Nitz v. Toledo

22 Ohio C.C. 454
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. 454 (Nitz v. Toledo) 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
Nitz v. Toledo, 22 Ohio C.C. 454 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Hull, J.

This action is brought to reverse the judgment of the court of,' common pleas. The plaintiff in error was the plaintiff below, and a verdict was returned against him at the trial, and judgment, entered upon that verdict.

The action below was to recover for personal injuries which thb plaintiff claimed he had sustained on' account of negligence of the city.. He complains in', his petition that on or about October 30, 1899,- he was walking along the platform of Market space, on Superior street,- between Monroe street and Washington street,, and that about the middle' of the platform, a set of scales had been removed which formerly stood there,' leáving a hole some four or five feet or more in depth. It is alleged that it was in the night; that he did not see the hole, and that he fell into it and was injured.

"The answer is in the way of a general denial and alleges that if the plaintiff was injured, it was on account of his own negligence. . ,

Tt is complained that the verdict and judgment are against the weight of the evidence; are not sustained by sufficient evidence; that the court erred on' the trial of the case, and especially in its charge to the jury.

While the plaintiff alleged in his petition that he was walking on the market platform at the time he fell into the hole, he testified upon the trial that this was not the fact; that he was in fact walking on the street, on Superior street, crossing the street, at the place where the scales had been, going east, and that in that way he fell into the hole. The plaintiff testified-that he lived somewhere in the western part of the city; that he had been on Summit street and then came upon Monroe street to Superior street, to the western end of Market space. There he made a small purchase, then turning down Superior street, south or east, with the intention of going down that street and finally reaching his home in that way, but that, when hé was about half way between Monroe street and Washington [457]*457street, he concluded to turn off to the east and go through the opening between the platforms of the market place, where the scales had been, and by way of an alley which ran east, and reach St. Clair street and there take a car. He turned off at. this point and started across Superior street in an eastward direction, as he claims, for the purpose stated, and when he' reached the platform on Market space he'undertook to walk through where the scales had been and fell into the'hole caus'ed by their being taken out that day. He had three of his rihs' broken and was otherwise seriously injured.' '

'It is claimed on the part of the. city that' whatever errors1 may have been committed by the trial/court, they are not prejudicial, for the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. It is claimed that he was going where he. had no' right to go and uding a part of the street which he had no right to:use, except at! his own risk,' using it for his own convenience, 'his own pur-’, pose; that instead'of keeping upon the sidéwálk he'walked' out' into the street, and that in'so doing he took his own risk,, and if he was injured, no cause of action' arose against the city-

Two decisions of the supreme court are cited to sustain this contention, one being Kelley v. Columbus, 41 Ohio St., 263, where the court says in the syllábus:

“A city is not liable for an injury resulting from the unsafe or dangerous condition of lands adjacent to a street where thp place of danger is so far from the street that no injury can result to persons in the ordinary and proper use of the street.

“The owner of land is not liable for injury resulting from the unsafe or dangerous condition of his premises, to persons who go upon them without invitation express or implied.

“The fact that a pavement was continuous from a sidewalk on. a street over the adjacent lands to the place of danger, was not, of itself, an implied invitation to a person on the sidewalk to go upon the adjacent lands.”

Kelley was walking along the street in Columbus, in the vicinity of the city hall, and for the purpose of answering a [458]*458call of- nature, he stepped off the sidewalk and walked across - the pavement and to the east side of the building in the night season. This building was some thirty feet away from the sidewalk. He fell into an open area and received an injury. The supreme court held that where- he fell was no part of the sidewalk; that he had no invitation to go there, and if he saw fit to use this place for that purpose, when he might have kept on the sidewalk, he did so at his own risk, and if he was injured, there could be no recovery.

The other case relied upon is Dayton v. Taylor, 62 Ohio St., 11. The party in this case slipped and fell or slid into a catch-basin in the street. He was going across the street diagonally where there was no sidewalk, and the supreme court say, in the syllabus:

“A pedestrian who, without necessity, and for his own pleasure and convenience, departs from the sidewalks and street crossings, upon which he would have avoided injury, and crosses a street intersection diagonally, and is injured by slipping into a catch-basin which lay between the crossings, must be held to have assumed the risks which' lay in the path ■ which he thus chooses.”

So that under these authorities, if Nitz deliberately left the-sidewalk and traveled over a part of the street not intended, to be traveled upon, for his own purpose and his own convenience, the city would not be liable.

But the evidence shows that he walked in a southerly direction upon Superior street, upon the west side of it, where-there was a sidewalk, and that in the middle of the street, between Monroe street and Washington street, was a market house or market shed, which consisted of a platform with a roof over it at that time. . The platform is perhaps fifteen feet in width and is used by market men in the middle of the day. This market shed consisted of two parts, and midway between them was this opening for the scales, where they had been for many years, and the evidence shows that from these scales on each side there was a sidewalk to the edge of Superior street, the sidewalk running from the point where Nitz turned off to go to St. Clair street to the opening between the platforms where the scales were, extending to the edge of the opening' [459]*459northerly, and on the other side of the platform there was gi sidewalk running' to the easterly side of Superior street and ending nearly in front of the city police station, or city hall.

' -These scales, which were large ones,, used -for the purpose cf weighing wagons, had a* platform as long as the market platform was wide, and the platform of the scales was about ten feet in width; they had been used for many'years by the public for the purpose of travel, some of the witnesses saying that hundreds of people went through there every day an} night, and, according to the testimony, used it as a part of thg street, and there was on the easterly side of Superior street^ an alley running to St. Charles street, which was immediately opposite this opening made by the scales, so that. Nitz, when? he undertook to go from Superior street on its western sidé over to St.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nitz-v-toledo-ohiocirct-1901.