Lazarides v. Turowske

162 N.E. 610, 28 Ohio App. 208, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 615, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 380
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 610 (Lazarides v. Turowske) 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
Lazarides v. Turowske, 162 N.E. 610, 28 Ohio App. 208, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 615, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 380 (Ohio Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Shields, J.

At the May, 1927, term of the Stark county common pleas court the defendant in error, Josephine Turowske, as plaintiff, recovered a verdict and judgment against plaintiff in error, Lazarios Th. Lazarides, as defendant, in the sum of $5,000, as damages for injuries received from slipping and falling upon an icy sidewalk fronting said defendant’s building in the city of Canton, Ohio.

In her petition, she says that defendant maintained a spouting on his building, which drained the water from the roof thereof and permitted it to flow *210 upon the sidewalk in front of his said building, in violation of a certain city ordinance of said city, as set forth in her petition.

She says that on January 25,1926, in the evening, she was walking west on Eighth street in said city when she slipped and fell upon a ridge of ice which had formed upon the sidewalk fronting along said défendant’s building, and seriously injured herself, as averred in her petition. She says that she was at said time in the exercise of due care and that her injuries were caused directly and proximately by the carelessness and negligence of said defendant by his violation of the provisions of said city ordinance, and as in said petition stated.

She further says that said defendant was careless and negligent in permitting ice to so form a ridge upon said sidewalk, as aforesaid, and also in permitting the water to freeze thereon, thereby endangering the life and limb of persons having occasion to use said sidewalk, and that he was further careless and negligent in failing to cover the same with a covering of ashes, sand, sawdust, or other substance to make it safe for travel.

She says that as a direct result of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant, as aforesaid, she suffered the injuries complained of in her petition, for which she prays judgment against the defendant in the sum of $15,000.

In his answer the defendant admits that at the "time stated he owned and occupied the premises described in plaintiff’s petition, but he denies each and every other allegation therein. As a further answer he denies that there was any ice, snow, or other substance on said sidewalk in front of his said *211 premises, save and except such as accumulated there by natural causes; that any injuries which plaintiff suffered by reason of the matters set forth in her petition she caused directly by her own negligence, which by the exercise of ordinary care could have been avoided. He denies all liability and asks that said petition be dismissed.

A general denial is filed by plaintiff of the allegations made in the answer, including the contributory negligence charged therein.

The judgment below in favor of plaintiff is sought to be set aside on the ground of alleged errors committed by the trial court, to which end a petition in error, setting up such alleged errors, is filed in this court.

Keeping in mind such assignments of error, the second, third and fourth relate to the same subject-matter, and will be considered together, namely, the overruling of the motion of defendant at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, and the overruling of the motion of the defendant at the close of all the testimony, to direct a verdict in his behalf.

As this court has had occasion to announce before this, directed verdicts are authorized only under the evidence of certain conditions, not at random, and the question arises here, did the court below, as a matter of law, err in overruling plaintiff in error’s said motions, or either of them, for a directed verdict, on the ground that defendant in error was guilty of contributory negligence at the time she received her injuries on the sidewalk fronting plaintiff in error’s premises? In passing on this and similar questions, in Kasky v. B. & O. Rd. Co., 23 Ohio *212 App., 185, at page 188, 155 N. E., 174, 175, the general rule is stated:

“Such a motion involves an admission of all the facts, which the evidence in any degree tends to prove, and presents only a question of law, whether each fact indispensable to the right of action and put in issue by the pleadings has been supported by some evidence. If it has, the motion must be denied, as no finding of facts by the court, or weighing of the evidence, is permitted.”

Here a thorough examination of all the testimony contained in the record as to the conduct of the defendant in error at the time she received her injuries repels the presumption of contributory negligence and clearly shows that she was entirely free from such negligence. On the contrary, the testimony shows that she was walking along on said sidewalk in the early evening of the day referred to in said petition in the exercise of due care, without knowing of the existence, and without noticing or having occasion to notice the ridge of ice spoken of until she slipped and fell upon the same, and as a direct result thereof she sustained the injuries set out in her petition, testified to by several witnesses, and the effects of which were testified to by her attending physicians. "What the effect of the covert attack upon the testimony of these witnesses was upon the jury we have no means of knowing, but, in the light of the testimony referred to, it is safe to say it fails to influence this court. The errors raised are held not to be well taken. It might be added to what has already been said that the testimony of the witnesses, who were, at the scene of the accident at the time or soon after, was that it was “neither *213 light nor dark,” and that the ridge of ice formed from the water flowing from the down-spouting was “partly covered with snow.”

In the judgment of this court, this case is unlike the Naef case, 54 Ohio St., 529, 44 N. E., 236, cited in the brief of plaintiff in error. In the case before us, the source of danger was not plainly visible, nor did defendant in error know of the existence of the ridge of ice; on the other hand, it was not light enough to see, and the ridge of ice was partly covered with snow, as testified to by witnesses. It would seem that the street light below said building afforded little light to said sidewalk, and that the frozen condition of the windows of said building were of no helpful assistance in this respect. In the absence of knowledge of the actual condition of this sidewalk, and being unable to see the ridge of ice thereon, would not the defendant in error, if in the exercise of due care, have a right to presume that the sidewalk was safe for pedestrians to travel on? And in this connection the sufficiency of plaintiff’s petition is attacked by demurrer. While, as counsel for plaintiff in error argues, Section 3714, General Code, imposes on the municipality the duty of keeping the streets and sidewalks open and free from obstruction and nuisance, still it can scarcely be claimed that said section exempts one from liability who is guilty of affirmative negligence in causing an injury. Here, as counsel for defendant in error claim, the action is based on a violation of section 177 of the city ordinances, which is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 610, 28 Ohio App. 208, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 615, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lazarides-v-turowske-ohioctapp-1927.