New York, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Willing

5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 137
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedNovember 15, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 137 (New York, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Willing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts 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 Ry. Co. v. Willing, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 137 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

The defendant in error, plaintiff below, brought this action in this case to recover damages for being wrongfully and unlawfully put off thé train of the railroad company in the month of May, 1900, at a point betwéen the town of Bellevue and the village of Kimball on the line of the railroad company. The plaintiff recovered a verdict for $810. The motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered thereon, and it is to reverse this judgment that proceedings were commenced in this court.

The plaintiff claims that he was at the village of Arcadia, Hancock county, on the line of the railroad company, on the night of May 5, 1900, and he desired to go to Kimball in Erie county. He wished to take the train at Arcadia late at night (about eleven o’clock), and it is claimed that he asked the ticket agent at Arcadia if the train stopped at Kimball, and the ticket agent told him that it did. Willing claimed he asked the agent how much the fare was, and the agent replied that he did not know, as he was a new man, but that the [138]*138train was a local train, stopping at all stations, and. that it stopped at Kimball, and that he might pay his fare on the train as well as to bny a ticket; and that he got on the train after receiving this information. He claims that he paid the conductor on the train his fare between Arcadia and Bellevue, and that at the time he paid him he was told by this conductor that he would get off at Bellevue and that he could not take his fare to Kimball, but he could pay it to the conductor that would get on the train at Bellevue, at the end of the division. He claimed he proceeded on his way to Bellevue, accompanied by a friend by the name of Howard, who got off at Bellevue, and Willing, the plaintiff below, stayed in the car and went out on the train in the direction of Kimball.

After he had gone a short distance from Bellevue he was informed by the brakeman and conductor that the train did not stop at Kimball. Willing claims he told the conductor that he had been informed by the ticket agent at Arcadia and also by the conductor in charge of the train from Arcadia to Bellevue that the train did stop at Kimball. The conductor told him the train would not stop until they reached Lorain, and that he would either have to pay his fare to Lorain or get off — he could take his choice. Willing said he would rather get off, and thereuppn the conductor pulled the rope, as he says, in an ■“angry manner,” and the brakeman opened the door and he was ordered out of. the car and off the train at a point perhaps three miles east of Bellevue, just at the edge of the yards where the sign “yard limits” stands, and about half way between Bellevue and Kimball, the latter place being about seven miles east of Bellevue. No physical violence was used in putting him off the train, and after he got off he concluded to go on to Kimball to the house where he intended to go, instead of going back to Bellevue, the distance being about the same.

After starting on his way, a short distance from where he was put off, there was a highway crossing the railroad track, and, without seeing it, Willing claims he stepped on to and walked upon a cattle guard, and his foot turned and his ankle was sprained, and he claims he was quite severely injured.

[139]*139On the other hand, the railroad company denied that any such information as this was given to Willing at Arcadia when he purchased his ticket, and the conductor on the train from Arcadia to Bellevue denied that he made the statements testified to by Willing, and his testimony as to what occurred between Bellevue and the place where he was put off was denied in some particulars.

A large number of exceptions were taken to the introduction and exclusion of evidence. While there was some testimony admitted perhaps that might have been excluded, we find, on examination of the whole record, no error in this behalf to the substantial prejudice of the plaintiff in error.

It was contended by plaintiff in error that Willing’s injuries which he received, if he received any on account of stepping on the cattle guard, could not and should not be permitted to sustain his claim for damages in any particular; that such injuries were not the natural or probable result of his being put off the train in this manner. We think, however, if he was lawfully on the train and unlawfully put off at a point on the railroad track where there was no station and no stopping place, and from which it would be necessary for him to go either to his destination or back to Bellevue, we think if those were the facts, and if without any negligence on his part he was injured in walking upon the cattle guard, as he claims he was, that this would be an element that might be included in his claim. If the company wrongfully and unlawfully put him off the train at such a point in the night, they could not be heard to say that he ought not to recover for such injuries as those which resulted from his being so put off the train.

Testimony was introduced as to his injuries — as to the result of this sprained ankle and his own conduct afterwards— his limping and other indications of lameness and pain.' We think that admitting testimony such as this, while rather close to the line, was not error under all the circumstances.

Witnesses were permitted, however, to state what he said on different occasions, some time after his injury — that his ankle hurt him, and similar expressions. This testimony, we think, ought not to have been admitted. Express declarations like [140]*140these a long time after the injury, that his ankle pained him, or hurt him, ought to have been excluded.

A certain piece of evidence that was introduced and which was objected to by the railroad company, was an almanac showing the time the moon set on the night in question. It has always been the rule, as far as we know, to admit almanacs in evidence, and, upon examination of Jones on Evidence, we find that there is authority for it. In Jones on Evidence, Section 594, where there is a brief discussion of almanacs along with scientific and medical works, we find this language:

‘ ‘ On the same principle almanacs have been admitted to prove at what hour the sun or moon rose at a given time, although since this is a fact of which the court will take judicial notice, the evidence may be unnecessary, or it may be deemed as used for the purpose of refreshing the memory of the court and jury.”

We think it was not error to admit the almanac.'

Quite a large number of requests to charge the jury were made by the plaintiff and by the defendant, and many of them were given. Among the requests that were given on behalf of the plaintiff below was request No. 6, which reads as follows:

“If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff, at the time this train left Bellevue, knew that this train did not stop at Kimball, and if you find that he refused to pay his fare from Bellevue to Lorain, the conductor would have a right to eject the plaintiff from the train, but he would have no right to eject the plaintiff late at night, if the night was dark, in the country, far from a railroad station, if by so doing such passenger so ejected would thereby and as a natural and probable consequence be exposed to danger.”

To the giving of this instruction exception was taken by the railroad company, and error is claimed from it here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-chicago-st-louis-ry-co-v-willing-ohiocirct-1902.