Moulder v. Cleveland, Canton & Southern Railroad

1 Ohio N.P. 361
CourtStark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 27, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio N.P. 361 (Moulder v. Cleveland, Canton & Southern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moulder v. Cleveland, Canton & Southern Railroad, 1 Ohio N.P. 361 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Charge by

McCarty, J.

Gentlemen of the Jury :

This action is brought by Jacob Moulder against the Cleveland, Canton & Southern Railroad Company, for the purpose of recovering damages, which he alleges he has sustained by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant, the Cleveland, Canton & Southern Railroad Company.

He sets forth in his petition, in substance, that the Cleveland, Canton .& Southern Railroad Company is an incorporated company under the laws of the State of Ohio, and on the 17th day of November, 1893, owned and operated the railroad known as the Cleveland, Canton & Southern Railroad, with tracks, cars, locomotives and other appliances thereto belonging; that a track of said railroad ran from the city of Canton, in Stark county, to Sherrodsville, in Carroll countv ; and that it bad a branch of road extending from said main track to and through the village of Minerva; and •that said branch crosses the railroad track of the Lake Erie, Alliance & ■Southern Railway at or near the town of Minerva, and at which crossing there was placed a target for signal purposes; and that on the 17th day of November, 1893, the plaintiff was riding in a caboose on a work train on the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railway, and was an employe on said train and road ; that on the morning of said day, while plaintiff was in ■said caboose on said train, as aforesaid, and while said work train on said [362]*362Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railway was going south through the town of Minerva, and while crossing the track of the defendant at said town of Minerva, the defendant carelessly and negligently caused one of its locomotives and train of cars to be backed into said train on said Lake Erie, Allian.ee & Southern Railway, at said railroad crossing, on which the plaintiff was, and without giving any signal, and when the target was so set as to notify said defendants, its employes and train men not to cross said crossing, as the train on the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railway was crossing and had the right of way to cross; and at the time when the same could be easily seen; and thereby defendant caused its train of cars, so carelessly and negligently operated, as aforesaid, to run into said caboose-in which plaintiff was riding on said Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railway, and with such force and violence as to throw the caboose from the track, and thereby the plaintiff received severe, painful and permanent injuries to his person, by the breaking offthree ribs, and puncture and injury to his left lung, and injuries to his spine, together with cuts and bruises about his person, and from which injuries he alleges he has suffered great pain, and he is a constant sufferer therefrom ; and that said injuries are of a permanent character, and that he will always be afflicted with pain, and unable to do but little, if any, work ; that said defendant caused its cars to pass over said track of the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railroad Company at said crossing at Minerva, and at said time when said plaintiff received his injuries as aforesaid, carelessly and negligently, and without right; when said train on which said plaintiff was riding on, the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railway had the .right to said crossing, and when the target at said crossing had been so placed to notify said defendant’s employes so running said train, not to cross said crossing, and that-thereby said plaintiff received said injuries without any fault or negligence on his part, but by reason of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant in its operation and running of said train of cars on said road, as aforesaid; and that he has sustained damages growing out of said injuries.

The plaintiff further alleges that at the time of said collision on the 17th day of November, 1893, the employes of said Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railroad Company, so placed said target as to notify the defendant at said crossing; and said defendant’s employes so carelessly and negligently operated said train of cars, and paid no attention to said signal and target at said crossing, and did not stop its train within two hundred feet thereof, nor over eight hundred-feet from said crossing, but crossed the same without being signalled by any watchman or person in charge of said target, and before the line was clear, and while said train was passing over as aforesaid, and by means of the premises and the negligence and carelessness of the defendant in its operating and running said engine and train over said crossing and onto said train on which said plaintiff was a passenger, the plaintiff received the injuries set forth in his petition, and now claims damages in the sum of ten thousand dollars.

Now that is the statement of the claims made by the plaintiff as to his cause of action against the defendant.

To this petition, thus stated, the defendant has filed an answer in which it admits that at the time named in the petition it was an incorporated railway company, duly incorporated under the laws of Ohio, and that-a part of its railroad extended and still extends from the city of Canton, Stark county, Ohio, to Sherrodsville, Carroll county, Ohio, and that it has a branch road extending from said main line to the village of Minerva, and said branch crossed the track of the lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railway near the town of Minerva, and there was at said crossing a target to be used for signal purposes.

[363]*363The defendant denies that said plaintiff was injured at the time stated in said petition bp reason of any negligence upon the part ofthe defendant or any of its employes.

The defendant denies that the train on the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railroad had the right to the crossing at the place specified. It denies that said target was set so as to give to the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern train the right to said crossing. And the defendant says that it has no knowledge of the injuries complained of in the petition, but avers that if said plaintiff was injured, it was either by his own negligence and carelessness, or the carelessness of the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern Railway, and not the carelessness of the defendant; and the defendant denies each and every other allegation contained in the petition which is not admitted in its answer.

Now, to this answer the plaintiff has filed a reply which isa general denial of all the averments contained in the answer which do not admit the averments of the petition. So that these pleadings, the petition, the answer and the reply, set-forth the claims made respectively by the parties to this suit.

The facts alleged in the petition which are denied in the answer, and the allegations of the answer which are denied by the reply, form the issues in this law suit.

What I mean by the issues are, the allegations affirmed on one side, and denied on the other; the matters in dispute.

There are some matters about which there is no dispute; these you will simply take as facts. One is that the Cleveland, Canton & Southern Railroad Company wa«, on the day when the accident is alleged to have occurred, viz: the 17th day of November, 1893, the owner, and was operating its railroad on its branch from the junction to Minerva.

Another is, that the Lake Erie, Alliance & Southern, at the same time, owned and was operating its railroad from Alliance through Minerva; that at or near Minerva, these two railroads cross each other at a common level.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio N.P. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moulder-v-cleveland-canton-southern-railroad-ohctcomplstark-1895.