New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad v. Kistler

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 277
CourtSandusky Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 277 (New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad v. Kistler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Sandusky Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad v. Kistler, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 277 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

This is a case in error pending in the circuit court of Sandusky county, in which the plaintiff in error, the railroad company, seeks to reverse a judgment obtained by Miss Kistler, the defendant in error, against the railroad company. The case was heard by us at Fremont in June last. The record is very voluminous, occupying between five and six hundred pages of type-written matter. It has been a very great labor to examine it with the care that its importance and justice to the parties demanded. We have not been able to give it such examination —complete our examination of the record — until quite recently, but we have gone carefully through it, and 1 shall now proceed to announce the conclusion at which we have arrived.

The plaintiff below, Miss Kistler, filed her petition in the court of common pleas of Sandusky county on November 10, 1892. She alleged the corporate existence of the railroad company, set forth the county through which the line of railway passed, and alleged that

“On or about the second of June, 1892, she was a traveler upon one of the highways of that locality in a vehicle drawn by two horses; that while so traveling at a point at or near a place where said railroad crosses said highway, defendant, by its servants, ran one of its locomotives and a train of cars thereto attached upon said railroad, and negligently and carelessly approached said highway with said locomotive and train of cars at a high, immoderate and dangerous rate of speed, and negligently and carelessly omitted to give proper and sufficient signals or warning of the approach of said locomotive'and train of cars to said crossing, and of the existence of said crossing, and negligently and carelessly allowed and maintained obstructions to a proper view of said train, locomotive and railroad, and negligently and carelessly operated and handled its said locomotive and train of cars; by reason whereof the plaintiff, while so traveling in the crossing of said railroad upon said highway, and being in the exercise of due care and without fault or negligence on her part, was violently struck by said locomotive and train, and thereby danerously, seriously and permanently bruised, injured,, scarred and disfigured and thereby received unsightly marks about her head, and was thereby made very sick for a long time.”

She prays judgment for $>30,000 for the injuries.

The railroad company filed its answer on February 27,189B. It admitted the corporate existence of the defendant; that it owns and operates the line of railway described in the petition; and for want of knowledge it denies all the other statements contained in the petition. And for ground of defense the defendant further says:

“If the plaintiff was injured in any degree or respect by a train upon defendant’s railroad, the defendant avers and says that such injury was brought about and caused by the negligence and want of care of the [279]*279plaintiff and those to whom she entrusted her personal safety at the time, in approaching and crossing said railroad; and that the line of defendant’s railroad at the place where said plaintiff was crossing the same, was visible for a long distance either way upon the side of the railroad track, along the highway which she was traveling; that there was nothing except the want of care and attention, and failure to look and listen, on the part of the plaintiff, that could possibly prevent her hearing or seeing any train approaching from either direction, as she approached said railway crossing on the highway; and that on the occasion in question, if she was injured in any respect, as she alleges, it was because she failed, neglected and refused to exercise her faculties of hearing, seeing and looking out for approaching trains, which faculties, the defendant alleges, she then had and possessed to an ordinary degree, and to the extent that people have and possess such faculties generally. Wherefore it is alleged that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.”

The plaintiff in her reply to defendant’s answer, filed January 22, 1894, said that she denied negligence or want of care upon her part, or any one with whom she entrusted her personal safety. She denied also that the defendant’s railroad at the place named was visible for a long distance either way, as alleged; denied that she (plaintiff) negligently exercised the ordinary faculties of seeing and hearing in looking out for an approaching train; denied that she negligently exercised ordinary care in approaching said railway or crossing, or that she was guilty of any negligence which contributed to her injury.

The case was tried to a jury, and on January 13, 1894, a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff against the railroad company for $12,000. The railroad company thereupon filed its motion for a new trial, alleging as grounds of the motion, 1. Excessive damages. 2. Verdict not sustained by sufficient evidence and contrary to law. 3. Error of law occurring at the trial, excepted to at the time; also that the court admitted testimony offered by the plaintiff and objected to by defendant, and excluded testimony offered by the defendant; and error in the charge of the court in giving certain requests. On February 17, 1894, the motion for a new trial was overruled, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff below on the verdict, which was excepted to. A bill of exceptions was taken by the defendant, and filed March 17 or 27 — the record states it both ways — 1894. The petition in error was filed in the circuit court on April 2, 1894. The errors assigned are substantially those set forth in the motion for a new trial.

The line of the defendant’s railway at the locality in question, as appears from the record, crosses what' is known as the county line road in such manner as to form an acute angle at the place of crossing.

There was no sign-board at this crossing, giving notice of the existence of a railroad crossing. The county line road runs directly east and west, the railroad in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction over the county line road crossing. A public road known as the Sand Ridge road crosses the county line road and the railroad in a diagonal manner, this crossing being in a direction a little east of north. The effect of these several crossings is to leave a small piece of land of triangular shape lying between the county line road, the Ridge road, and the railroad. The distance from the railroad and the county line road crossing, along the county line road to the Ridge road and county line road crossing, is 202 feet; from the last named point to the Ridge road and railroad crossing, along the Ridge road, is, as stated upon a plat which was fur[280]*280nished us, 135 feet, but as stated by one of the witnesses is 166 feet. From this point southwesterly along the railroad to the railroad and county line road crossing is 346 feet. East of the Ridge road crossing the distance between the county line road and the line of railroad increases, owing to the fact that while the county line road proceeds in a direct line east and west, the railroad bears off from the highway in a northeasterly direction. Eying east of the 'crossing is a piece of woods through which the line of railway passes. The distance irom the crossing where the accident in question occurred, to this piece of woods, is estimated by some of the witnesses at from 75 to 80 rods ; one witness fixing it by actual measurement at 94 rods, or 1,551 ieet. The lands in the locality in question are described as being somewhat rolling in their character, possessing some inequalities of surface, but not to any considerable extent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-chicago-st-louis-railroad-v-kistler-ohcirctsandusky-1894.