P. C. C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Moreland

12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 604
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 604 (P. C. C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Moreland) 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
P. C. C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Moreland, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 604 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Burrows, J.

This action was brought in the court of common pleas of this. county to recover a judgment against the railway company, for injuries which he alleges in his petition were caused by the carelessness of (he defendant company.

The issues were made between the parties and the case tried to a iury and a verdict in iavor of the plaintiff was the result of the trial. A motion was made for a new trial and overruled by the court of common pleas and afterwards the petition in error was filed in this court, seeking to reverse the judgment entered in the court of common pleas.

Plaintiff below alleged in his petition that the defendant was guilty of negligence in this, that in the cut which is west of the Bowerston tunnel, as it is called, the defendant had permitted and allowed the -accumulation of large quantities and masses of ice along and upon the rocks on the south side of this cut; that the defendant knew or ought to have known that this mass of ice, hanging from the rocks only a short distance from the track of the railway, was dangerous by reason of the liability of the same to fall on workmen or servants of the company working upon its tracks; that knowing, or having the means of knowledge, of this dangerous situation, the defendant ordered the plaintiff, William Moreland, to go to work upon the track of the railroad opposite to or near to a mass of ice that was more dangerous on account of a larger accumulation having been made at that point; more dangerous than it would have been to have worked at any other point in the cut.

It is also alleged in the petition that the defendant is guilty of negligence in running trains over its track at this point, where workmen were liable to be standing or walking between the track and these masses of ice.

The defendant, in its answer, denies all negligence and avers that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which directly caused his own injury.

This, by reply, is denied by the plaintiff.

Upon the trial, there was very little dispute as to the facts. West of Bowerston tunnel, there is a deep cut on the south side, from the level of the track for two or three feet; extending up the side of this cut is dirt or fire clay; above that is a perpendicular ledge of rocks for a distance of twelve or fourteen feet, and above that to the top of the cut is simply earth, sloping back from the rocks.

[606]*606There is no dispute as to distances or the quantity of ice, or the position of the tracks, or the position of the workmen.

From the perpendicular of this ledge of rocks to the tracks, the distance was some twelve feet. By means of the ditch being stopped, or lor some other cause, at the particular point of this injury, the ice was hanging to this perpendicular ledge ot rocks to the width of some eighteen or twenty inches, and the depth of a foot, as near as the testimony of any of the witnesses could ascertain it, and ot the height along the rocks of some ten or itwelve feet.

On the day of the injury some portion of this ice fell. The estimates are various, but substantially the same, that there was a quantity of two, three or five hundred pounds, or that two or three bushels of ice tell from this particular mass of ice.-

There is no dispute as to other tacts, that the plaintiff below had complete and full knowledge of the existence of this mass of ice at this point. There is no dispute but that the delendant, the railway company, had full and complete knowledge ot the existence of this ice. There is no dispute but that the section boss ordered this plaintiff to go to work tamping or tapping the earth in under the ties opposite, or nearly opposite, this mass of ice. There is no dispute but what the plaintiff was injured, and seriously injured, by the falling of this ice.

It is also a matter that is uncontradicted that when the freight train was coming from the west, that the plaintiff stepped off the railroad track, where he was at work, and placed himself near this ice while the freight train was passing, and that while so standing there a portion of the ice tell and injured him.

The plaintiff alleges in his petition, and says in his testimony, that he had no knowledge of the dangerous condition ot this ice or its liability to fall. He says also that he had some tear in that respect when he .was required to go to this place to work; that others suggested to the section boss that it was dangerous; that the section boss took a jack handle and put it behind this projecting ice and undertook to throw it down, and thereupon told the plaintiff that he thought that it was safe.

When this ice fell, the proof shows that it fell almost in line with the perpendicular surface of these rocks and away from the railroad track, and the pieces, so falling, so far as there is any testimony, did not reach the railroad track to within four feet.-

There is nothing in this evidence to show that there was any liability of this ice reaching the place where the plaintiff was at work, had it fallen while he was at work. At any rate, he was not injured while working upon the track.

While there are some allegations in the petition that the railway company was negligent in respect to the moving of its trains along this cut, the proof shows that this freight train was moving irom four to eight miles an hour; no witness putting the speed higher than eight miles an hour. So that, if there is any allegation of negligence in the petition against the railway company as to the moving of trains, it is entirely unproved.

As I said before, there is no evidence ot the ice being dangerous to a person working upon the track, while he was at work upon the track. The direct, proximate and only cause of this injury was the plaintiff stepping from the track where he was at work to avoid the coming train i and placing himself in proximity to this ice.

[607]*607While it is not stated in the petition that the plaintiii necessarily and by reason oi being at work at this point upon the railroad, was compelled, in moving from the track, to go near this ice, yet perhaps it is implied or inferable from what was stated in the petition, that he naturally and necessarily, in avoiding the passing train, placed himself in proximity to this hanging ice pile.

It is evident from this recitation of the facts that the cause oi the injury to the plaintiii was his position at the time the train passed.

It is not contended by counsel for the plaintiii below, that there was any real order or instructions from the railway company or this section boss that compelled or induced the plaintiii to go to the place where he went while the train was passing, to go into this place oi danger, but it is rested solely upon the ground that it was usual and natural foi persons working upon the track to step oti upon the side at which they were working, and that the railway company or the section boss, in ordering him to work where he was ordered to work, should have anticipated that, in the passing oi the train, he would step to that side where the passing train was liable to throw down this hanging ice, and ought to have warned him not to have stepped to that side, or kept some observation of his conduct; to have prevented it, if it was seen he was about to go into danger.

The case was not tried upon the issues that were fairly made by the pleadings.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-c-c-st-l-ry-co-v-moreland-ohiocirct-1896.