Toledo, Bowling Green & Fremont Ry. Co. v. Pfisterer

5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 359, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 265
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJune 25, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 359 (Toledo, Bowling Green & Fremont Ry. Co. v. Pfisterer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toledo, Bowling Green & Fremont Ry. Co. v. Pfisterer, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 359, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 265 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Pfisterer was the plaintiff below, and brought his action against the railway company to recover damages for injuries which he claims he sustained on account of the negligence of the railway company. The railway company claimed that it was not negligent in the respect complained of, and further, that Pfisterer, in what he did and was doing at the time of his injury, was a volunteer merely, not in the employ of the company for that purpose, and therefore that the company was not liable to him.

. The plaintiff in error, the defendant below, was operating an electric street or interurban railroad between Perrysburg and B'owling Green, Wood County, Ohio, at the time of Pfisterer’s injury, in June, 1900. He was enployed >at that time as a section man, engaged either in building or repairing the road somewhere in the neighborhood of Bowling Green, and on the morning of the day of his injury, he, with other section men, left Perrysburg on a car leaving there at 6:10 o ’clock to go to the place where they were to work. After they had proceeded a few miles, the' evidence tends to show that Pfisterer was standing in the vestibule of the car. There is some evidence that he was inside, and went out, but the evidence tends to show that at the time of his injury he was standing in the vestibule. The car was going from twenty to thirty-five miles an hour. There is some conflict on this, but it was clearly going at a high rate of speed. There is some question as to where the conductor of the car was at the time, but we think the evidence shows that he was somewhere inside the car, probably within three or four seats of the rear of the car.

The trolley pole wheel came off the wire as the car was running along at this rate of speed. There were cross-wires, as is usual, some ninety feet apart — guy-wires, perhaps called— and when the trolley pole came off it struck these wires. The evidence shows that Pfisterer was standing in the rear of the vestibule of the car, right at the window, and took hold of the trolley rope, for the purpose of putting the wheel back on the wire, and when he pulled down on the rope, the pole became detached from the top of the car, came out of its socket, and fell off the car and struck the ground, and Pfisterer became en[361]*361tangled in the trolley pole rope at the rear end of the ear, and it became wrapped around his body or limbs, and when the pole struck the ground Pfisterer was suddenly pulled out of the back window to the ground, striking the ground violently. The trolley pole was attached to the car, and after Pfiisterer was thus pulled out of the window he was dragged along by the rope quite a distance behind the car, until it was cut by the conductor. He was seriously injured. The trial resulted in a verdict of $1,250, on which judgment was entered. These proceedings in error are to reverse that judgment.

There were various grounds of negligence set up in the petition — as to the- speed the car was going, the fact that the rope was atached to the rear of the ear, and other claims were made by the plaintiff — but the case was finally submitted to the jury upon one ground of negligence: that the trolley pole was insecurely fastened in its socket on the top of the car, and as a consequence the plaintiff was injured in the manner stated. All the other claims of negligence were excluded by the court in its charge to the jury.

The railroad company claims that Pfisterer at the time was a mere volunteer, and therefore not entitled to recover. He was not employed, it is urged, to do anything in the way of running or managing the ear. He was simply going to his work, it is said, as a section man; and that it was the duty of the conductor to run the car; that therefore Pfisterer comes under the rule of law that one who volunteers to interfere with the business of another can not recover.

It is claimed, on the other hand, by Pfisterer, that he did this at the request of the conductor, and that the circumstances were such at that time that he ought not -to be regarded as a volunteer. It is claimed further by Pfisterer that he and other section men had performed this service upon the cars of the road in the presence of the superintendent and manager of the company, while riding on the cars, so that the service would be regarded as having been done under the authority and with the consent of the company; and that therefore he was entitled to the same protection when doing that work as when doing work as a section hand.

[362]*362The court in its charge to the jury required the jury to find, in order to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict, that this work had been done by Pfisterer or other section men in the presence of the manager and officers of the railway company such a length of time as to show their knowledge and consent to his performing such service, and that unless they found this, they should return a verdict in favor of the defendant. Upon this charge a verdict was found in favor of the plaintiff.

It is claimed by the defendant in error that he was entitled to recover whether the jury were warranted by the evidence in finding that the company had knowledge that he was performing such service or not. A number of authorities have been cited by counsel both for the plaintiff and for the defendant, upon the question of the liability of the company to Pfisterer while performing this service.

It has been held by the Supreme Court in 63 O. S., 236, and 43 O. S., 224, substantially that where one is requested by an employe of a company to perform a service for the employe in behalf of the company, that if such person complies with the request, and has at the same time an interest in the performanc of the work himself, that he is entitled to protection from the negligence of the employer or the servants of the company. It is said that a person thus situated is not to be regarded as a trespasser or as a volunteer; that he is upon the premises of the master, while not with his consent, yet without his objection, and that at the same time he is doing something in which he himself is interested, and that he is not to be regarded, as the court say, as a volunteer or as a servant, but that his position is somewhere between the two; that he is doing this work, as the Supreme Court say, by suffrance of the master; that he himself having a personal interest in doing it while doing it, he is entitled to protection. This question is discussed at some length in 63 O. S., 236. This is said in the third paragraph of the syllabus.

“One who is invited by a servant of a corporation in charge of its work or service to assist him therein, and does so with some purpose or benefit to be subserved in his own behalf in addition to the purpose of so assisting, is not a volunteer, and [363]*363is entitled while so assisting to be protected against the negligence of the servants of the company.1 ’

And the question is discussed quite fully in the opinion by Uudge Burket. In this case it was the duty of the station agent of the railroad company to set the lights in the switches near the station house. Instead of doing it himself, he employed a hoy, the plaintiff, to do it for him, and gave him some compensation for the service; and while the boy was doing the work, he was injured by a torpedo that had been left on the track. The court held that the boy was not to be considered as a mere volunteer or trespasser, as he was doing the work at the request of an employe of the company, and had himself a personal interest in it.

The case in 43 O. S., 224, is cited in the case in 63 O. S. with approval.

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5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 359, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-bowling-green-fremont-ry-co-v-pfisterer-ohiocirct-1904.