Packard v. Toledo Traction Co.

22 Ohio C.C. 578, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 822
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. 578 (Packard v. Toledo Traction Co.) 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
Packard v. Toledo Traction Co., 22 Ohio C.C. 578, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 822 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

. Hurí,, J.

The plaintiff in error in this case was also plaintiff below. He brought his action against the defendant to recover damages for injuries that he claims he sustained by reason of the negligence of the Traction Company in operating one of its street cars. The case was tried before the court and a jury and a verdict returned in favor of the defendant, and judgment entered thereon. It is to reverse this judgment that Packard brings this proceeding in error. The chief claim of the plaintiff in error is, that the judgment should be reversed for the reason that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and is against the weight of evidence. He also claims that the court erred in its charge to the jury.

The plaintiff offered his testimony and that of his witnesses as to the transaction in question, and the only evidence offered by the defendant was that of a physician in regard to plaintiff’s injuries. The case stood as to the accident itself upon the testimony offered by the plaintiff. The question is, whether, under the evidence as offered by the plaintiff alone, the jury was justified in finding a verdict against him.

The plaintiff’s claim in his petition is, in substance, that about 6.30 o’clock in the morning of the day in question, the defendant stopped one of its cars near the crossing of the Rake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway track, and that the plaintiff attempted to get onto the car after it had stopped; that he took hold of the handle on one side of the car with his left hand, and got onto the step with one foot, and while he was about in that position, and while he was trying to get into the car, and before he had gotten in or had time to get in, the conductor negligently signaled the car to go ahead, and the motorman started the car with a sudden jerk, and the plaintiff was thrown off and dragged for some distance, and injured. He claims that the Traction Company was negligent in the conduct of its motorman and conductor at the time in question, and that the finding of the jury against his claim is against the evidence. His claim is that under the undisputed facts of the case he is entitled to recover. On the other hand, the claim of the Traction Company is, that the question as to [580]*580whether the motorman and conductor exercised ordinary care at the time in question was a proper question for the jury_, was fairly submitted to the jury, and that their finding cannot be disturbed.

It appears from the record that the plaintiff lived very near the crossing of the tracks of the Traction Company with the Fake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company, and that he had for some time been in the habit of getting on the car near this crossing, a statute of the state (section 3443-6, Revised Statutes) requiring the street railway company to stop its cars not less than ten nor more than fifty feet from the, railroad crossing. The plaintiff had been in the habit of taking advantage of this stop to get on the car and go down town to his work, and he testifies that on the morning in question he left his house about the usual time to go to work, and that he stood in the street waiting for the car for perhaps ten or fifteen minutes. He stood first at the edge of the curb, and finally, he says, he walked out in the street within, perhaps, three or four feet of the railway track. Finally a car approached. He made no signal to the car that he desired to take passage thereon, knowing, of course, that the car was compelled to stop at this point. The car stopped within the short distance fixed by the statute from the steam railway track. The conductor went ahead, as he was in the habit of doing, and to comply with the statute, to look out for approaching trains. About the time the conductor reached the steam railroad track the plaintiff took hold of the handle of the car, and put his left foot on the step or running board to get on. Just at this time the conductor, from the'steam railway crossing, signaled the motorman to go ahead. The motorman, without looking around or taking any notice of what was taking place at the car, started in the sudden way that electric cars are usually started, and the plaintiff’s foot was thrown off the running board, but he held on the handle, and was dragged across the steam railway track,' and was finally assisted into the car by a passenger. He went down town to his work, but claims that he suffered considerable injury from the accident, and on account of what occurred there. There is no evidence in the record that the conductor or th<? motorman had any actual notice that he intended to get on [581]*581the car. The plaintiff testified that he was within three or four feet of the track as the car approached. His wife testified that she looked out of the. window, and when she last saw him he was standing near,the telegraph pole, which would be at the curb. She was then called away for a moment, and' when she next looked out of- the window, he was being dragged, as she says, by the street car. Whether he was-standing within three or four feet of the railroad track as the car approached, or was standing back by the curb, is not entirely clear from the testimony- of these two witnesses — the-plaintiff and his wife. Their testimony may have been regarded by the jury as contradictory. In any event, he made-no signal, and gave no sign that he desired to take passage-upon this car; and, as the court charged the jury, there was-no evidence .that either the motorman or the conductor in fact knew that he desired to get on the car. The plaintiff testified' that he had been in the habit of getting on at this point, and' that others had.

The court submitted the question of the defendant’s alleged negligence to the jury as a question of fact to be determined' by them from the evidence, and said to the jury:

“On the other hand ,if you find from all the facts in the case that the conductor and the motorman, acting with that care, ordinarily would ascertain (and which they might have ascertained by the position of the plaintiff, taken in connection with all the other -circumstances in the case that have been-testified to), that he desired to become a passenger on the car, then your finding would be that they were chargeable with' notice, and the duty that they should discharge would immediately attach to them, and must be fulfilled and discharged.”

And the court in the preceding paragraph said this to the-jury:

“You will take all the facts and circumstances in the case and consider everything that has been brought out in the evidence here, and determine the question whether the employes-in charge of this car, exercising ordinary care, must have known that the plaintiff desired to become a passenger upon this car or not. If, in the exercise of ordinary care they would" not have known, there being no testimony here directly that: [582]*582notice was given to them.' by the plaintiff, in that case the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover.”

We find that the charge fáirly submitted to the jury the question as to whether the defendant did' exercise ordinary care or not.

■ We are of the opinion that the defendant’s agents, the motorman and the conductor, were not required as a matter of law to look before the car was started at this point, to see and ascertain whether any one was getting on the car, or was about to get on the car. Whether ordinary care required them to look, or whether by the exercise of ordinary care they would have known that plaintiff was about to -get on, is a question that the court submitted to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. 578, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packard-v-toledo-traction-co-ohiocirct-1901.