Root v. Monroeville Village

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 53
CourtHuron Circuit Court
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 53 (Root v. Monroeville Village) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Huron Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Root v. Monroeville Village, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 53 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Bentley, J.

(orally.)

This is a proceeding in error to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas, against Mr. Root rendered in an action commenced by him in that court against the incorporated village of Monroeville, Ohio, to recover damages for a certain alleged injury received by him while walking along one of the sidewalks in that village and which he claimed the village should have [54]*54kept in repair, but which they had negligently allowed to become and remain out of repair, whereby he was injured.

As the terms of the petition may be important in considering some of the alleged errors, I will read a portion of it. After making some general allegations in regard to the duty resting upon the village, the petition proceeds: “On the 15th day of October, 1889, said street and sidewalks were, by the negligence of said defendant, allowed to be and remain out of repair; and the sidewalk along the north side thereof, in front of in-lots numbers 121 and 128, on the plat of said village, which walk was originally ■constructed of stone, was broken with many dangerous holes and sharp and jagged projections. By the negligence of the defendant, on the evening of that day, said holes were allowed to remain open, and broken pieces of stone were not removed but were exposed to contact without lights or guards The defendant had, by its proper officers and agents, full knowledge and notice of the dangerous condition of said walk in time to remedy it and to prevent all injury therefrom and it then and there became the duty of said defendant to so remedy it as to prevent such resulting injury. On said evening of the 15th day of October, 1889, this plaintiff was lawfully passing along said street upon said sidewalk wholly unáware of its dangerous condition, and accidentally, without any fault or negligence on his part, while walking there, was precipitated into one of said holes in said sidewalk, his foot striking on one of said sharp, rough and jagged pieces of stone and his said foot and person were thereby cut, tom and severely bruised and wounded, whereby he was greatly and permanently injured.”

He further makes some allegations regarding the accident, the permanency of his injury, and that he was put to great expense in endeavoring to be cured of it. The village, in its answer, admits its character as charged, and admits its control over this particular street in question, and its general duty to keep the sidewalks in repair on this street, but denied in general all the other averments of the petition and also alleges that if the plaintiff received any injury, it was on account of his own negligence contributing thereto. The reply of the plaintiff denies this affirmative allegation of contributory negligence.

The case came on for trial and was tried to a jury. The plaintiff gave evidence, as cited by the bill of exceptions, tending to prove all of the material averments of his petition. The defendant produced its testimony, and a£ the close of the evidence and before the argument began, the plaintiff preferred to the court certain written charges requesting that they be given to the jury as the law of the case. This was refused, and after the argument to the jury had closed, the court gave to the jury, after retirement, brought in a verdict in favor of the village against the plaintiff. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled and judgment was rendered upon the verdict, and a bill of exceptions was allowed and filed in the case. The bill of exceptions does not purport to exhibit all of the testimony that was given in the case. It states the giving of certain testimony tending to prove certain facts. It states certain questions which were asked of the witnesses and the ruling of the court upon them. It recites and gives in haec verba, certain requests of the plaintiff and the charge of the court, and contains the recitation that it embodies all of the charge given by the court; but the recitation and the other matters were simply to exhibit what is claimed to be errors of the court in its rulings upon the trial of the case.

In the bill, after reciting the giving of evidence by the plaintiff to sustain the material allegations of his petition, that is, the facts which the plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove, are stated affirmatively here in the bill, this occurs:

“Among the witnesses called by the plaintiff were Peter Seymour and Jacob Hammel, who were asked by plaintiff’s counsel as to the condition of the sidewalks on both sides of [55]*55Monroe street at the time when said accident occurred. To this question defendant’s counsel objected and plaintiff’s counsel stated that he proposed to show by the witnesses that the sidewalk on the opposite side — on the side of the street opposite the place where plaintiff was injured, was also then out of repair and in an unsafe condition generally, and that there could be no choice for a person passing along said street between the sidewalks on the two sides of it, for both were bad and unsafe; but the court sustained the objection and_ excluded said evidence and the same was not given to or considered by the jury, to which ruling the plaintiff by his counsel then and there excepted.”

That is one of the errors which is urged here as a ground for setting aside the verdict and reversing the judgment.

The issues, as they were presented by the pleadings, are tobe considered here. The plaintiff alleged that this dangerous defect existed in a certain sidewalk of the public street along which he'had occasion to pass and did pass. The village, not denying that this was bne of the streets of which it had charge, or that this was a sidewalk which it was bound to keep in repair, admits both of those facts. Presumably then, the plaintiff below, without some averment or showing otherwise, had a right to pass along that public sidewalk. This evidence was offered by him in chief and he claims that it was proper because it would negative the idea that he ought to have avoided this dangerous condition which he claimed to be in the sidewalk, by showing that he substantially had no choice in the matter, or, at least, that he had no opportunity of avoiding that by going on the other side of the street.

Had this testimony been offered in rebuttal, and after the defendant village had offered testimony tending to show that this defect was noticeable, and that another way existed there which the plaintiff could well have taken, then this testimony would have been proper; but to have anticipated the evidence which might have been given on the part of the defense without anything, up to this time, suggesting, as appears in the record, any necessity for such testimony would, we think, have been subject to the objection mentioned by the counsel for the village, that it would tend to introduce immaterial issues and possibly prejudice the village by showing that not only had it suffered this particular defect to exist, but that it was also negligent regarding other sidewalks and streets.

Upon this view of the matter, the action of the court in excluding it was correct. It does not appear that it was afterwards offered in rebuttal.

The next objection appears as stated in the bill, in this way:

“ Among plaintiff’s witnesses was Frank Bgle, who was asked by plaintiff’s counsel as to the repair of the sidewalk at the place where plaintiff was injured, by the authorities of said .village, soon after the accident.

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4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/root-v-monroeville-village-ohcircthuron-1894.