Slicker v. Seccombe

182 N.E. 131, 42 Ohio App. 357, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 507, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 366
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 131 (Slicker v. Seccombe) 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
Slicker v. Seccombe, 182 N.E. 131, 42 Ohio App. 357, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 507, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 366 (Ohio Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

SHERICK, PJ,

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s opening statement, the defendant moved for judgment on the pleadings and opening statement. This motion the court overruled. Of this ruling the defendant now complains. The ground advanced for the sustaining of this motion was that the plaintiff could only recover upon averment and proof of a wilful and wanton tort on the part of the defendant. This motion was properly overruled, for the reason that the averment of the defendant’s answer, that the plaintiff’s wife was guilty of negligence per se in riding ' on the running board of the car, which was forbidden by a valid and subsisting city ordinance, had been generally denied by the reply. It was hence at this point not an admitted fact,

Plaintiff’s counsel seems quickly to have perceived the deadfall ahead, and promptly asked for and obtained leave to file an amended petition. The amendment as made consisted of the injectment throughout the petition of the words “wanton and wilful,” as applied to the claimed negligent acts of the defendant. An amended answer was thereafter filed, meeting the new issue raised, and the cause proceeded to trial after the court had overruled a similar motion directed to the amended petition. In this we see no error, for the reason that the reply generally denied the averments of the amended answer.

*509 At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case and at the end of all the evidence, the defendant moved for an instructed verdict for the reason that the plaintiff’s wife and her sister, the driver of the car, were guilty of uncontradicted and undisputed acts of negligence, and particularly for the reason that there was an entire absence of testimony or evidence tending to show wilful negligence on the part of the defendant at and prior to the time of the accident. These motions were overruled, and no doubt rightly so, as will hereinafter be developed in a consideration of the further claimed error in the court’s refusal to grant a new trial, for the reason that the verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

It is disclosed that Tuscarawas street west, upon which all parties were proceeding west, is forty-six -feet in width from curb to curb, upon which are located double street car tracks; that Claremont avenue is forty feet in width from lot line to lot line, and begins at Tuscarawas street and runs north. The angle of the two streets is less than a right angle. It is also evidenced that an alley leads south from Tuscarawas street, at a point opposite or very near the mouth of Claremont street.

Both cars were proceeding west at a speed of around twenty to twenty-five miles per hour, that of the defendant following the car upon which the plaintiff’s wife was riding, and about twenty-five feet back therefrom. The traffic was very heavy. As they neared Claremont avenue, the 'sister of the plaintiff’s wife, who had been driving near the line of cars parked along the street, pulled towards the street car tracks in the center of the street and slowed down. She gave no warning of her intention of making a turn, other than, as she says, that she raised her hand inside the car, a Ford coupe, in which three were riding, the plaintiff’s wife being on the right running board. This signal the defendant says he did not see. It also appears that some ribbons were fastened to the curtain at the top of the glass in the rear of the Ford, and that these were fluttering, and they, no doubt, partially obscured any signal given inside the car.

The defendant says that he assumed that the Ford car was about to make a left-hand turn, and it is shown that he proceeded forward in the lane of travel, at the same rate of speed, and that, while he was about abreast of it, at about the street intersection, the Ford car turned to the right; that he then increased his speed and turned his car north and ran up over the curb, sidewalk and lawn, to avoid hitting the Ford car, but that the right front hub cap of the Ford car came in contact with the front left side of his car, Very little damage was sustained by either car. The plaintiff’s wife, however, was jolted off and injured, but was not hit by the defendant’s car. The defendant admits that he saw the plaintiff’s wife on the running board all the way up the street.

The main point of difference in all this evidence is that the plaintiff maintains that the Ford car did not bear to the left, as defendant contends. The plaintiff’s wife has no knowledge as to how the accident happened. The two sisters of the plaintiff’s wife and their mother say that the Ford car did not bear to the left. On the other hand, the defendant and five others assert the contrary. One Dr. Bowman, following these two cars, and called by the plaintiff as his wife’s first medical aid and witness,' is not clear in his statement and throws no light on this disputed point.

A young man by . the name of Kanaga, called by the plaintiff, says that he was across Tuscarawas street, and that, when he first saw the cars, the defendant’s car was obscured by the Ford, and they were about abreast. The mother-in-law’s testimony is important. She testifies that the Ford car had been driven out Tuscarawas street near the curb, and just enough away therefrom to miss the line of cars parked along the curb on the north side, but it is significant that she states that, had both cars gone straight ahead at the time, there would have been no accident. This, to our notion, lends credence to the defendant’s claim that the Ford car had borne to the left, and it follows that the right turn attempted to be made, due perhaps to the Ford’s crowded interior, and lack of freedom that restricted its driver, was, to use the language of the street, rather a roundhouse turn; and the bearing to the left indicated that a turn was to be made to the left, which was in itself an invitation to following traffic to continue in its lane or course uninterrupted.

It is obvious that the plaintiff’s wife was guilty of negligence in riding upon the running board, contrary to the city ordinance. It is admitted that neither the driver of the Ford nor any of its other occupants signaled outside of the car an intention to slow down, stop, or turn, as provided by §6310-22, GC. A signal on the inside of the car, when not seen by those following, is not such warning as is contemplated by this section of the Code. We think the statute contemplated an effective warning, and to such it was intended to be made outside of a car, so that all may see, and not made just for the occupants of any vehicle immediately behind it. In this the plaintiff’s wife and the driver of the Ford were negligent.

*510 It is provided in the rules of traffic, §6310-23, GC, that vehicles “turning to the right into another road or highway shall turn the corner as near to the right side of the road as possible.”

This section of the statutes is not invoked by the defendant, but we have no doubt that he and the occupants of the Ford car knew of this rule. Now the Ford car was not turned in this fashion, and in that there was a dereliction of a statutory duty.

It is therefore apparent that from these proven and admitted facts the plaintiff’s wife and her sister, the driver of the car, were negligent. That being true, it devolved upon the plaintiff to prove two things: First, that the defendant was negligent in some one particular; and, second, that in such act or omission he had perpetrated a wilful and wanton tort.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 131, 42 Ohio App. 357, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 507, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slicker-v-seccombe-ohioctapp-1931.