Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Starkey

18 Ohio C.C. 700
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. 700 (Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Starkey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Starkey, 18 Ohio C.C. 700 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

BENTLEY, J.

In the case of the The Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railroad Company v. Starkey, the railroad company seeks a reversal, of the judgment rendered by the court of common pleas in favor of Mr. Starkey, against the defendant in error, for the sum of-810,000 for injuries received by Mr. Starkey while in the employ of the company on the 18th of April, 1891, at Kipton, Ohio. It is charged, .and appears from the evidence, that on the day named, train No'. 14 of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway, bound eastward — a mail and passenger train — and the fast passenger train No. 21, bound westward, met in a terrific collision at Kipton, and quite a large number of people were thereby killed. The plaintiff below, the defendant in error here, was fireman on the engine attached to train No. 14. When he saw that the collision was imminent, he got down upon the st9ps of the engine, and jumped off. He says that the momentum was so great that he rolled along upon the ground and ties for some ninety feet, and received severe and permanent injuries. He charges in his petition that this collision and his injury occurred by reason of the negligence of the railroad company in various particulars. One of the charges of negligence was,that there was a water tank near the track at Kipton which prevented the company’s agent from seeing the approach of the train in a certain direction, which otherwise he might have seen, and if he had seen it upon this occasion, he had facilities for stopping- it and preventing this collision. Another item of negligence charged is that the company had at Kipton only one person to attend to all of its business, there; that is, the telegraph business, seeing to the baggage, selling of tickets, the receiving and delivering of freight and making- of reports to the company, and all of the various matters-usually to be attended to for the company at that, a freight and passenger station, and that this force was insufficient; so that this person, who should have been at his post at the office, at the telegraphic instrument, was compelled by his duties to be elsewhere at the time this collision occurred, and that therefore he could not be reached by a warning telegram sought to be sent him from Cleveland, and was not in a position to - prevent this collision which otherwise he could have prevented. It is also charged in the petition that the meeting- time of these two trains at Kipton was too close, there being only three minutes by the-schedule between the time of the arrival of train No. 21 at that point and the passage of No. 14 having the right of way, not stopping regularly at Kipton; that the schedule provided only three minutes after the arrival of No.21 at that point for it to get in on to the side track, and with the chances of No. 21 being late, or of something occurring or liable to occur, it was taking too-great a risk to arrange a schedule with only three minutes difference at that point.

In the amended petition it is also charged that the conductor and engineer of No. 21 were negligent upon the particular day in question, because when they arrived at Oberlin, a station east of Kipton, and about five miles from it, they were late; that they should have arrived there at 4:38 in the afternoon and should’ have arrived at Kipton, according to their schedule time, at 4:49,. giving 11 minutes time; that, as a matter of fact, they arrived ac Oberlin as late-as 4:43 and remained there some three minutes, and did not depart until 4:46, or a little after, and that having-. [702]*702no special orders to meet No. 14 at Kipton. and having no guide except the schedule time, and knowing that No. 14 was due at Kipton at 4"52, they were negligent in starting out of Oberlin as late as they did, because they had not time, according to the ordinary way of running a train, even jf they put their train to its utmost speed, to arrive at Kipton and get out of the way of No. 14 by 4:52; that notwithstanding that they pulled out of Oberlin, and on this account, the collision occurred.

These are the various charges of negligence preferred in the petition, and (he amended petition upon which the case Anally went to trial.

The company, in the case before us on error, claim that the court of common pleas erred in various particulars, one being the allowing of testimony to be given that a certain rule — which had been rescinded — bad been once in existence. The company objec ted to that, but the court overruled the objection and allowed the plaintiff to give that rule in evidence. This was rule No. 10, which had been rescinded some iime before his accident occurred, and which provided in substance that when two passenger trains were to meet at any station, they should each come to a full stop between the switches. The idea being, perhaps, to avoid the danger of collision, for as both trains would havo to slow down when compelled to stop within the switches, the danger of collision would be less.

One of the charges in the petition, as I have said, was that there was no rule provided by the company for the stopping of trains in that way; that is, no rule at the time of tne collision, and that it was negligence upon the part of the company not to have a rule in force at that particular time, and the question presented here iu whether or not it was error for the court to admit that proof — that there had been a rule which had been rescinded. We have come to the conclusion that this was not error for two reasons. Olio was that it showed a recognition or admission upon the part of the company at one time, that such a rule was proper, and that its attention had been called to the necessity, or at last propriety of such a rule.

The other reason — and it seems to us pretty clear that it applies —is tiiis: It was incumbent upon the plaintiff, in order to sustain this branch of his petition, to prove the negative fact, to prove that there was in fact, no su'di rule applicable at that time and place, provided for by the company. Now, in order to prove the negative fact, he offered this evidence — that there was a rule upon the subject; that prior to this time, the rule had been abrogated. With that evidence in, and no further evidence upon the subject, it seems to us that ibe jury would be warranted in finding the negative fact, that is to say upon proof that a rule upon the subject liad existed and had been rescinded, with no proof or suggestion that another one had ever been substituted, or that any regulation thereafter had ever been adopted, the jury might be warranted in finding that that state of circumstances contin jod to exist, and that there was an absence of such regulation at the. time of the injury.

The counsel for the railway company also complain that the court erred in its charge in reiterating the charges of negligence in the petition before the. jury, without stating the defenses of the railroad company to these various charges; that is, that while the court may have correctly enumerated the charges of negli[703]*703genoe, by stating them in detail in that way, without stating the other side, it gave undue prominence to the claim of the plaintiff over the claims of the defendant.

The fact was,the court enumerated these charges and then said substantially this: “All these charges of negligence are put in issue by the denials of the defendant;” and then proceeded to state*tc the jury that they were called upon to look into all the testimony and say what the facts Were regarding these various charges.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-shore-michigan-southern-railway-co-v-starkey-ohiocirct-1894.