Lake Shore Electric Ry. Co. v. Kellar

168 N.E. 853, 33 Ohio App. 214, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 391
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 2, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 N.E. 853 (Lake Shore Electric Ry. Co. v. Kellar) 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
Lake Shore Electric Ry. Co. v. Kellar, 168 N.E. 853, 33 Ohio App. 214, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 391 (Ohio Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

Lloyd, J.

The Lake Shore Electric Railway Company was the defendant, and Alfred J. Kellar was the plaintiff, in the court of common pleas, and will be so referred to here.

*215 In the afternoon of February 7, 1925, tbe automobile of plaintiff was struck by an interurban car of defendant at a crossing in the village of Huron, known as tbe Berlin street crossing. Plaintiff sustained certain personal injuries, and his automobile, a 1923 model Ford touring car, was damaged beyond repair. In bis petition, filed in tbe court of common pleas, plaintiff claimed that tbe defendant was negligent in certain alleged particulars, and that thereby be bad sustained damage in tbe sum of $10,000, $250 of which was for tbe alleged damage to bis automobile. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment of $2,250 in favor of the plaintiff. The' defendant seeks a reversal of this judgment.

Tbe defendant denied that it was in any respect negligent, but relied principally on tbe alleged claim that tbe plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and at tbe close of plaintiff’s evidence interposed two motions, tbe first for a directed verdict in its behalf, tbe second requesting tbe court to direct a verdict in favor of, defendant “with reference to the injuries and claim of the plaintiff for damage to bis person, and that there be left to be submitted to tbe jury only such evidence as bears upon tbe question of damages sustained by tbe plaintiff on account of damage to bis automobile.” These motions, being overruled, were renewed at tbe completion of defendant’s evidence, and were then again overruled, defendant preserving its exceptions thereto. .

Tbe question confronting this court for consideration is whether or not tbe plaintiff was himself guilty of such contributory negligence as precludes a right of recovery by him in any sum, or whether be may *216 recover only for the damage to his automobile. From the evidence it appears that the defendant owns and operates an interurban railway into' and through the village of Huron, its track being constructed upon and along the northerly side of a main highway called the Lake road, which extends in an easterly and westerly direction, the central portion thereof being paved with concrete. Berlin street, also in Huron, extends in a general north and south direction to Lake road, where it is crossed by the track of defendant. About 4 feet and 7 inches northerly of the north rail of defendant’s track is a line of poles, which plaintiff testified obstructed the view to the east of a person on Berlin street approaching the railway crossing. Easterly from the point of the collision the track of defendant is straight for a distance of 2,380 feet, where it curves to the northeast. Berlin street is unpaved, rough and “bumpy,” with several holes therein, of which one, at the time of the occurrence in question, was seven or eight feet north of the railway track. The day before the occurrence employees of the defendant had dumped about a quarter of a carload of cinders on Berlin street, spreading them over the surface of the eight or ten feet thereof immediately north of the track, at an average depth of five or six inches, filling therewith the holes in that part of the street, so that the portion of the street so covered appeared to be even. Prior to the day of the collision the plaintiff had full knowledge of and was entirely familiar with all of the foregoing facts, except the placing of the cinders on Berlin street, having driven his automobile upon Berlin street and over this railway crossing many times previous thereto»

*217 On the day in question accompanied by a Mr. Paxr ton he was driving in his Ford car southerly on Berlin street and “bumped along the road” until he came to the crossing. He says that when he ‘ ‘ got right to the track pretty near the track,” he “looked up and down * # * and couldn’t see nothing coming.. i * * * shut my car off and kind of drifted over a little, and hit those cinders and the engine stalled, just the wheels over the north rail.” Plaintiff remained in the automobile trying to start it, and, he being unable to do so, Paxton got out to crank it. Paxton testified that before he got out Kellar “tried to start her several times — oh, I should judge four or five minutes, three or four minutes anyway, at the outside — and he see he couldn’t start her that way. I got out of the car and I tried to crank the car, and see if I couldn’t start it and I looked down the track — that is, to the east— and saw this car approaching. "Well, at that time she was getting pretty close.”- On cross-examination Paxton said that, when “it failed to start, I got out and was going to crank it; that is, when I saw the car coming, I got out of the car to get a view of the track, to see whether there was any street car coming or not,” and to crank the car. He says he thinks the Ford car was stalled on the track four or five minutes before being struck by the street car, and that the street car could be seen for a “good big half mile anyway, a clear view of it” east of the crossing.

Kellar, the plaintiff, says that, “when I tried to start it two or three times, and couldn’t, I told him (Paxton) to get out and crank it, and we tried to crank it two or three times. When he got out he *218 started toward the front end of the car and hollowed, ‘Here comes that car,’ and I looked ont of the window and seen the car coming, bnt I did not have time to get ont of it. I looked ont, but I did not have time to get out. I looked out and saw the car coming, just when he told me the car was coming.” Again he says that “Paxton got out and cranked the car,” and that his auto was stalled on the track before the collision “possibly two or three minutes,” and that “I started my car, tried to start it two or three times with the starter, and I guess through the excitement I got it flooded; the carburetor flooded; lots of times you get it so it floods the spark plugs so she won’t go.”

Another witness called by plaintiff says that it was rather a bright day and the pavement was dry; that he was driving westerly on the Lake road and saw the Ford car “approaching rather slowly, and it drove up onto the Lake Shore Electric tracks and there it stopped. ’ ’ Then ‘ ‘ I looked back to see if the electric car was coming, and I saw one just coming, rounding the curve at the east. As I got up almost to where the collision occurred, I looked back again. I then saw the motorman, * * # probably 200 or 300 feet from the crossing, apparently making a desperate effort to bring his car under control, to apply his brakes. As I had been driving up to the crossing, the one man got out of the machine and was around to the front of it, either attempting to crank it or push it off the tracks, and just before the collision he turned and ran down the road, passing to the north of the stalled automobile.” He further says, “I think I heard the ear whistle blown as it came around the bend,” and that the interurban *219 car stopped possibly 200 feet west of the place of collision.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Frazier v. Warden of Maryland Penitentiary
165 A.2d 463 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 N.E. 853, 33 Ohio App. 214, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-shore-electric-ry-co-v-kellar-ohioctapp-1928.