Mays v. Minnich

19 Ohio Law. Abs. 516
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1935
DocketNo 1307
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 516 (Mays v. Minnich) 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
Mays v. Minnich, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 516 (Ohio Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

[518]*518OPINION

By HORNBECK, J.

The bill of exceptions is in the form of a stipulation, wherein, in part, it is set forth that the plaintiff introduced witnesses who testified to facts tending to prove wilful and wanton misconduct on the part of the defendant as alleged in plaintiff’s petition; that the plaintiff and defendant introduced testimony tending to prove that' the defendant was guilty of ordinary negligence only, and that the defendant introduced testimony tending to prove that he was not negligent and was not guilty of wanton and wilful misconduct.

The special charges requested by the parties and given by the court and the general charge of the court appear, as do the interrogatories and the answers thereto, together with the opinion of the court in sustaining the motion of the defendant to set aside the verdict of the jury, which motion was made immediately upon the return of the verdict by the jury and at the suggestion of the trial court. The bill-also sets forth the opinion, and decision of the court on the motion of the defendant for judgment on the interrogatories and answers thereto.

Plaintiff claims that the answer to No. 1 is not inconsistent' with the general verdict; that Nos; 2 and 3 should not have been submitted and that it was improper to require them to be answered and that the answers thereto should not be controlling against the general verdict.

The answer averred that the defendant was required to drive his car off the improved portion of the highway on to -a gravel strip on the- right side of the improved portion of said highway in order to avoid a head-on collision with an approaching truck. * † ■*

The first interrogatory, the answer to which is “Yes” is: “Did the presence of the truck cause defendant to pull his car to the right and off the pavement?” In our judgment this is a proper interrogatory but the answer is not so inconsistent with the general verdict as to require its setting aside. The fact established by the answer to the interrogatory is not compelling of the conclusion that the proximate cause of the accident and th? injuries- to the plaintiff was the presence- of the truck. It merely establishes that the presence of the truck was a cause of the defendant pulling his- -car to the right- and off the, pavement. The answer is not inconsistent with the wilful-and wanton misconduct of the defendant in the operation-of bis auto[519]*519mobile upon which the general verdict must have been based.

Coming to the second and third requests for findings of facts, we first, consider whether or not it was proper to interrogate the jury as to the defendant’s negligent operation of his automobile at or immediately preceding the time of the accident and if so,.whether or not such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.

We are of opinion that interrogatory No. 2 was improper because the answer thereto did not establish any, determinative fact in the cause. Whether or not the defendant was negligent in the operation of his s.utomobile was a question of law or at most a mixed question of law and fact. The distinction is marked in the leading case of Davison v Flowers, 123 Oh St, 89, where the answers to the combined interrogatories Nos. 1 and 2 , would have established the facts which constituted the negligence.

In Steel Co. v Lanakis, 93 Oh St, 302, the court had under consideration the interrogatory: “Was the plaintiff negligent in any degree, directly and proximately contributing to his accident and injuries,” the answer to which was “Yes.”

The court said at page 303:

“This interrogatory does not call for a special finding upon a particular question of fact as contemplated by such statutory provision, but rather for a combined finding of fact and conclusion of law, which conclusion may or may riot be drawn from findings- or particular facts returned by the jury and therefore should not have been submitted by the.trial court.”

In Tire Co. v Lansinger, 108 Oh St, 377, Judge Wanamaker, writing the opinion, at page 381 says:

“It is obvious' that the language of §11463, GC, headed ‘Finding on Questions of Fact,’ relates as the context shows, not merely to a fact that may be testified to by a witness as evidence or, in short, an evidentiary fact, but to a ‘particular question of fact.’ And the particular question of fact must ’ be a controlling' fact.”

In Schweinfurth, Admr. v The C.C.C. & St. L. Railway Company, 60 Oh St, 215, syllabus 7, it is said:

“It is not the purpose of §5201, Revised Statutes, which requires the court, when requested by either party, to direct the jury to find specially upon particular questions of fact, to require special findings of merely evidential facts. The ‘particular questions of fact’ contemplated by the statute are those, the ansv/ers to which will establish ultimate and determinative facts, and not such as are only of a probative character.”

Gale v Priddy, 66 Oh St 400, qualified somewhat the scope of interrogatories as defined in the Sehweinfurth case wherein it was held that:

“Although the questions must be such that the answers thereto will • establish ultimate and determinative facts, and not such as are only of a probative character; yet questions the answers to which establish probative facts from which an ultimate material fact may be inf-rred as a matter of law, should be allowed.”

Our attention is directed to syllabus 1 cf Dowd-Feder Co. v Schreyer, 124 Oh St 504:

“1. Special findings returned by a jury pursuant to §11463 GC embrace answers to one or more questions pertinent to but not necessarily covering any issue in the caso. They are never required except when a general verdict is returned.”

There is no indication in this proposition of the syllabus of any purpose on the part of the court to distinguish, modify or reverse the specific holdings in Schweinfurth v The C.C.C. & St. L. Railway Company, supra. Gale v Priddy, supra, Steel Co. v Lanakis, supra, Tire Co. v Lansinger, supra.

The court was not considering interrogatories but a special verdict. There was no question presented under the facts of the case which required any pronouncement of the purview or extent of §11463 GC now §11420-17 GC relating to special findings of fact. Judge Matthias, who wrote the opinion, made reference but once to the s”ction, §11463 GC, and in connection only with a quotation from Clements on Special Verdicts. We recognize that the Supreme Court writes its own syllabus but it is also true that the law of the case must have reference to the facts upon which it predicated. We find no purpose to distinguish the clear expressions in the cases heretofore cited, wherein the specific questions ■ were directed -to the law of special findings of fact.

The principle announced in the Schweinfurth case, supra, that the particular questions of facts contemplated by the statute are those, the answer to which will establish ultimate and determinative facts, has been modified only to the extent that questions [520]*520may be submitted, the answers to which will establish probative facts from which an ultimate material fact may be inferred as a matter of law. Gale v Priddy, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio Law. Abs. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mays-v-minnich-ohioctapp-1935.