verdict a motion for a new trial was filed, alleging as ground for such new trial, among other things, that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence.

The evidence tended to show that the automobile was going at a very high rate of speed at the time it came in sight of the plaintiff from the top of the elevation at the north and that it continued at such very high rate of speed until it had passed the plaintiff; that the horse of the plaintiff, though a quiet horse, was somewhat frightened at the approach of the automobile, and that the plaintiff was also frightened at its approach.

On the part of the defendant evidence was introduced tending to show that the speed of the automobile was not high, but with the several witnesses produced on the part of the plaintiff as to such speed, against the testimony of witnesses on the part of the defendant as to such speed, we would not be justified in reaching the conclusion that the jury was manifestly wrong in [606]*606believing tbe witnesses for the plaintiff that the speed was very high, np to twenty-five or thirty-five miles an hour. True, one witness on the part of the defendant testified that the speed was slackened as it went down the hill, the language used by her being: “We gradually got slower as we went down the hill; it was a gradual descent and we went down about five miles an hour. ’ ’ Then she was asked, how do you know you got down to five miles an hour, and she answered: “We looked at the speedometer. I thought that the machine had stopped, it was going at the rate of five miles an hour when we passed him.” It is not surprising that the jury should have regarded this testimony as being wholly mistaken. First, it is inconceivable that one riding in a vehicle at the rate of five miles an hour should have supposed that it was standing still until she looked at a device for indicating whether it was moving or not, and found it to be moving at the rate of five miles an hour. The only possible way of accounting for this is either that the witness was somewhat excited by the accident and its surroundings or somewhat confused at the time she gave her evidence, and so did not quite understand what she said, or that the automobile in which she was riding with the defendant had been traveling at such an excessive speed that when it got down to five miles an hour she thought it was not going at all.

The defendant testifies that he did not slacken his speed after he saw the situation of the plaintiff, but he says that he was not going at an excessive speed, and he says that he did not see the plaintiff raise a hand as a warning. The plaintiff and a number of other witnesses say that the hand was so raised, and so the most natural explanation of the fact that the defendant did not see it would seem to be that as he was driving at such speed that he did not notice what the plaintiff was doing. In short, from the evidence in the case, it is not surprising that the jury reached the conclusion that the defendant was driving at a high rate of speed, without giving due care to the danger which might result to the plaintiff from continuing at that high rate of speed, and yet he says he did not slacken his speed any, but only explains that by saying that he was going at a slow rate all the time.

[607]*607If the defendant was driving at a speed of twenty-five miles or more per hour, with the surroundings as they are shown to be here, whether such rate was in violation of a statute or not, the jury might well reach the conclusion that it was a reckless and careless way of driving; that it injured the plaintiff, either because his horse was so seared that it turned out and overset the wagon, or else that the plaintiff, in the fear which might well be excited in his mind-by seeing the machine coming at such a rate of speed, did not estimate with exactness how near tó the automobile the defendant was driving at a reckless rate of speed, calculated to scare people or horses who might be apt to meet him. If the plaintiff in view of the surroundings exercised such care as one so situated might ordinarily be expected to use, then he would not be precluded from a recovery, even though, if he had calculated exactly the distance between the easternmost line of the automobile and the declivity over which his machine went, he would have known that he could avoid a collision without going over this declivity.

The jury probably wondered somewhat how one could drive an automobile 100 miles, or thereabouts, in less than four hours, without driving most of the way at an excessive rate of speed; the maximum rate allowed by law being twenty miles, both in Ohio and Pennsylvania. The statute of Pennsylvania was introduced in evidence.

The court did not err in refusing to sustain a motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence.

But, it is urged, that the court erred in excluding certain evidence offered by the defendant. When the defendant was himself upon the stand, he was asked this question: “You may tell the jury and the court, if you can, at what rate of speed you were going when you were going down the hill just north of where this accident occurred; at what rate of speed you went further down past Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 604, 18 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 77, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-blake-ohcirctcuyahoga-1910.