Ohliger v. Toledo

10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 762
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 762 (Ohliger v. Toledo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohliger v. Toledo, 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 762 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Hull, J.

This action comes into this court on petition in error to the judgment of the court of common pleas, plaintiff in error, who was plaintiff below, brought an action against the city of Toledo for injuries which he claimed he had sustained on account of negligence of the city.

Plaintiff alleged in his petition, in substance, that on the evening of November 3, 1898, while walking along a public street of the city of Toledo, to-wit, Hoag street, he fell through a hole in the sidewalk, which was caused by a board being out, and he claims that the city was negligent in having and permitting a sidewalk to be in that condition at the time of this injury, and that he, the plaintiff, was without <any fault or negligence on his part.

He claims to have been seriously injured; alleges that he is a physician, having a practice, as he claims, of about twenty years or a little over, at the time ot his injury, and that on account of his injuries he had been confined to his house from the time of the accident and had not been able to practice his profession, and he asks damages against the city 1 in the sum of $20,000.

The defendant admits that Hoag street, on which the plaintiff claims to have been injured, is a public street, and in its answer substantially denies all the other allegations of the petition, except that the city is a municipal corporation as alleged in the petition; and avers that whatever injury the plaintiff suffered, if he suffered any, was on account of his own negligence, contributing to his injury.

The case was tried in common pleas court to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of defendant A motion for a new trial was filed, upon the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence and contrary to law, and on account of errors claimed to have been committed in excluding testimony offered by plaintiff, and in the general charge of the court; and especially in the giving of certain requests asked by the defendant. The motion was overruled and judgment entered upon the verdict. Error is prosecuted here to reverse that judgment.

To fairly consider the errors that are complained of here, it will be necessary to state, very briefly, what the evidence of the plaintiff and of the defendant on the trial tended to show. The testimony of the plaintiff himself and of other witnesses called by him tended to show that on November 3, 1898, between the hours of seven and eight o’clock in the evening, he was in his office and was visited by a man and a woman, the man’s name being Swandeck and the woman’s name Josie Eosick, who asked him to come with him at once to visit a woman who was sick in that part of the city. It appears that the plaintiff lived on Nebraska avenue, not .very far from Hoag street, the latter being a street in the residence part of the city of Toledo. The doctor started from his office with these two persons, according to his testimony and that of those who were with him, to visit this woman. It was a dark night and somewhat rainy. When they reached Hoag street, where the accident occurred, the doctor was walking by the side of Mrs. Eosick and Mr. Swandeck was walking immediately ahead of them. They were walking along on Hoag street, in the ordinary way, and when near Vance street the do'ctor stepped into a hole in the sidewalk, which was an ordinary board sidewalk about five feet in width. He was walking on the outside of the [765]*765walk towards the driveway, and. fell down between the outside stringer and the middle stringer, where a board of the sidewalk, according to the testimony, -was out and left a hole about one foot wide and of the same depth. There was no evidence that plaintiff had any knowledge that the board was out. The doctor was gotten out of the hole, made his call upon the sick woman and went home. As I have said, he claims to have been quite seriously injured, to have been unconscious for a short time after the accident, that he was injured to a considerable extent about his limbs, spine and person and his nervous system very much shocked. The plaintiff called several other witnesses, who testified to this plank being out of this sidewalk, some testifying that it had been out since the latter part of July previous, and some having seen it in August and some in September, the accident having occurred November 3, 1898.

The testimony offered by the city conflicted in some respects with that of the plaintiff and his witnesses, as to the length of time that this board had been out or as to whether it had been out any appreciable length of time before the accident, some witnesses testifying that it had been out only seven or eight days, and two witnesses who lived near by, and perhaps upon property abutting on the street at that place, said that it had not been out at all before that night. Two witnesses called by the city testified to seeing the doctor fall at the place where he claims he did, and there is not very much question, from the testimony, but that the doctor fell through a hole in the sidewalk as he claims he did. The length of time that this board had been out and whether the city ought to have known of it, is in dispute between the parties; whether the city was negligent in that respect, and whether the plaintiff received such injuries as he claims he did, is also in dispute. -Quite a large number of witnesses, were called by the defendant, and among them three or four physicians, upon the latter point. With the testimony substantially in this condition the case went to the jury and a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant.

It is claimed by the plaintiff in error, that the court erred in giving this instruction to the jury in the general charge :

“ It must also appear that such defective condition of the walk that occasioned this fall was known to the city and that the city, with knowledge of this defect, neglected its duty which the law imposes upon it, to repair and put this sidewalk in proper condition for the use of the citizen.”

It is urged that this instructed the jury that it must appear that the city had positive and actual knowledge of this defect, in order to make the city liable; that the instruction left out the element of constructive or implied notice that would be presumed from a defect existing in the sidewalk for a long period of time, where the city might be held to be guilty of negligence under the doctrine of implied or constructive notice, or because it had not exercised ordinary care in discovering the defect. And it is urged that although this element is covered in other parts of the charge, that the giving of this instruction to the jury by itself, was erroneous and should be held to be prejudicial error. On the next page of the charge, to-wit, page 110, it appears that the court said this to the jury:

“ It must also appear that such defect was actually known to the city through some of its officers, agents or servants charged with the duty of looking after its streets and sidewalks, or it must appear that the defect had existed for such a length of time prior to the alleged injury that the [766]*766city, if exercising ordinary care and diligence, would or should have known of those defects.”

And again, at the bottom of the same page, the court said to the Jury:

“ As I have said to you, the city to be liable, if there was a defect in. this walk, must have had actual notice of the defect through its proper officers, or the defect must have existed for such a length of time that it would be presumed to know of the delect.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohliger-v-toledo-ohcirctlucas-1900.