L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Orvis

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 452
CourtLorain Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 452 (L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Orvis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Orvis, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 452 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

(orally.)

Charles Orvis was killed by being run over by the cars of the plaintiff in error, at the’ point where the railroad crosses a street in Elyria. A. B. Orvis was appointed administrator, and brings this action, in which he avers that this accident was caused by the carelessness and negligence of the railroad and its employees, in that there was not sufficient protection given this child at this [453]*453crossing; in that there was no proper service at that time by way of giving him notice of danger by means of a flagman at that place; and in the next place there was no person on top of the car that did the killing to give any notice to a person on the track. The decedent was a child almost eight years old. The circumstances were these. I might say before stating the circumstances, that the railroad company makes a few admissions, but denies principally all the allegations of the petition, especially the charge of negligence I have spoken of. It seems that at this point where this accident occurred there are three tracks of the railroad company; two of them, the two south tracks, are used for cars to pass upon, the other one leads to the freight house, and over which trains are not usually run, but cars are passed over there at different times and on different occasions, as it may be necessary to unload there, or for other purposes.

On this occasion an engine having some cars attached to it passed in upon this track and switched a little east of this crossing and a little east of the freight house of the plaintiff in error, and there were cars standing on- the track and as the engine and the cars approached these cars they shoved them along ahead of them, and these cars being thus shoved passed over this highway, and this child was upon the track upon which these cars were being pushed, and he was hit by the car and thrown down and killed. It is claimed as an act of negligence, that he got no notice in fact from the flagman, who it appears was there at his place, and that no one was on the top of these cars that were advancing, or upon the front car as they were shoved along to give any notice or any warning of danger. The matter that made the flagman, as was claimed, of no account in this case, was the fact that he was on the south side of all these tracks and, at the time, this accident occurred on the north main track. There was passing towards the east and from the west a long train of freight cars, and they entirely obscured, or nearly so, the view of the flagman from any one approaching this crossing from the north, and that being the case, the flagman so far as giving any warning to this child was of no consequence whatever, and it is alleged to be a ground of neglect and careless management of the passing of these trains over that crossing; that being so it became necessary, if cars were being passed west at the same time this other train was passing east, that greater caution should be observed in the management-of the train that was passing to the west. There being no one on the car, the front car of that train, the accident was caused by the negligence of the company. It is said on behalf of the railroad company that this child was guilty of contributor negligence, and that his death was caused, at least in part, by his own negligence, and that being the case there can be no •recovery here. The case was tried, and comes to us on error with a bill of exceptions, setting out all the testimony. It is claimed in the first place, that the conclusion of the jury was not correct, both as to finding negligence against the L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co., and also in finding that this child was not guilty of negligence that contributed to his own injury.

We have examined the testimony so far as this question is concerned somewhat in detail, and while the testimony is conflicting as to whether there was any one upon the car,where it is claimed a man should have been, upon this car that was passing to the west, and while it is conflicting as to whether the person who got on that car, or got on the cars, whether that car or some other is also in conflict, and whether he got on the car in time to see this child before he was killed, if he had looked, is somewhat in dispute, and as to whether, when he got on the car, he looked in that direction where the child was, is in conflict also. These matters being somewhat controverted in the testimony, we are unable to say that there was any error on the part of the jury in finding that the railroad company was guilty of negligence.

As to the child, it is claimed that he was given some money by his mother (he lived north of this' crossing, or he was staying north of this crossing with a sister of hers,) and that he started over town on an errand, or for some purpose; that when he approached this crossing this freight train going to the east was [454]*454passing over the crossing, or about to pass, and no one knows exactly when he approached that crossing. It does not appear from the testimony. The first thing that is seen of this child by any one he was upon the north track at that crossing, and perhaps a little west of the sidewalk — a foot or so off of the street * — a little west of the west line of the street as it crosses the railroad track at that point. He seemed to be bending over with his face to the west and his back to the cars that were'approaching him. At that moment he did not seem to be looking in the direction of the cars that killed him. He was picking up pebbles, according to some of the testimony. And there is some testimony to show that he was throwing the pebbles under the train that was passing.

It is claimed that the testimony shows that he was not looking in the direction from which the cars came that caused his death. That being so, and having been seen there for some seconds before he was killed, by the flagman who undertook to warn him of his danger, it is claimed that he was guilty of contributor}negligence, and that the jury, in finding that there was no contributory negligence, as they must have found under the charge of the court, in order to find the verdict against the railroad company, were clearly wrong, and that the finding was not warranted by the evidence. Now, it is true that all the testimomthat locales this child locates him upon the track, perhaps between the rails and a little west of the street line, and with his back towards the cars that were approaching him; picking up pebbles, or at least bending over with his face to the west, and with his back towards these cars. And the question was at once raised whether he was- exercising that caution that a child of his years should have exercised, or would ordinarily have exercised. The matter was left to the jury, and the jury have found that there was no contributory negligence, and we do not feel warranted, under the law as it pertains to a child of these years, in finding there was any contributory negligence. The fact is, the child was not seen until just a moment or so before he was killed, by any one, except the flagman, and the flagman’s view must have been necessarily very indistinct, because of the freight train that was passing to the east. It was passing at the rate of ten, twelve or fourteen miles an hour, according to the testimony, and the flagman got a view of this child only as he got a glimpse of him between the cars, which was a mere glimpse, without any distinct view. No one has been able to ■say that this child, when he approached that place, looked carefully before going upon the track. It is not known whether at the time he got there these cars had •commenced to move.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-s-m-s-ry-co-v-orvis-ohcirctlorain-1894.