Lewis v. Cincinnati Street Ry. Co.

8 Ohio N.P. 417
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 417 (Lewis v. Cincinnati Street Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Cincinnati Street Ry. Co., 8 Ohio N.P. 417 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Hollister, J.

There were two points made by counsel for defendant in their argument at the hearing of their motion for á new trial. One was that the court erred in its charge to the jury, and in its refusal to give certain special charges on the subject of the duty of the plaintiff! before and at the time driving with her horse and buggy upon the defendant’s street railroad track.

The court was of opinion, at the trial, that the question whether or not the plaintiff’s conduct in driving upon the track was negligence should be submitted to the jury; that no absolute rule could be laid down requiring one driving along a street upon which were street car tracks to either stop or look or listen before crossing over the track, or to look once or more times before going upon the tracks to ascertain whether or not a car operated by electricity might bring aboiit a collision. The court still adheres to that view, and thinks that its action in charging the jury as it did and in refusing to charge as requested was correct.

The other ground for a new trial was that the court erred in charging the jury that che ordinance of the city regulating the speed of street cars, in force at the time of the accident, limited their operation to six miles an hour.

The ordinance of February, 1879, art. I., section 18, Coppock, in Hertenstein’s ordinances,, provides that:

“No cars shall be drawn at a greater speed than six miles an hour.”

Ordinance No. 4286, Henderson’s ordinances, 113, passed October 25, 1889, provided for an extension of Route No. 7, the construction of an electric system of motive power along that route and upon a poriion of Route No. 5, and fixed rates of speed on certain routes.

In Section 2 it is ordained:

“That the schedule time for operating cars over said Routes 3 and 7 and over all portions of said company’s other street railroad routes over which any kind of motors or means of rapid transit are authorized to be used shall not exceed ten miles an hour. And art. L, section 18, of the general street railroad ordinances, passed February 7, 1879, or any provision of any other section relative to the speed at which each car shall be operated shall not be applicable to such routes.”

On September 16, 1892, the board of legislation sought to repeal the ordinance of October 23, 1889, by pasing an ordinance expressly repealing it, and ordaining that:

“All rights, privileges and franchises granted to the Cincinnati Street Railway Company under and by virtue of said ordinance be and [418]*418the same are hereby forfeited and held for naught.
And the corporation counsel was directed to institute the necessary legal proceedings to enforce the provisions of the repealing ordinance.
In 1896 the board of administration, by resolution, revised the terms and conditions of all of the grants and franchises to the Cincinnati Street Railway Company, and, among other things, resolved that:
“All of ‘he provisions of the general ordinance providing for the construction, operation and government of street railroads, passed February 7, 1879, and all-other ordinances extending and providing for the operation of the roads of any of said companies, in so far as the same are consistent herewith, shall apply to and become and be a part of the terms and conditions of the grant hereby made.”

It is assumed, for the purposes of this case, that it was. impossible for the board of legislation to repeal, by its ordinance of 1892, the ordinance of 1889, in such a way as to effect any vested rights acquired under the former ordinance, and that the board could not, by ordinance work a forfeiture of those rights, although the company may not have run its cars as the ordinance required, and this, independent of the fact, that it does not appear that the corporation counsel took any steps to legally establish its forfeiture.

When it can not be doubted that the proper municipal authorities may, by the exercise of police power and in discharge of the duties of the trust for the public under which it has supervision of and care of the streets, from time to time, regulate the speed of cars and all other vehicles using the streets, yet it is assumed further that the object of the repealing ordinance was not to bring about a change of the rate of speed at which cars could legally be run, but was to effect only the rights 01-privileges or franchises granted in the ordinance of 1889, and that, as it was invalid in respect to its real object, any incidentally declared purpose was ineffectual also.

These assumptions leave the provision of the ordinance of 1889, fixing the schedule rate of speed at ten miles an hour, in force unless there is some good reason why that ordinance is not operative.

It will be observed that the speed per mile is not limited to a maximum of ten miles per hour. The ordinance permits a schedule time of ten miles an hour. That is, the total number of miles in the route over which the car is operated shall not be covered in a less time than' ten miles a.n hour. Under such a provision the., car .might be run at a much greater speed over some portions of the road, and, in order to maintain the average, would necessarily at some places be operated at perhaps twice ten miles an hour. It will be noticed that the ordinance makes no difference in its requirements between the portions of the routes which include streets comparatively unfrequented and those in which a condition of semi-blockade is often present.

The court assumes that it would be impossible to maintain a speed of ten miles an hour in the crowded streets, during the ordinary business hours, unless pedestrians and drivers of vehicles should waive their rights in those portions of the streets in which the car tracks are found. The effect of this would be the abandonment of their rights in a portion of a large number of streets and the appropriation of that part by the street railway company.

Whatever may be the exigencies and necessities of modern rapid transit, the law has not yet donated to street railroad companies the use of any part of the streets to the exclusion ot those whose rights in the streets were fixed long before cars operated in streets by animals, cables or electricity wdre heard of, and by virtue of whose rights alone the courts have permitted the use of the cars on fixed rails in the street as simply another method of using vehicles in the streets, not differing, in the underlying principles involved, from any other vehicle used for travel. Yet, under this ordinance, it is in the power of the company to operate its cars anywhere, on any of its routes, not only at ten miles an hour, but at any other greater speed which it chooses, and at ,any speed required by its schedule in making its round trips, limited only by the requirement that no schedule can be adopted for any route which will involve an average speed of over ten. miles an hour.

It is beyond discussion that under this ordinance there is no limitation upon the speedj at any point in a route, be it the most frequented inter sections of the most crowded streets in the city, or the open ways in the comparatively sparsely settled parts of the city, where the travel may not be greater than in many country roads.

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Related

Adolph v. Central Park, North & East River Railroad
76 N.Y. 530 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-cincinnati-street-ry-co-ohctcomplhamilt-1900.