Rogers, Commrs. v. Dietsche

198 N.E. 194, 50 Ohio App. 326, 4 Ohio Op. 69, 20 Ohio Law. Abs. 279, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 481
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 194 (Rogers, Commrs. v. Dietsche) 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
Rogers, Commrs. v. Dietsche, 198 N.E. 194, 50 Ohio App. 326, 4 Ohio Op. 69, 20 Ohio Law. Abs. 279, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 481 (Ohio Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Sherick, J.,

of the Fifth Appellate District, sitting by designation in the Seventh Appellate District. The Commissioners of Trumbull county, who are the plaintiffs in error in this court, complain of a judgment entered against them in the trial court. The action was for personal injury sustained by Lenore Dietsche in a fall while crossing a temporary bridge in the city of Niles. The pertinent facts disclosed by the pleadings, the evidence necessary for an understanding of the issues made, and the errors asserted are as follows:

In 1932 the commissioners contracted in writing with the E. H. Latham Company for the construction of a viaduct over the Mahoning river, in accordance with plans and specifications prepared by the county. It was therein covenanted that the contractor was to erect a temporary bridge to accommodate the traffic carried by the old bridge, which was to be demolished, and to maintain and keep the temporary structure in repair until completion of the new, and to keep and save the county harmless from any damage that might result by virtue of the contractor’s failure to perform this covenant. Thereupon the temporary bridge was built by the contractor in accordance with the plans, which bridge is alleged and proved to be defective in construction in that the part thereof set aside for use by pedestrians had too broad a span and was not reinforced by center support, as a result whereof the boards used to provide the floor bent and warped and the surface became uneven and dangerous. It is also in evidence that the temporary bridge plan did not provide for a railing between that part of the bridge set *328 apart for pedestrian traffic and that part set aside for vehicular traffic, and that this dangerous condition was thereafter remedied by the county at its labor and expense, the contract having made no provision therefor. In the installation of the railing, it was claimed and evidenced that the county took up certain floor boards in order to secure its rail posts, and that the warped and uneven boards were replaced, with the result that that portion of the bridge floor provided for pedestrians was in worse shape than it had been before.

Some six months thereafter, the plaintiff, Lenore Dietsehe, tripped and fell on this walk and sustained considerable injury. She thereupon sued the contractor for damages upon the theory that its negligence was the cause of her injury. This suit was thereafter settled for the sum of $750, the cause dismissed, and a release was entered into which provided in substance that the sum received was not intended as a full satisfaction of the injuries received, but was in fact but a partial compensation therefor. It released the contractor from all further liability, but specifically reserved to plaintiff the right to proceed further against Trumbull county for complete compensation for damage sustained. Thereafter the plaintiff commenced this action upon the same state of facts, but upon the theory of the county’s statutory liability to keep this bridge in repair and free from nuisance. To this pleading the county made answer by way of a general denial and a charge of negligence upon plaintiff’s part. As a further defense the county averred plaintiff’s suit against the contractor, and its settlement and release. The county further pleaded its contract with the E. H. Latham Company, with particular reference to the covenants thereof hereinbefore enumerated, that is, the clauses providing that the contractor was to keep the bridge in repair and protect the county as against damage claims of this character, *329 which might grow out of the contractor’s neglect in failing to so do and perform.

It is first urged that the trial court erred in its failure to sustain the defendants’ motions for an instructed verdict in the county’s favor, upon the theory that the contractor and the county were merely concurrent and related tort-feasors. The arguments advanced recognize that a county may not free itself of its statutory responsibility by a delegation of its statutory duty and obligation. It is urged that any negligence on the part of the contractor must be predicated upon common law negligence, and upon its contractual obligation with the county, and that the county’s responsibility rests upon statute. It is therefrom insisted that inasmuch as their responsibility rests upon different theories of negligence they can not be classed as joint tort-feasors. The prosecuting attorney’s office advances the cases of Morris v. Woodburn, 57 Ohio St., 330, 48 N. E., 1097; Village of Mineral City v. Gilbow, 81 Ohio St., 263, 90 N. E., 800, 25 L. R. A. (N. S.), 627; Bello v. City of Cleveland, 106 Ohio St., 94, 138 N. E., 526; Kouba v. City of Cleveland, 13 Ohio App., 443, with remark that they artificially classify torts and recognize a distinction between one who actively causes an injury and one who is secondarily liable for an injury. An illustration thereof is found in a property owner or third person excavating a sidewalk or piling debris in a public way. It is insisted, and rightly so, that in such case the property owner or third person actively causes the injury, and is primarily liable, and that where he is first sued the injured party is precluded from further pursuing the one secondarily liable, that is, the public body, like a city or county whose responsibility rests in statutory command.

The plaintiffs in error quote freely from their authorities. We choose to here set forth for further *330 comment a statement made in the Bello case, supra, found on page 104 thereof, where it is said:

“That there can be no joint action unless there is joint liability and joint liability can only exist where there is concert of action in pursuit of a common intent.”

The county, in concluding its claim, states that the effect of the release is to bar the injured party from suing it, because of the fact that election was first made to pursue the contractor, who was primarily liable in the first instance, and hence the county was no longer responsible, it being secondarily liable, not only upon the reason and authority of the adjudications noted, but due to the further fact that it could assert its contractual right of recoupment as against the contractor if it were compelled to pay this judgment.

It is the view of this court that the county’s position is fallacious. In the-first place, as counsel recognize, a county can not delegate the duty imposed upon it by Sections 2408, 2421 and 7557, General Code. Neither can it by any such act of delegation free itself of the obligations enjoined upon it by the statutes. Any authorized act of its contractor, who is in fact its agent, is the act of the agent’s principal, who in this instance is the county. In the present controversy this determination is further fortified by the fact that faulty plan, in part at least, was responsible for the dangerous condition of the bridge floor, and by the further disclosure that the county knew or must have known and acquiesced in the unsafe condition of the bridge floor at the time it erected the guard rail, and thereafter.

The presented instance is not a parallel situation to that of one who by his own affirmative act creates an obstruction in a street or road.

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Related

In Re Silver Bridge Disaster Litigation
381 F. Supp. 931 (S.D. West Virginia, 1974)
Ellis v. Jewett Rhodes Motor Co.
84 P.2d 791 (California Court of Appeal, 1938)
Rogers v. Dietsche
20 Ohio Law. Abs. 279 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
198 N.E. 194, 50 Ohio App. 326, 4 Ohio Op. 69, 20 Ohio Law. Abs. 279, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-commrs-v-dietsche-ohioctapp-1935.