Rickabaugh v. Youngstown Municipal Ry. Co.

9 N.E.2d 900, 55 Ohio App. 431, 9 Ohio Op. 129, 23 Ohio Law. Abs. 544, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 291
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 N.E.2d 900 (Rickabaugh v. Youngstown Municipal Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rickabaugh v. Youngstown Municipal Ry. Co., 9 N.E.2d 900, 55 Ohio App. 431, 9 Ohio Op. 129, 23 Ohio Law. Abs. 544, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 291 (Ohio Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Nichols, J.

Goldie Rickabaugh, in her action against the Youngstown Municipal Railway Company, sought to recover damages for personal injuries. The cause comes into this court upon appeal on questions of law to reverse the judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Mahoning county, the verdict of the jury having been for the defendant. The parties will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendant.

The plaintiff on the 13th day • of February, 1934, boarded one of defendant’s street cars as a passenger at the corner of Silliman and Steel streets in the city of Youngstown. She rode on the street car to the point of her destination at the intersection of Federal and Hazel streets in the business district of Youngstown, where the car came to a stop and she alighted therefrom for the purpose of going to her employment at the McKelvey Company Department Store. It is the claim of plaintiff that the step of the street car at that time and place was covered with a heavy coating of dirty, rough and old ice overlaid with snow, and when she stepped upon this step she slipped and fell to the ground sustaining serious personal injuries set forth and described in her third amended petition, and which injuries are claimed to have resulted from the negligence of the defendant in permitting the snow and ice to accumulate and remain upon the steps of its street car.

The defendant denied any negligence upon its part and contended that the plaintiff was injured by reason of her own negligence in falling upon the street after alighting from the street car, the streets of the city being covered with ice. Defendant further claimed that the step was free and clear of both snow *433 and ice, and that shortly before the accident the car had, been thoroughly cleaned and inspected. The plaintiff at the time wore no overshoes but just the regular high-heeled shoes of about two and three-fourths inches. For several days preceding the accident the weather in Youngstown had been very cold and the streets generally were covered with a glare of ice. It is not denied that plaintiff did fall and receive certain injuries, the controversy in this case being upon the question whether ice and snow had actually accumulated and been allowed to remain on the step of the street car, causing plaintiff to slip, or whether plaintiff fell upon the street after she had alighted from the street car, due to the fact that she had not properly equipped herself for travel upon the street, considering the known icy condition thereof. The record contains approximately five hundred pages of testimony given by the several witnesses in the case, and the trial resulted, as hereinabove stated, in the jury returning a verdict for the defendant.

The defendant admitted its corporate existence and that the plaintiff was a paid passenger upon the street car then operated by it.

The following errors are assigned by plaintiff (appellant) for which it is contended that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial, to wit:

“First: Admission of incompetent evidence offered by defendant.

“A. Testimony of Dutton and Reed as to. inspection reports of street car company.

“B. Miss Nelson’s testimony founded on hearsay as to memorandum made at G. M. McKelvey Company.

“O. Mr. Anderson’s testimony founded on hearsay records of the Strouss-Hirshberg Company.

‘ ‘ Second: Error in court’s charge to the jury.

*434 “A. Erroneous definition of ‘Highest Degree of Care. ’

“B. Inconsistent charges on duty and degree of care required of defendant carrier.

“C. Improper charge on contributory negligence.

“D. Failure to charge,after requested so to do by plaintiff upon subject of notice, defendant carrier’s duty to remove ice and snow collected, on street car steps, defendant carrier’s duty to anticipate the accumulation of ice and snow.

“E. Improper emphasis' placed upon credibility of witnesses after excluding competent evidence relative to credibility and after improper conduct of defendant’s counsel during argument.

“F. Improperly placing and defining burden of proof.

“Gr. Improper charge upon the subject of damages.

“Third: Exclusion of evidence and argument.

“A. Testimony of Doctor Pettigrew elicited by defendant on cross-examination.”

As a part of its defense to the claim of plaintiff that the company had not inspected its street car, the defendant, by two witnesses, Dutton and Reed, identified its exhibits 1, 2 and 3 which were permitted to go to the jury over the objection and exception of the plaintiff; the purpose of these exhibits being to prove that the step in question was free of ice and snow.' These witnesses testified that they had no independent recollection of the matters recorded upon these exhibits and that the information thereon was obtained from others and recorded by the witnesses. Mr. Dutton testified that defendant’s exhibit 1 “is one of the papers I have to fill out; a report of what I do on the street car and the ones we take care of in the night. * * * Every car that comes in that we put out the next morning we get out and inspect that car, we get it and look at the brakes and also we sweep the car, *435 look at the sand and sand the car. The man that sweeps the cars, he gets it and sweeps all the cars.”

• Defendant’s exhibit one is one of the original records made at the barns by the witness as car foreman. Over the objection and exception of the plaintiff, the witness was permitted to read this report which showed that car number 908 (the car upon which plaintiff was a passenger) was inspected, and the only defect found, on the night of the 12th day of February, 1934, was “one lamp out.”

On cross-examination the witness admitted that he could not say positively that he inspected the steps on car number 908 after it came in the barns at midnight and before it left on the morning of the 13th, and that the information which he put upon the report designated “defendant’s exhibit 1” came to him from one of the men who swept the car. The witness admitted that certain things stated on the report were not correct, as evidenced by the following questions:

“Q. Where it says ‘cars in at 7 a. m.,’ that’s not correct? A. No.

“Q. So the report in that respect is a faulty report? A. Yes.”

It is the claim of plaintiff that these reports marked as defendant’s exhibits should not have been admitted because they were merly self-serving declarations, not in all respects correct, made solely for the company’s own use in the management of its business and that the Supreme Court of Ohio in the case of Railroad Co. v. Cunnington, 39 Ohio St., 327, and the Court of Appeals for Hamilton county in the case of Russell, Admr., v. Fourth Natl. Bank of Cincinnati, 4 Ohio App., 378, have held the admission of such records to constitute prejudicial error.

We quote the second paragraph of the syllabus from the case of Railroad Co. v. Cunnington, supra:

“2.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.E.2d 900, 55 Ohio App. 431, 9 Ohio Op. 129, 23 Ohio Law. Abs. 544, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickabaugh-v-youngstown-municipal-ry-co-ohioctapp-1936.