Michigan Central Railroad v. Waterworth

21 Ohio C.C. 495
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio C.C. 495 (Michigan Central Railroad v. Waterworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michigan Central Railroad v. Waterworth, 21 Ohio C.C. 495 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This action in the court below was brought by Water-worth against said Railroad Company, on account of personal injuries received by him while in the employ of the company as a brakeman, he having had his hand badly injured and practically destroyed while he was coupling cars; and he avers this was due to a defect in the cars; that one of the bumpers or buffers was loose and out of condition and hung down in a somewhat twisted shape, so that when he undertook to couple the cars his hand was caught between the bumpers, whereas it would not have been caught had the bumpers been in proper condition.

The company denied that there was any defect or that it was guilty of any negligence in the premises, and avers that plaintiff’s injuries arose from his own negligence.

The case went to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff below for $4,000.00.

A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered upon this verdict, and the railroad company now prosecutes error in this court,

One of the grounds of the motion for a new trial,and the ground that is now urged here on error, is that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. Upon looking into the bill of exceptions, we find this condition: that there was a drawing used upon the trial which appears to have been a diagram of the grounds where the tracks of the company were, showing the tracks, etc., where this accident occurred. This question of the location of the cars, and of their movements upon this occasion, became material. Witnesses were interrogated with respect to the position of certain cars, and in undertaking to state where the cars were situated and how they were moved, in order that their testimony might be understood by the jury, they were asked to indicate these positions and movements upon the map, which they did, and it appears from the record that in certain instances they made marks upon the map to indicate the positions about which they had testified, so that the map, after it had been thus identified and used, was a material document and piece of evidence in the case. At page 103 of the bill of exceptions it appears that the plaint[497]*497iff offered this map in evidence, and that it was marked “Plaintiff’s Exhibit A. This map is not attached to the bill of exceptions nor filed with the papers in the case. The omission of this and certain other exhibits seems to have been due'to the circumstance that the attorney for the railroad company at the,time of the making up of the bill of exception, was ill and practically blind, and that he was obliged by his condition to leave the matter of the preparation of this bill of exceptions to the stenographer and to his own subordinates, and by some mischance these exhibits were not attached within the time allowed for perfecting a bill of exceptions, or at all,

There were other papers, certain slips', introduced in evidence, indicating repairs which had been made upon these cars, and these seem to have been regarded by the parties as somewhat material; and they may have been; without seeing them we can not tell, and they are not attached. At page 192 of the bill of exceptions it appears that these slips indicating repairs upon the cars, were formally intro duced in evidence.

There was still another paper, perhaps even more important than the others: one Dorner was called as a witness on behalf of the railroad company, and testified with respect to the condition of this car alleged to have been defective, saying, in effect, that the car was not deficient, or was not defective in the particular alleged in the petition. He testified to some other defect in the car, but upon the opposite end from that at which the plaintiff received his injury. Upon cross-examination he was asked about certain statements made in an affidavit which he had made respecting this same matter at the solicitation of attbrneys for the plaintiff. This affidavit appears to have been presented to him,and in the course of his cross-examination he was asked if he had not made the statements in that affidavit, and he assented that he had, but with respect to some of the statements he undertook to say that he did not understand them —did not understand that they were of the import that they appeared to be when the affidavit was exhibited. There was other testimony with respect to this affidavit to the effect that he had made it voluntarily; that it had been read over to him, and that he appeared to understand it; that it [498]*498set forth the statements as he had made them and in his own language; and after all this, at page 209 of the record, it appears that this affidavit was introduced in evidence and marked as an exhibit, plaintiff claiming that it tended to impeach the testimony of this witness upon certain points, This affidavit is not attached to the bill of exceptions.

We had occasion recently to pass upon a question like this, in the case of Hohly v. Sheeley, (ante, page 484), In that case a photograph had been used, practically as this diagram has been used in this case, but the photograph was not attached to the bill of exceptions, and we found that under the authorities we were therefore precluded from examining the case upon the question of the weight of the evidence, all of the evidence not being attached and made a part of the bill of exceptions, I shall not take time to read this opinion now, but all that was said in it with respect to the photograph, we think is applicable to the matter of the diagram here. There are other authorities still more distinct upon the question of such written evidence as the affidavit and the slips that I have méntioned. There is one case referred to in the course of that opinion where a diagram which seemed to have served practically the same purpose upon the trial as the diagram in this case, i. e., used in practically the same way (it being a personal injury case arising out of an accident occurring in a coal mine), and the diagram was not attached to or made a part of the bill of exceptions.

The circuit court held that the case could not be considered upon the question of the weight of the evidence. I refer to the case of Foster Coal Company v. Leander Moherman et al., 9 Ohio Circuit Court Reports, 544, and I will read a single short paragraph, at page 551, from the opinion of Judge Laubie. He says:

“So far as the verdict is concerned, we are not prepared to say but what it is right; but at all events we would not be at liberty to consider that question,for the reason that we do not have all of the evidence before us that was before the jury in the court below. They used a map largely in the testimony in this case, and witnesses pointed to it, pointed places out upon it, horse backs in the , mine here and there, etc. It was patent and plain to the jury, but it [499]*499is entirely unintelligible to us, so that in any event we could not examine the question whether the verdict was sustained by the weight of the evidence or not; but so far as it is disclosed, and treating those matters as to the map as immaterial, we do not see how the jury could have done otherwise than what they did.”

We take occasion to say here that while we adhere to our holding in the case of Hohly v. Sheeley because it seems to be required by the uniform holdings of the courts upon this subject; and yet we do this with less reluctance in this case, for the reason that it appears to us that it will not defeat the ends of justice.

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21 Ohio C.C. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-central-railroad-v-waterworth-ohcirctlucas-1901.