Russell v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway

6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 353
CourtAshtabula County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 353 (Russell v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ashtabula County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway, 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 353 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Roberts, J.

Motions to strike off interrogatories attached to answer.

The plaintiff alleges in the petition, as the administrator of the estate of Hattie A. Wilcox, deceased, that on July 25, 1906, the /defendant, by its employes, was running a train southerly on its railroad track, approaching a public crossing in Williajnsfield township, at the same time that the decedent was áriYing northerly upon the' highway approaching- said crossing; that while the plaintiff’s decedent was .in the exercise of all- due care,, the defendant so negligently and carelessly ran its said train, without sounding any whistle or ringing any bell' for said crossing, and at such an unlawful and negligent rate of speed that it ran said, train in, upon and against the carriage in which the decedent was riding, whereby she.was instantly'killed.. [354]*354This action is brought for the benefit of the two children of said decedent.

The defendant has filed an answer to the petition, in which it admits the representative capacity of the plaintiff; that it is a corporation; the location of said crossing; that on said day one of the trains of the defendant running southerly on said railroad track struck the vehicle of said decedent and that she was so injured that she died from the effects of said injury, and that she left surviving 'her the children named in the petition. The answer denies each and every other allegation contained in the petition.

To the answer the defendant has attached certain interrogatories, which the plaintiff is asked to answer. Which interrogatories ■ are as follows: -

“1. What acts of care did the plaintiff’s decedent exercise in approaching the Stanhope crossing at the time of the accident complained of in the petition?
“2. Did the'horse driven by said decedent approach said crossing at the time’of the accident on a walk, trot or run, or otherwise ?
“3. Did said decedent look and' listen for approaching trains before driving upon said crossing?
“4. Did said decedent have full control of her horse at and just previous to driving upon the crossing at the time of the accident ?
“5.. At what speed was the train running at the time of the accident complained of?
“6. What did the unlawful and negligent rate of speed complained of by the plaintiff consist of?
‘ ‘ 7. What .is the maximum lawful rate of speed at which a train may approach and .pass the Stanhope -crossing going south? ° ....
“8. What constitutes unlawful speed of a train in approach: ing and passing said Stanhope crossing?
‘ ‘ 9. What constitutes the acts, of negligence of which the de-. fendant was guilty at the time of the accident complained.,of in the petition?’'’

The plaintiff has filed a motion in which'he moves the court-to strike off the interrogatories attached to the answer, and as [355]*355reason therefor, says, -that they are impertinent,, incompetent and not within the intent of the statute, because they call for facts not known to the fiduciary plaintiff; that the facts called for are particularly within the knowledge of the defendant’s agents and employes, because it is an attempt to shift the burden of proof on the question of contributory negligence.

No brief has been filed by either the plaintiff or defendant upon this motion. Considerable investigation has been given the question raised by the motion for the reason that the interrogatories invoke a privilege but rarely exercised in this court, and concerning which but few reported cases are found in this, state. The interrogatories are asked by virtue of Revised Statute 5099, which reads as follows:

“ [Interrogatories may he annexed to a pleading.] A party may annex to his pleading, other than a demurrer, interrogatories pertinent to the issue made in the pleadings, which interrogatories, if not demurred to, shall be plainly and fully answered under oath, by the party to whom they are propounded, or if such party is a corporation, by the president, secretary, or other officer thereof, as the party propounding requires.”

So far’ as my knowledge goes, resort has not been had to interrogatories in negligence cases, and as their use would -have an important effect in practice, the issue raised is deemed of considerable importance.

In the case of Chapman v. Lee, 45 Ohio St., 356, Judge Spear, in rendering the opinion of the court says, commencing on page 365:

"Suits for discovery, were, in equity practice, auxiliary proceedings, brought not to obtain .any equitable remedy, nor to establish any equitable right, but .to aid in maintaining a legal right, and in prosecuting actions pending, or to be brought, .in a court of law. If a party could not súcceecl without the aid of 'facts' within the personal knowledge • of his adversary, he might file his bill, setting forth all the facts within his knowledge," and. adding interrogatories -which the other'party was required to answer fully under oath,- No relief beyond the answer desired need be asked, and no decree made, and as soon as the answer was complete'the function’of the equity court [356]*356ordinarily was ended, but the answer so far as responsive, could be used by either party in the trial at law. We will not be understood as meaining that it was not common for a court of equity, having taken cognizance of a case for one purpose, to retain it for all purposes, and award complete relief though the final remedy was of the kind which might be conferred by a court of law. Such result often followed where discovery was sought as' an incident to equitable- relief, covering the whole controversy. But where a court of law had ample power to award full relief, a court of equity ordinarily refused to take cognizance of the case, and there clearly is more conclusive reason, for such refusal, in a case like the one at -bar, under our present practice. . All the aid which a suit for recovery would give is now given by our code in the case at law itself. The party may attach to his pleading interrogatories which, so far as pertinent, the other party is bound to answer, and those answers may be used by either party as evidence. He may also take the deposition of the opposite party, or put him on the stand as a witness at the trial. The doctrine and rules concerning the subject-matter of discovery, established by courts of equity, are believed to be still in force and to control the same matters in the new procedure, but the bill of discovery, as a separate action, is practically obsolete in this state.”

Here we find defined by our Supreme Court, suits for discovery, the right of a party to invoke such action, to thus ascertain the facts within the personal knowledge of his adversary, and that an answer responsive can be used by either party in the trial at law as evidence. Also the declaration of the Supreme Court that the bill of discovery, as a separate action, is practically obsolete in this state; that it has been superseded by interrogatories provided for in Revised Statute 5099, above quoted $nd that the rules concerning the subject-matter of discovery established by courts of equity are still in force and to control the same matters in the new procedure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-lake-shore-michigan-southern-railway-ohctcomplashtab-1907.