Toledo Indiana Rd. Co. v. Yhalkee

1 N.E.2d 163, 51 Ohio App. 378, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 229, 5 Ohio Op. 299, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 502
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 N.E.2d 163 (Toledo Indiana Rd. Co. v. Yhalkee) 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
Toledo Indiana Rd. Co. v. Yhalkee, 1 N.E.2d 163, 51 Ohio App. 378, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 229, 5 Ohio Op. 299, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 502 (Ohio Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Richards, J.

By an action commenced in the Court of Common Pleas the defendant in error, Lem Yhalkee, sought to recover a judgment against The Toledo & Indiana Railroad Company for $7,700, for alleged injuries to his person and damage to his autopaohile by. reason of a collision between a train of the railroad company and his automobile, occurring at about 7:30 *379 o’clock in the evening of January 27, 1933. The trial resulted in a verdict in his favor in the sum of $870, upon which judgment was entered.

By its petition in error, the railroad company seeks a reversal of this judgment on the sole ground that the trial court erred in failing and refusing to direct a verdict in its favor, a motion therefor having been made both at the close of the evidence produced by Yhalkee and at the conclusion of that offered and received in its behalf. For this purpose no motion for a new trial was necessary and none was filed, the weight of the evidence not being involved.

The basis of the contention of the railroad company is that the evidence adduced at the trial is such that reasonable minds must conclude that Yhalkee was guilty of contributory negligence. Four grounds of negligence are alleged in the petition of Yhalkee:

1. In that the defendant by its agent and servant failed and omitted to sound a whistle at such time before arriving at said crossing, or ring a bell continuously upon arriving at said crossing and until the said interurban freight train had passed over said crossing.

2. In that said defendant company had failed at said time and place to provide any signalling system to protect vehicles crossing said interurban tracks on said highway.

3. In operating its said interurban freight train upon and over said crossing at a higher rate of speed than was reasonable and proper, in this, to wit, more than thirty miles per hour under the then existing conditions at said time and place.

4. In that after the defendant, by and through its agent, saw the automobile of plaintiff crossing said tracks at said time and place, although it knew or by the exercise of ordinary care on its part should have known, that to continue its operation of its said inter *380 urban train at said rate of speed of thirty miles per hour would result in a collision, but notwithstanding said knowledge by the defendant, it failed to slacken its speed or stop its said train in time to avoid said collision, but continued the operation of said train until it collided with the automobile of plaintiff.

The trial judge in his charge to the jury eliminated from consideration all of the foregoing claims of negligence on the part of the railroad company except No. 1, and our examination of the record convinces us that he was right in so doing.

The collision occurred at the crossing of Sibley Road and the tracks of the railroad, Sibley Road being a public highway located in Lucas county about four miles west of Toledo. Yhalkee lived on the east side of this highway in the first house, approximately 60 feet south of the railroad tracks. The house fronts on Sibley Road about 18 feet from the paved portion thereof. On the north side of the house is a driveway and there are no obstructions to a clear view of the railroad tracks in a northeasterly direction for at least a distance of 500 feet. There is a slight slope upward in Sibley Road as it approaches the track. Yhalkee was fully familiar with the location of the tracks and of the fact that cars and trains were operated thereover, the railroad being an electric interurban, not a steam road. Prior to the time of the collision, Yhalkee, accompanied by his wife and daughter, had left his home to visit his parents in Swanton, with whom they fire* quently stayed over week-ends. After proceeding a portion of the way they decided because of a snowstorm not to go further, and, turning around, proceeded homeward. Reaching home, Yhalkee stopped the automobile on the driveway at the rear of his house, the rear of the automobile being about 35 feet from the entrance to Sibley Road. He, his wife and his daughter got out of the automobile, the wife and *381 daughter immediately going into the house and he remaining to wipe off the snow which had gathered on the right front side of the windshield, there being an automatic wiper on the left side thereof. He then got into the car, intending to go to the grocery to get some meat and bread for breakfast. He backed out of the driveway into Sibley Road, stopped and looked to the right, and seeing or hearing nothing started forward in first speed, and when “fifteen, twenty feet, maybe fifteen, eighteen feet,” from the railroad crossing, he again stopped, shifted his gears to second speed and continued to and over the crossing at a speed, he says, not in excess of 4 or 5 miles an hour. The snow was falling in heavy, wet flakes and there was a strong wind, but the headlights on his automobile were burning brightly and he says he could see ahead through the storm 40 or 50 feet and that at the speed his car was traveling could have stopped within a distance of 4 or 5 feet. He did not hear any whistle or bell, nor did he see the train until the instant of the collision.

The train consisted of four freight cars, loaded with crushed stone, drawn by an electric motor car. The motor car struck the right middle part of the Yhalkee automobile.

Mrs. Yhalkee testified that almost immediately after she entered the house the “whistle shrieked” at almost the same time as she heard the crash, and that there was no whistle before that. Asked as to whether the headlights on the front of the electric car were burning after the collision, she answered “they were lit.”

A Mr. Shortridge, a garage operator, testified that at the time of the collision he was working on a motor in the basement of his house, which is located about 375 feet north from the railroad crossing. He said he heard one shrill whistle and then the crash, and that he heard no other signals. He stated also that the *382 Yhalkee automobile was in second speed when it was removed from the track for the purpose of taking it to his garage. Another witness was walking on a road that parallels and then crosses the railroad tracks, and when he was between 50 and 60 feet from Sibley Road saw Yhalkee’s automobile parked in the driveway. He saw the automobile back out of the driveway, and says he could see the headlight and that the automobile straightened up and came to a stop, and that after it came- to a stop it started forward towards the tracks from which Yhalkee was then about 15 feet distant. Because of the snow the witness was walking with his head down, and, after seeing Yhalkee move out from the driveway to Sibley Road and move toward the tracks, he did not look up again until he heard the crash, when he was about 30 feet from the crossing. He says “I was looking down” and “heard no street car or saw no street car. I heard one long whistle” but “it was blown so quickly to the crash that I couldn’t say whether it was right at the time of the crash or a few seconds before.”

The foregoing is the substance of all of the evidence offered by Yhalkee at the trial, which related to the alleged negligence of the railroad company and to the negligence of Yhalkee.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.E.2d 163, 51 Ohio App. 378, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 229, 5 Ohio Op. 299, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-indiana-rd-co-v-yhalkee-ohioctapp-1935.