Sheley v. Swing

29 N.E.2d 364, 65 Ohio App. 109, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 244, 15 Ohio Op. 381, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 427
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 1939
DocketNo 5516
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 364 (Sheley v. Swing) 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
Sheley v. Swing, 29 N.E.2d 364, 65 Ohio App. 109, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 244, 15 Ohio Op. 381, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 427 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

OPINION

By MATTHEWS, J.

The common pleas court sustained a general demurrer to the petition and entered judgment for the costs against the plaintiff.

It is from that judgment that this appeal was taken. The only question, therefore, is whether the petition states a cause of action against the defendants.

And as no liability exists against the county in the absence of a statute imposing a liability (Hamilton County v Mighels, 7 Oh St 109; Alexander, et v Brady, 61 Oh St 174) and as §2408, GC, is the only statute imposing a liability that has any relation to the situation described in the petition, the question is further reduced to that of determining whether that section imposes a liability upon the county commissioners for the damage suffered by the plaintiff under the facts alleged in her petition.

The plaintiff alleged that she owned certain described land abutting on Wuest Road, a county highway established and maintained by the couty commissioners of Hamilton county; that there was a frame house owned by her on this land; that two ditches were dug across the road under tne direction of the county commissioners, and that they allowed these ditches to remain open for eleven days and failed to warn the public that the road was closed or blockaded; that while the road was in that condition, her home caught on fire; that an alarm was sent to the Groesbeck Fire Department, located about one and one-half miles away; that the Fire Department responded immediately and attempted to reach the *246 plaintiff’s property, but was unable to do so because the ditches across Wuest Road rendered it impassable by the fire extinguishing equipment; that but for this the fire would have been extinguished and her property preserved to her. She also alleged that the defendants allowed the road to remain impassable for an unreasonable length of time and that this constituted negligence on their part, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the destruction of her property by the fire.

It is thus seen that the specific negligence charged against the defendants is that they permitted the public road to remain impassable for an unreasonable length of time.

Now by §2498, GC, it is enacted that:

“The board of county commissioners may sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded in any court of judicature, bring, maintain, and defend all suits in law or in equity, involving an injury to any public, state or county road, bridge, ditch, drain or watercourse established by such board in its county, and for the prevention of injury thereto. The board shall be liable in its official capacity for damages received by reason of its negligence or carelessness in not keeping any such road or bridge in proper repair, and shall demand and receive, by suit or otherwise, any real estate or interest therein, legal or equitable, belonging to the county or any money or other property due the county. The money so recovered shall be paid into the treasury of the. county, and the board shall take the treasurer’s receipt therefore, and file it with the county auditor.”

Does that section impose a liability upon the facts alleged?

It will be observed that the negligence that creates a liability is not that of blockading the road so as to exclude the public from its use or in failing to warn that the road is impassable. The negligence creating liability is “in not keeping any such road or bridge in proper repair”. For what? Plainly, for travel. Its condition in relation to travel would determine whether the duty had been performed. Clearly, the meaning of this would seem to be that to create a liability, the road would have to be out of repair and that that condition had been caused by the defendants’ falure to exercise reasonable care. It is only conduct in relation to the repair that is of significance in this connection. It is not the blockading of the road or failure to warn the public, per se, that creates the liability. As long as the road remains open and the public is invited impliedly to use it, those using it have a right to assume that the county has performed its duty to them and that it is reasonably safe for travel in the ordinary mode. That is the test of whether the road is in a proper state of repair. 11 O. Jur. 559. Until a person proceeds to use the road, he does not bring himself, in relation to the county, in such a way as to cause the duty to become active for his protection. The negligence inhered in the condition of the road. It was not ambulatory. Juxtaposition could only be created by the public coming to it, and that could only be accomplished by using the highway, or by being so close to the highway that injury was received as a direct result of the defect.

Now the plaintiff was not traveling upon this highway. The members of the Groesbeek Fire Department were, but no injury was suffered by them. They are not parties to this action. Nothing happened on the highway. No force emanated from it that harmed the plaintiff’s property. Until the plaintiff should bring her property within the perimeter of the zone of danger created by the defect, no duty was owing to her, and until a duty arose, no damage suffered could be the proximate result of the defect. 22 R.C.L. 116.

It is a rule of evidence that an inference upon an inference is inadmissible because indulgence in the *247 second inference would exhaust the reasoning process and enter the domain of speculation and mere conjecture. It has no probative value. Sobolovitz v Lubric Oil Co., 107 Oh St 204, 140 N. E. 634; U. S. v Ross, 92 U. S. 281; Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe R. R. Co. v Baumgarten, 10 Am. Cases, 1094 at 1097; 10 R. C. L. 870; 17 O. Jur. 87. And this is but a specific application of the general rule that all judicial reasoning must be kept within the bounds of rationality. In Thayer’s Preliminary Treatise on The Law of Evidence, at page 194, the author says:

“There comes up for consideration, then, this matter of reasoning: a thing which intervenes, e. g., in questions of negligence and the like, between the primary facts, what may be called the raw material of the case, and the secondary or ultimate facts; just as it intervenes, in the court’s questions of the interpretation of statutes and other writings, between the bare words of the document and the ascertainment of its legal meaning.”

The rule of statutory construction that the language of the statute should not be given a strained construction is another illustration of the same fundamental principle. Shreedley v State, 23 Oh St 130. This same rule of reason is a limitation upon all the powers of government imposed by the “Due Process Clauses”1 of our state and federal constitutions. It precludes the legislature from imposing an arbitrary inference or presumption. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v Ford, 287 U. S. 502; Morrison v California, 291 U. S. 82. If liability results from proximate cause a law cannot make that a proximate cause, which has no relation whatever to the effect. Such a statute would be wholly unreasonable and unconstitutional.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 364, 65 Ohio App. 109, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 244, 15 Ohio Op. 381, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheley-v-swing-ohioctapp-1939.