New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Woods

6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350
CourtAshtabula Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350 (New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ashtabula 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 Railway Co. v. Woods, 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Eaubie, J.

This proceeding in error is brought to reverse a judgment of the court below, in an .action wherein the defendant in error, Mary A. B. Woods, was plaintiff, and the railroad company was defendant. The action was brought by her to recover for injuries received instepping off of the passenger train of the defendant company, at Bellevue station in this state, and was tried before Judge Howland and a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in her favor.

She was on her way to Chicago as a passenger upon the road of the company from Erie, Pennsylvania, but the train did not proceed to Chicago upon that day. It regularly stopped over night at Fostoria, Ohio, a station just beyond Bellevue, but passengers were permitted to stop over at Fostoria or Bellevue, on their way to Chicago. She chose to stop at Bellevue, and she alleged she was-injured in alighting from the train by reason oí certain negligent acts of the defendant’s servants in charge of the train, especially in not giving notice of the arrival of the train at that station, in not holding the train long enough for her to get off, and suddenly starting the train as she was stepping off, without notice to her that it was about to start, whereby she. was thrown down and struck by one of the cars, without fault on her part. All of this was denied by the defendant, and it is alleged that she, the plaintiff, was injured solely from her own want of ordinary care.

The only assigned errors that require notice are as to the charge of the court, and the first is as to the burden of proof of contributory negligence. That part of the charge is as follows : “ The burden is upon the defendant to prove that the plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care, which contributed to the accident and injury as the proximate cause thereof, under this issue, and that burden remains upon the defendants to so prove that the defendant has failed to-exercise ordinary care, unless the' plaintiff’s evidence has raised a presumption that she was not in the exercise of due and ordinary care, in anything that she did, or omitted to do; and if her evidence did raise such a presumption, then the-burden would be upon the plaintiff to remove and overcome that presumption, before she will be entitled to a finding in her favor upon that issue, or a verdict-in this case. Upon that question you would have a right to look to and consider all of the evidence in this case, whether introduced by the plaintiff or the defendant, or was called out in chief or cross-examination, and if no presumption is raised by the plaintiff’s evidence, or if one has been raised thereby, and overcome and removed by the evidence in the case, then and in that event the burden would still be on the defendant to prove by a preponderance of all the evidence-in this case, its defense, that the plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care in what she did or omitted to do, at or before the injury complained of, and that her failure to exercise ordinary care contributed to the accident and injury, as the proximate cause thereof; and if the defendant has failed to prove its defense of contributory negligence by a preponderance of all the evidence in this, case, which you find has any bearing thereon, then your finding upon that issue should, be-against the defendant, and in favor of the plaintiff; but if it has been so proven [352]*352fdiat the plaintiff did fail to use ordinary care as stated, then your verdict should "be for the defendant.”

If the court had given only the first paragraph of this instruction, there cquld be no doubt but that the court had substantially given the rule correctly; 'but the court proceeded further to instruct the jury that if such a presumption was raised, and it was overcome and removed by the evidence in the case, then the burden of proof still rested upon the defendant, to maintain its defense of contributory negligence by a preponderance of all the evidence in this ■case.”

Is it correct, that where such a presumption is raised by the plaintiff’s evidence, the burden still rests upon the defendant to prove contributory negligence, if after considering all of ihe evidence in the case, the presumption of negligence is removed ? If it depended upon the plaintiff to remove that presumption, then .she must have done it by evidence introduced by her, because the court did not mean that such presumption cast upon the plaintiff the burden of proving ordinary care on her part. To allow the jury to determine from all of the evidence in the case whether the plaintiff had overcome and removed such presumption, would be consistent only with the idea that the burden of disproving contributory negligence had been cast upon the plaintiff, The charge, as given, either makes the removal of such presumption something less than the burden of proof of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff; or, that the burden of proof upon that point shifts; and neither proposition can be sustained, in our opinion. The burden of proof, it is unnecessary to say, never shifts. Where it once rests upon a party, it rests always so far as the trial of the case is concerned. Upon the other •proposition, that the removal of this presumption, where it is raised by the •plaintiff’s evidence, is anything less than the burden of proof upon the question -of contributory negligence, is also a mistake. Where plaintiff is ’seeking to recover for injuries received through negligence of the defendant, the legal effect •of certain facts in the plaintiff’s case, if they appear in his evidence, is to create .a presumption that he was guilty of contributory negligence, and, therefore, h*. cannot recover until the legal effect of those facts are removed and overcome, by ■ showing the existence of other facts sufficient to that end; and that means that the burden of proof, to remove and overcome the legal effect of those facts, i. ei: that plaintiff -was guilty of contributory negligence, rests upon the plaintiff.

The charge in the respect named, is not sustained, as claimed, by the holding in B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Whitacre, 35 Ohio St., 627. It is true that there may be some uncertainty in the syllabus of that case upon this question, that might, ■perhaps, when not carefully considered, lead the court into the belief that something less was meant than casting the burden of proof upon the question of contributory negligence upon the plaintiff. That part of the syllabus is as follows : “ But if plaintiff’s own testimony in support of his cause of action raises a presumption of such contributory negligence, the burden rests upon him to remove that presumption.” This may, if there is any uncertainty in it, be regarded as an unfortunate use of language, but, after all, there is no uncertainty in it. The meaning and effect of that holding is to throw the burden of proof upon the plaintiff to show he used ordinary care on the occasion in question.

In Robinson et al. v. Gary, 28 Ohio St., 250, Judge Fay uses this language which is (quoted with approbation in the Whitacre case): “It is only when the injury is shown by the plaintiff, and there is nothing that implies that his own negligence contributed to it, that the burden of proving contributory negligence ■ can properly be said to be cast on the defendant, for when the plaintiff’s own case raises the suspicion that his own negligence contributed to the injury, the presumption of due care on his part is so far removed that he cannot properly be ■.relieved from disproving his own contributory negligence, by casting the burden ■of proving it on the defendant.

A more particular examination of the case of the B. & O. R. R. Co. v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-chicago-st-louis-railway-co-v-woods-ohcirctashtabul-1895.