O. B. Farrelly & Co. v. City of Cincinnati

2 Disney (Ohio) 516
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJune 15, 1859
DocketNo. 9,280
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Disney (Ohio) 516 (O. B. Farrelly & Co. v. City of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O. B. Farrelly & Co. v. City of Cincinnati, 2 Disney (Ohio) 516 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

Hoadly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In ordinary actions under the Code, no specific statement of the damages sustained by the plaintiff:-is necessary. The statement of facts constituting the cause of action (Code, sec. 85) is not generally required to embrace the details of damages. But in actions for losses sustained by public nuisances, the rule is different. For here the gist of the action lies in the fact that the plaintiff has sustained special damage, different in kind from that common to the public. Lansing v. Smith, 8 Cowen, 153; Squire v. Gould, 14 Wend. 159. Unless such damage is shown, there is no £‘ cause of action,” and its existence is one of the ££ facts constituting the 'cause of action.” And without a sufficient statement of such damage, a demurrer is well taken to a petition in such action.

About the general rule in such cases, there is no difficulty. The plaintiff' to recover must show a loss different in land from the rest of the community. Merely enhanced suffering of the same kind will not answer ; and the loss of the public here consists in the inconvenience in, or obstruction to the use of the highway by travelers, differing in degree, not in kind, according to the frequency of use which proximity of residence, or estate, or peculiarity of occupation may impose. And for this no individual can sue, but must resort to such public remedies as are given by law. As already stated, the right to maintain a private action depends on the existence of special damage.

In looking to see if such damage is stated, we find two particulars charged. The first consists in losses sustained while in the continuing use of the street when foundrous; the other in the necessity of abandoning part of the route, and seeking the terminus of the trips by other streets. Let us consider these separately.

Without doubt the breaking of carriages and killing of horses may be special damage. But as they are not necessarily such, omnibuses will wear out and break down with ordinary wear and tear in time, and horses in like manner [520]*520will die in ordinary omnibus service. And if these are the results of the continued use of a foundrous highway, it is difficult to find any principle upon which they can be considered different in kind from the loss every traveler with a vehicle over the same road sustains. It is still ordinary wear and tear, the ordinary wear and tear of very bad work, of travel over a very bad road, and just such wear and tear as every vehicle which uses the street is subjected to. Again, if the cause of action arose out of the breaking of one or more omnibuses, or the killing of one or more horses in a foundrous highway by driving into a hole or over a pile of stones, whose existence was before unknown, and which could not with ordinary diligence be avoided, no doubt there would be a right to recover. But where this very same damage results, as here, from the continued use of a foundrous highway, it is obvious that unless it is the only road which could be resorted to and the use of it is necessary, every trip after its foundrous condition is discovered is voluntary, and every item of damage sustained after that time voluntarily incurred, and not the subject of an action such as this.

The rule is well stated in Farnum v. Concord, 2 New Hamp. 394. The court there say: “ Suppose a bridge across a stream in a town so out of repair and ruinous as to be manifestly and clearly unsafe to pass, any person coming to such bridge with his horse, carriage, or team, might with great propriety decline to pass it, and if he sustained any special damage by reason of his being unable to pass it, he might well obtain an action against the town. But if in such case, knowing the situation of the bridge, he should attempt to pass with his horse or team, and they should be lost or injured, he could maintain no action against the town, because the loss must be attributed to his own fault and folly in attempting to pass such a bridge.” And again they say: “If towns suffer highways to be out of repair, they may be compelled by law to repair them; but no neglect of towns to repair roads gives any right to individuals to make dangerous experiments upon them at the risk of towns.” [521]*521To the same effect also is Mount Vernon v. Dusouchett et al., 2 Carter, Ind. 586; Erie City v. Schwingle, 22 Penn. 384, may perhaps be cited as against this view, but it is not. There a bridge had been carried away, which the city was bound to sustain, and a ford was attempted, in its place. The city undertook to repair the road leading to the ford, and by the bad condition of this road, the plaintiff was injured. He knew that the bridge was gone, and there were other streets with bridges, which he could have traveled, but it was not shown that he knew the road to the creek was out of order, and he was injured, not by the want of the bridge, but the non-repair of the road, and this very road the city had tried or assumed to put in order for travel.

It must be remembered that though the plaintiffs state that they were licensed to use this route, they do not sue for the breach of any contract, express or implied, but only for the breach of the general public duty to keep the streets of the city in fit condition for use. And if they have, by reason of their license, a right to use Yine street while it is out of repair, they must assert it in the proper action; an action upon the contract, if there be one. The fact that they continued voluntarily to use the street after it ceased to be fit for use, might not perhaps there avail as a defense. But where they rely on the public duty, and not on a private right, it is a sufficient answer to say, you could have used other routes to your terminus; you persisted in this, knowing its condition, and voluntarily incurred this loss.

Eor one of the elements of that special damage which justifies a recovery in this class of cases is that the plaintiff' did not contribute to its existence. The public nuisance must be the proximate cause of the injury. Here it is the remote cause. The voluntary use of the highway by the plaintiff's is the proximate cause.

Nor can it be said that Yine street was the only avenue by which Corryville could be reached from the city. The petition itself shows that other routes could be and were used for that purpose. So far, then, as the injury to the [522]*522horses and carriages of the plaintiffs is concerned, it might have been avoided, and can not be recovered.

We come next to consider the claim of damages founded on the abandonment of the streets and the resort to other routes. In examining this part of the case, it must be borne in mind that the plaintiffs do not sue upon any contract growing out of their license. They rely on the breach of a public duty, and the case, in this respect, presents the single question: Can it be alleged as special damage by those who have been using a public highway with coaches for the transportation of passengers, that a nuisance exists by which they are forced to abandon and seek the termini of their ■ route by other steets, and that thereby they have suffered in their trade ?

The consideration of this question calls for an examination of authorities. The earliest case is to be found in the Year Rook 27, Henry VIII., page 27, where the judges disagreed.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Disney (Ohio) 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/o-b-farrelly-co-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohsuperctcinci-1859.