Slyder v. Board of County Commissioners

12 N.E.2d 407, 133 Ohio St. 146, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 146, 10 Ohio Op. 214, 1938 Ohio LEXIS 434
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1938
Docket26746
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 N.E.2d 407 (Slyder v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slyder v. Board of County Commissioners, 12 N.E.2d 407, 133 Ohio St. 146, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 146, 10 Ohio Op. 214, 1938 Ohio LEXIS 434 (Ohio 1938).

Opinions

Myers, J.

It is the contention of defendant that the trial court committed error in denying defendant’s motion to direct a verdict. Defendant contends, first, that the guard rails required on the approach to the bridge were intended to serve solely as a barrier and not as a warning, and, second, that the absence of guard rails in no way proximately caused or contributed to the accident and injuries of plaintiff.

The instant case concerns three sections of the General Code relating to guard rails, which read as follows :

Section 7563. “The board of county commissioners shall erect or cause to be erected and maintained where not already done, one or more guard rails on each end of a county bridge, viaduct or culvert more than five *148 feet high. They shall also erect or cause to be erected, where not already done one or more guard rails on each side of every approach to a county bridge, viaduct or culvert if the approach or embankment is more than six feet high. They shall also protect, by suitable guard rails, all perpendicular wash banks more than eight feet in height, where such banks have an immediate connection with a public highway, other than state highways, or are adjacent thereto, in an unprotected condition, but in such cities and villages as by law receive part of the bridge fund levied therein, such guard rails shall be erected by the municipality, and on state highways such guard rails shall be erected and maintained by the department of state highways.”
Section 7564. “It shall be a sufficient compliance with the provisions of the next preceding section, if the county commissioners shall cause to be erected and maintained, a good stock-proof hedge fence where a guard rail is required. Such guard rails or hedge fence shall be erected in a substantial manner, having sufficient strength to serve a protection to life and property, the expense thereof to be paid out of the county bridge fund.”
Section 7565. “Failure to comply with the provisions of the next two preceding sections shall render the county liable for all accidents or damages as a result of such failure.”

These statutes were enacted for the purpose of guarding the traveling public in its use of highways and bridges. One definition of the word “guard” as given by Webster’s Dictionary is: “To protect from danger; to defend; shield.” According to Crabb’s English Synonymes, ‘ ‘ Guard comes from Anglo-Saxon weardian, to watch, the gu being due to French influence. * * * To guard in its largest sense, comprehends both watching and defending, that is, both preventing the attack and the resisting it when it is *149 made.” When Section 7563 was enacted in its original form in 1889 the title to the act was, “For the better protection of life and property by requiring county commissioners to erect guard rails.”

These three sections were not intended merely for building a proper approach to a bridge. That purpose was provided for in Section 7559, General Code, as follows: “The county commissioners shall cause to be constructed without unnecessary delay, good and sufficient approaches or ways to bridges which are erected by them.” We may, therefore, say that guard rails, as provided for by statute, were intended to be something additional, something designed to guard and defend against peril and danger in approaching a bridge, especially in the night season.

It is contended by counsel that in serving as “a protection to life and property” under the statute, the guard rails were not intended to be a warning. It is contended that since Section 7564 reads, “having sufficient strength to serve a protection,” “it is solely the strength of the guard that counts.” In making this contention defendant stresses the beginning of Section 7564 reading, “It shall be a sufficient compliance,” and maintains that by virtue of these words of the statute it was in no wise intended that the guard rails should serve as a warning but only as a barrier of sufficient strength to keep vehicles, etc., from going over an embankment.

However, when these statutes were first enacted in 1889, Section 7564 (then Section 8035-292, Smith and Benedict, Revised Statutes [1890], Volumé 2, and later Section 4940-2 of Giauque, Revised Statutes [1896], Volume 1) did not contain the language “It shall be a sufficient compliance,” nor was there any mention of a “hedge fence.” When first enacted that section merely read, “Said guard rails shall be erected in a substantial manner, having sufficient strength to serve as a protection to life and property.” The words *150 “sufficient compliance” came into the statute in the same sentence with “hedge fence” when the act was amended in 1892. The amendment, therefore, meant that it would be a “sufficient compliance” if a good stock-proof hedge fence w.eve erected and maintained instead of guard rails. The original act was also amended by inserting “or hedge fence” after the words “such guard rails” as if to intend that if a hedge fence is erected instead of a guard rail, it too must be of “sufficient strength to serve a protection to life and property.” It would seem, therefore, that “sufficient compliance” relates solely to the substitution of a hedge fence for guard rails, provided also that it be of the required strength.

It is further claimed that inasmuch as “the statute says nothing about the guard rails being a warning” that “the purpose, therefore, is to protect and not to warn.” Since the word “protection” was used in the title of the original act and since Section 7563 contains the phrase, “they shall also protect,” it may be helpful to ascertain the meaning of this term. Webster’s Dictionary defines the word “protect” as follows: “To cover or shield from that which would injure, destroy or detrimentally affect. * * * to defend; to guard.” Quoting again from Crabb’s English Synonymes: “A person may be defended in any particular case of actual danger or difficulty; he is protected from what may happen as well as what does happen.” In the light of such definitions there can be no doubt as to the use of the words “protect” and “protection” as used in these statutes. These guard rails were designed to protect the traveling public not only from what mag happen but also from injury in event that something does happen. They were intended to serve both as a warning and a barrier.

It is urged that the case of Bd. of County Commrs. of Franklin County v. Darst, 96 Ohio St., 163, 117 N. E., 166, should govern the disposition of the instant *151 case. That case is distinguishable from the issues we have here. The issue there was whether the statute required guard rails at fixed points of danger next to an approach even though the embankment at such point of danger might not be six feet high. That issue is not here presented.

In Dent v. Jefferson Co. Commissioners,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.E.2d 407, 133 Ohio St. 146, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 146, 10 Ohio Op. 214, 1938 Ohio LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slyder-v-board-of-county-commissioners-ohio-1938.