Prescott v. Albrecht

33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 314, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 198, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 404
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 314 (Prescott v. Albrecht) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prescott v. Albrecht, 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 314, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 198, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 404 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

HENRY, J.

This is a proceeding in error whereby it is sought to reverse a judgment for $5,000 recovered March 1, 1905, by the defendant in error against the plaintiffs in error, partners as the Saginaw Bay Company, in an action for death by wrongful act.

The decedent, Albert Albrecht, was killed July 16, 1902, while in the employ of the Saginaw Bay Co., in whose service he had been engaged for many years, at their lumber yard at Cleveland. This yard includes a certain dock or docks, on the Cuyahoga river, alongside of which the schooner Oneonta lay discharging her cargo of lumber on said date. One of her lines was made fast by her crew to a lumber pile in said yard and slanted upwards from the edge of the dock to a point some distance away, and about 9 or 10 feet above the floor of the dock, being a foot or two below the top of the lumber pile.

The defendant’s duties were to assort the boards that were laid by the stevedores on the dock, in order that the workmen in the yard might put them into proper piles. These duties brought him from time to time under the schooner’s line and near the lumber pile to which it was fastened. It is claimed, however, that such was the urgency of his work while the schooner was being unloaded, and so constantly was his gaze directed downwards upon the lumber which he was measuring and marking, that he can not be presumed to have noticed the schooner’s line overhead, or the manner in which it was fastened.

While the decedent was thus occupied, a vessel moving rapidly along the river, by its wash, caused the Oneonta to strain at her moorings so that the top of the lumber pile was pulled down on Albrecht’s head and killed him, and it is claimed that his employers are liable therefor because they permitted the schooner to be thus moored.

The record which we are called upon to review exhibits all evidence by means of a bill of exceptions. The first error alleged is that the court below erroneously ruled that one Fred Glauser, a witness for the plaintiff below, was hostile to the party calling him, so that the latter was held entitled to cross-examine him; and that, in the cross-examination which ensued, the substance of the coroner’s previous examination of the same witness was gotten before the jury, and permited by them to be [316]*316considered as independent evidence of facts thereby disclosed, notwithstanding that some of it was originally opinion and hear- . say, and was further incompetent because not reiterated by the witness under oath before the jury.

From our examination of the bill of exceptions we are not prepared to say that the trial judge, who had opportunity to observe the demeanor of the witness on the stand, was guilty of any abuse of discretion in permitting him to be cross-examined by the party calling him, notwithstanding that the record discloses but the meagerest grounds for ruling that he manifested hostility to the plaintiff below. Nor do we find anything prejudicial to the plaintiff in error in the disclosure to the jury of those portions of the coroner’s record concerning which the witness was interrogated. True, they were admissible only as affecting the credibility of the witness and not as independent evidence of the facts so disclosed, and the court should so have instructed the jury as asked in the plaintiff’s fourth request (Elliott v. State, 36 Ohio St. 318, 320, 324). But the opinions and hearsay contained in the coroner’s examination, as well as the matters therein which, on the trial, the witness qualified, or refused to confirm, all related to uneontested or unimportant circumstances which, we think, could not possibly harm the defendants below before the jury.

The second assignment of error is upon the granting of the plaintiff’s first request to charge as follows:

‘ ‘ If you find from the evidence that at or just prior to the accident which caused the death of the plaintiff’s decedent, a boat, steamer or vessel, passed through the river, going towards the lake, and opposite the Oneonta, and that the passing of said boat created a swash, or other disturbance in the river, which caused the Oneonta to swerve outward from the dock and thus pull down the lumber pile to which the one part of the Oneonta had been made fast by a rope, and that Albert Albrecht, deceased, had no notice and did not know that such vessel was then passing through the river outside and beyond the Oneonta, and that the passing of such vessel would create a swash or disturbance in the river that would cause the Oneonta to swerve outward from the dock and pull down the lumber pile near which he was working, then I say to you that he did not assume the risk which was created by the passing of said vessel; and you must find from the testimony that the said Albert Albrecht [317]*317just prior to Ms injury had knowledge and equal means of knowing with the defendants that owing to the passing of a vessel opposite the Oneonta, as said Oneonta was then tied to said lumber pile, an unsafe condition would be created, and that said unsafe condition would endanger his life or limb, before he can be charged to have assumed the risk of working as he was working at the time he was injured, and in the place he was injured.

It may well be doubted whether the question of Albrecht’s assumption of the risk of injury, from the wrongful conduct complained of, should be made to turn merely on his notice or want of notice of the fact that a vessel was passing along the river at the time of or just prior to the accident. That was an event which was likely to occur at any time, and he may have had notice of the likelihood of its occurring at any time without having notice that it then was in fact occurring. The real fact, on which this issue of assumption of risk should have been made to turn, is Albrecht’s notice or want of notice of all the circumstances which together constituted the continuing danger there menacing him. But, in any event, this request is technically erroneous because it exonerates Albrecht from the assumption of risk of defendant’s alleged negligence unless he had both “knowledge and equal means of knowing with the defendants” that 'such risk existed; whereas the law is that either actual knowledge or equal means of knowing, suffices to show such assumption in the case of an experienced employee. We hold that it was error to grant this request. Chicago & Ohio Coal & Car Co. v. Norman, 49 Ohio St. 598 [32 N. E. 857]; Pennsylvania Co. v. McCurdy, 66 Ohio St. 118 [63 N. E. 585].

The second request of plaintiff below, as given, is also complained of here. It reads as follows:

“Albert Albrecht, the plaintiff’s decedent, at and just prior to the time he was injured had a right to assume and rely upon the assumption that the defendants would discharge their duty towards him fully, as to keeping the place where he was working in a safe condition and free from danger, and he was only chargeable with such risks as were ordinarily and usually incident to the business in which he was employed.”

This proposition is perhaps correct so far as it goes, but it lacks this essential qualification, viz: that risks, of which the [318]*318employee has, or is chargeable with, notice, are also assumed by him, irrespective of their being ordinarily and usually incident to the business Coal Co. v. Estievenard, 53 Ohio St. 43 [40 N. E. 725].

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 314, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 198, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prescott-v-albrecht-ohcirctcuyahoga-1905.