Toledo Consolidated Street Railroad v. Sweeney

8 Ohio C.C. 298
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio C.C. 298 (Toledo Consolidated Street Railroad v. Sweeney) 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 Consolidated Street Railroad v. Sweeney, 8 Ohio C.C. 298 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Haynes, J.,

(orally).

On the 15th of April, 1892, Thomas Sweeney, then a conductor upon the cars of The Toledo Consolidated Street Railway Company, in Toledo, was in charge of one of the cars crossing a bridge over the track of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company, at the junction of St. Clair street and Maumee avenue. The car upon which he was riding, and which he had charge of, had received some injury or had become defective, and for the purpose of returning it to the stables of the company it was being pushed by another car of the company, to which it was attached. While the [299]*299cars were upon this bridge, the bridge suddenly gave away and fell, bringing the two cars together. Sweeney was standing upon the rear end of his, and one Mammett, conductor of the other car, was standing immediately opposite, and as the cars went down, the rear end of the car upon which Sweeney stood collided with the front end of the other car, and he received severe injuries, Mammett at the same time being killed.

Sweeney brought an action in the court of common pleas against the Con. St. Ry. Co., the City of Toledo and the L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co., jointly, and recovered for the injuries which he received upon this occasion. He set up in his petition the various facts upon which he claimed that each of the defendants was liable to him by reason of negligence upon its part causing the injuries which he had received.

The case passed to trial in the common pleas, was tried to a jury, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of fourteen thousand dollars, and each of the defendants filed a petition in error. They deemed it necessary each to take a bill of exceptions, and upon the overruling of the motions for a new trial, each filed a petition in error, so that the case stands upon three bills of exceptions and three petitions in error, all in one case. Whether it was necessary to have so many bills of exceptions, is perhaps a question; the bills are each a copy of the other.

The fundamental basis of the petition is, first, that the L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. was obliged, by virtue of the statutes, section 3284, to build, maintain and keep in repair a bridge at this point over the line of its road. The streets were opened and the bridge built some time after the railroad was built and in use. Whether the keeping and maintaining of that bridge would come within the limits of that statute, is a question that is not urged here. There seems to have been some talk about it in the court below ; but the court held — and that seems to have been acquiesced in here — that inasmuch as the Lake Shore Company had [300]*300assumed to build that bridge originally and keep and maintain it, and had done so for a long period of time, that it was still liable for its maintenance and continuance. Under the decisions of the Supreme Court it is said that the company is bound to maintain the bridge so long as it keeps and uses its franchise.

The liability of the City of Toledo, it is claimed, arises upon the fact that this bridge is within the limits of the city of Toledo, and connecting one public street with another, and that the obligation rests upon the City of Toledo to maintain and keep the streets and bridges in repair, open and free from nuisance.

As to the liability-of the Consolidated St. Ry. Co., it is claimed to rest upon the fact that it was using this bridge and this street for the purpose of running its ears over them a long time after it had knowledge that the bridge was in a defective and dangerous condition.

The evidence shows substantially this state of facts.

Sweeney, upon .the morning of the day upon which he received his injury, was at the barns of the street railway company upon Cherry street. He went there to take his car; and while he was there he went to the person in charge of the barns, and who, it is claimed, had charge of the men, who sent them out and directed them when to go, and how to go upon their cars, and told him that he had been informed by certain parties. that the bridge over the Lake Shore road upon St. Clair street was out of order and was dangerous, and he asked that he might be excused from going out upon his car that day— lay off. The person in charge, and the person to whom he applied — Pelt.on by name — told him that he had no other man; that if he had another man he would let him lay off, but .he had no other man, and he would make some inquiries. Thereupon another person present, one of the employes of the company, Stahl by name, in presence of plaintiff and Pelton telephoned to Denman, who was the general superintendent, as I understand it, of the company, stating the [301]*301facts in regard to the bridge, and stating what this man wanted. He received for answer that an examination had been made of that bridge by the officers of the company, and that the bridge was in good condition, and that the man should have no fear, but go ahead. Thereupon Sweeney got upon his car and proceeded, Robert McMahon being the conductor of the car with him. McMahon’s testimony is that Sweeney told him substantially what he had told the other parties; that some man said that the bridge was out of repair and he was going to speak about it; and after they started out and got up towards the bridge, Sweeney told him to look at the bridge, and McMahon says that the bridge swayed and sagged five or six inches as they went over it; but they went on about their employment during the day, and McMahon made no report of it to anybody, and didn’t seem to trouble his head about the matter.

Another witness testified — Stahl by name — and he was present at the barn and reported at the barn in the morning— that he was in the employ of the company between nine and ten o’clock of the evening before, and came across this bridge, and as he was crossing the bridge he saw Mr. Denman upon the bridge, and spoke to him about the bridge, that there had been something said about the bridge being out of repair, and asked him what he thought about it, and Denman said the bridge was good for a thousand — practically, that the bridge was all right, and he should go on. As he passed over the end' of the bridge and came off, he saw Mr. Lang, the general manager, sitting in his buggy by a telegraph pole some 20 or 30 feet from the end of the bridge. He didn’t speak to him, but passed on down town.

About half-past six o’clock upon the evening of the 13th, as these ears were going over, as stated, the bridge fell, and this plaintiff received his injury.

It is claimed on the part of the Street Railway Company that all the information it obtained in regard to this bridge was obtained through the plaintiff, Sweeney, and that [302]*302if any liability exists on the part of the company towards him, he himself is chargeable with knowledge of the condition of the bridge at that time as fully and completely as the defendant company.

Now, we cannot accept that view — or, we do not reach the same conclusion, in regard to the condition of matters. .It would seem from the testimony of Mr. Pelton, that some parties before had made charges in regard to the condition of the bridge, because the plaintiff says that when he spoke to Pelton, Pelton said that some one had spoken to him before, or that he had received such information before. But it was telephoned back that morning that an examination had been made of the bridge by the officer of the company.

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8 Ohio C.C. 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-consolidated-street-railroad-v-sweeney-ohiocirct-1894.