Snider v. Dayton Power & Light Co.

27 Ohio Law. Abs. 389
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1938
DocketNo 94
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 Ohio Law. Abs. 389 (Snider v. Dayton Power & Light Co.) 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
Snider v. Dayton Power & Light Co., 27 Ohio Law. Abs. 389 (Ohio Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

[390]*390OPINION

By HORNBECK, J.

The action was for damages resulting from personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in a collision between a Plymouth automobile which he was driving and a tractor truck driven by an employee of defendant. The accident occurred on April 17, 1934 at about one o’clock P. M. on the Camden Gratis Pike. Plaintiff was moving eastwardly and defendant’s truck was moving in a westwardly direction. It is testified that the tractor truck and trailer with load was one hundred feet in length and ninety-eight mches in width and carried telephone poles. The improved portion of'the road at and near the place of the collision had a minimum width of fifteen feet and a maximum width of fifteen feet six inches.

The specifications of negligence against the defendant were that it operated the truck and trailer with load without the written permission of the surveyor of Preble County, Ohio; that it operated it on the south or defendant’s left side of said highway; that it failed to pass plaintiff’s automobile to its right; that it operated a truck ninety-eight inches in width, contrary to law. Plaintiff further avers that in order to avoid a collision with defendant’s tractor truck and trailer he drove his Plymouth automobile to his right; that his automobile left the improved portion of the highway, the right wheels thereof going into the ditch, overturning the automobile and injuring the plaintiff in the particulars set forth.

The answer is a general denial of all specifications of negligence, denial that it was necessary for plaintiff to drive his automobile off the paved portion of the highway to pass' defendant’s truck and an averment that plaintiff’s injury was caused by his sole negligence in operating his automobile at a high and dangerous rate of speed, namely in excess ot fifty miles per hour and in the center of tne highway and over a knoll or rise in the highway, which was so formed as to shut off plaintiff’s view of vehicles approaching from the opposite direction until just before the top of the knoll was reached and that plaintiff was operating his automobile at a rate of speed greater, than would enable him to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.

The reply was a denial ci' the affirmative averments of the answer.

The plaintiff requested the court to give seven special charges before argument, five of which were given. Defendant requested eight special charges. The court gave six ot them.

The cause was tried to a jury and at the conclusion of the whole case both oarties moved the court for a- directed verdict. Notwithstanding, the iourt submitted the cause to the jury, which returned a verdict for the defendant. The jury alsc answered a special interrogatory which was returned with the general verdict, namely; “Could the plaintiff, in the exercise of ordinary care, for his own safety have seen the truck with the defendant in time, in the exercise of ordinary care, to bring his automobile to a stop and to have avoided the accident?”

The answer to this interrogatory was “Yes.”

Motion for new trial was interposed, overruled and judgment entered ot the verdict. An appeal on questions of 'aw is prosecuted.

The motion for new trial consisted of seven grounds which is expanded on appeal to ten assignments of error:

1. Error in admission of evidence.

2. Error in general charge to the jury.

3. Refusal to charge as requested by appellant.

4. .Giving certain special charges requested by appellee.

5. Taking from the jury consideration of the length and width of appellee’s truck.

6. Misconduct of appellee’s counsel in examination of witnesses and argument to the jury.

7. Failure of the trial judge to take the case from the consideration of the jury.

8. Other prejudicial errors on the face of the record.

9. Verdict not sustained by weight of evidence.

10. Error in overruling motion of appellant for new trial.

We first consider an important assignment of error, No. 7:

Refusal of the trial judge to take the case from tlje consideration of the jury after the motion of both parties for a directed verdict pended before him.

The record discloses that at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case counsel for the defendant moved the court to direct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. At the conclusion .of. the whole case [391]*391the record, at page 128, discloses the following, after both parties had rested:

“Mr. Ferguson: Let the record show the same motion is made at this time as was made at the close of plaintiff’s case asking the court to direct a verdict.
(Court’s Note).
Thereupon, without the hearing of the jury and without the hearing of the court reporter counsel for plaintiff announced to the court that he desired to and did make a motion for a directed verdict on behalf of plaintiff. Whereupon the jury was recessed and the court and counsel retired to the library, and, still without the hearing of the jury and the court reporter, said motions were argued; thereupon the court announced both motions would be overruled and the case would be submitted to the jury. Counsel for both plaintiff and defendant excepted to ;he ruling, plaintiff’s counsel contending that by the filing of like motions by defendant and plaintiff for a directed verdict the cáse should be determined by the court. Thereupon court was reconvened.
The Court: The motion will be overruled.
Mr. Ferguson: Note our exceptions.
Mr. Burke: Let the record show the plaintiff joins in a motion for the court to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
The Court: The motion will be overruled.
Mr. Burke: To which ruling counsel for plaintiff excepts.”

Thereafter the court gave the jury the usual admonition upon separation and after a short recess resumed the trial of the case, gave certain special charges before argument, requested by the parties, and after arguments charged the jury generally, submitted at the request of counsel for the defendant a special interrogatory to the jury, which the jury answered and returned with its general verdict. Thereafter and within three days, motion for new trial was filed by plaintiff, setting forth seven assignments of error, one of which was the assignment which we are now considering and another that the verdict was not sustained by the weight of the evidence. The trial judge, insofar as the record discloses, considered the motion for a new trial in all particulars, as though the jury had not been waived, and entered judgment on the verdict. This action on the motions to direct verdicts is assigned as error.

There is no doubt chat the trial, judge had the right to submit any and all factual issues to the jury for its determination • in ar. advisory capacity. The record discloses unequivocal purpose on the part of counsel for both parties to waive the jm-y and submit the whole case both upon facts and law to the trial judge.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Ohio Law. Abs. 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snider-v-dayton-power-light-co-ohioctapp-1938.