Myrtle Fannin, Administratrix of the Estate of Zeb Fannin, Deceased v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company

253 F.2d 173, 15 Ohio Op. 2d 353, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3840
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1958
Docket13260
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 253 F.2d 173 (Myrtle Fannin, Administratrix of the Estate of Zeb Fannin, Deceased v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myrtle Fannin, Administratrix of the Estate of Zeb Fannin, Deceased v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, 253 F.2d 173, 15 Ohio Op. 2d 353, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3840 (6th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from judgment entered on a directed verdict for the defendant in an action brought against ap-pellee by the administratrix, widow of *174 decedent who was killed by a train of the defendant operated at a high rate of speed over the Sandusky River Bridge at Tiffin, Ohio. In his opinion, delivered from the bench in directing the jury, the United States District Judge discussed in some detail both the facts and the law which he deemed applicable to the facts. He held plaintiff’s intestate to have been guilty of such contributory negligence as would preclude recovery by the ad-ministratrix and announced the further conclusion that there had been no negligence on the part of the railroad company which could be a proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s intestate.

Coneededly, Ohio supplies the governing law of the case. In Biery v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 156 Ohio St. 75, 77, 78, 99 N.E.2d 895, 896, the law is thus stated: “The rule is well settled that upon a defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, the trial court must construe the evidence most strongly in plaintiff’s favor and submit the case to the jury if such evidence, with all inferences reasonably deducible therefrom, would permit reasonable minds to reach different conclusions with respect to those questions of fact essential to be proved by plaintiff. [Citing cases.]

“Another equally well established rule is that negligence is never presumed. In an- action based on negligence, the presumption exists that each party was in the exercise of ordinary care, and such presumption prevails until rebutted by evidence to the contrary. [Citing cases].”

The first syllabus of Pope v. Mudge, 108 Ohio St. 192, 140 N.E. 501, asserts: “It is error for the court to direct a verdict against the plaintiff, where, by giving to the evidence the most favorable interpretation toward him which any of the evidence will reasonably warrant, there is some evidence tending to support the allegations of the petition.” See also Douglas v. Daniels Bros. Coal Co., 135 Ohio St. 641, 650, 22 N.E.2d 195, 123 A.L.R. 761.

The Supreme Court of Ohio, in Amstutz v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America, 136 Ohio St. 404, 407, 408, 26 N.E.2d 454, 456, thus stated the criterion: “The general rule is that in passing upon a defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, the trial court must treat as true all the evidence, together with any and all inferences which a jury may reasonably draw therefrom, in favor of the plaintiff; and ‘if, after so treating the evidence, the court should find that reasonable minds may reach different conclusions as to any question of fact essential to the claim of the party against whom the motion is made, the motion should be denied and the case submitted to the jury. See Hamden Lodge v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co., 127 Ohio St. 469, 189 N.E. 246.’ Wilson v. Peoples Ry. Co., 135 Ohio St. 547, at 552, 21 N.E.2d 860, 862.” See also Purdy v. Kerentoff, 152 Ohio St. 391, 394, 89 N.E.2d 565; Douglas v. Daniels Bros. Co., 135 Ohio St. 641, 650, 22 N.E.2d 195, 123 A.L.R. 761.

Our colleague, United States Circuit Judge Allen, formerly a member of the Supreme Court of Ohio, thus stated the rule in Baltimore & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Hen-ery, 6 Cir., 235 F.2d 770, 772, 773: “Under Ohio law, controlling here, the usual rule applies that a motion for a directed verdict amounts to an admission of all the facts which the evidence tends to prove. Moreover, the evidence is 'to be construed most strongly in favor of the party against whom the motion is made, Wilkeson v. Erskine & Son, Inc., 145 Ohio St. 218, 61 N.E.2d 201, 39 O.Jur., 799, Sections 182 and 183. See also Hamden Lodge, etc. v. Ohio Fuel Gas-Co., 127 Ohio St. 469, 189 N.E. 246.” See another opinion written by Judge Allen: Nieman v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 6 Cir., 83 F.2d 753, 754; see also Begert v. Payne, 6 Cir., 274 F. 784.

We shall now undertake a brief review of the facts to be considered in the light of the legal principles stated. The decedent, Zeb Fannin, was at the time of the fatal accident a painter in the employ of a contracting firm which had undertaken to paint the bridge of the appellee railroad company over the Sandusky River *175 at Tiffin, Ohio. Although the painting of the bridge had been under way for several weeks, the decedent had commenced work on it only the day before he met his death. In cooperation with Richard Kilgore, another employee of the painting firm, the decedent was working underneath the bridge. They had strung three cables — one on each side and one in the middle — and two “picks,” some twenty to twenty-two feet long, below the bridge. These picks were made like a ladder, with rungs over the top to which two-inch strip boards had been nailed.

When the decedent and the younger man, Kilgore, quit work on the day before the accident, the pick which they had been using was left about sixty feet from the east end of the bridge. It was strung crosswise in a northerly-southerly direction beneath the bridge. To get to the pick, Fannin and Kilgore had to step down onto a cross-piece and then on to the pick. The two men went to work about 6:45 on the morning of the accident.

The railroad tracks cross the bridge in an easterly-westerly direction and are comparatively straight until they reach a point some 700 or 800 feet west of the west end of the bridge. Whistle posts and yellow flags, indicating to approaching train crews that men were working on or about the bridge, had been placed both east and west of the bridge. Moreover, the railroad company had issued a bulletin to its employees to the effect that there were men working on the bridge. Admittedly, the appellee railroad company’s own rules limited the maximum speed to 35 miles per hour for all trains passing over the particular bridge at Tiffin, Ohio. Appellee’s train which struck and killed Fannin was, according to the testimony of Kilgore, traveling at sixty to seventy miles per hour when it passed him on the bridge. This was twice as fast as all other trains which he had observed passing over the bridge had traveled during the four or five weeks that he had worked on it. In fact, the speed of the train on the day of the fatal accident was so fast that — after its two engines had passed him — ;Kilgore’s hat was blown off his head.

Kilgore was the only witness who described the accident. He stated that he and the decedent had gone to work around 6:45 a. m. It was a clear day. After they arrived at the bridge, the two men unloaded from a truck, parked on the street at the west end of the bridge, the air hoses, paint buckets, and other tools needed for their work, and carried these implements onto the bridge to a point some sixty feet from its east end.

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253 F.2d 173, 15 Ohio Op. 2d 353, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myrtle-fannin-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-zeb-fannin-deceased-v-ca6-1958.