Toomey v. Avery Stamping Co.

20 Ohio C.C. 183
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ohio C.C. 183 (Toomey v. Avery Stamping Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toomey v. Avery Stamping Co., 20 Ohio C.C. 183 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

This case is before us on a petition in error; and, without stating the facts, we proceed at once to consider the errors alleged and relied upon in the hearing of the case.

The first is, that the petition does not state a cause of action, and, in order to show that the petition is insufficient, the plaintiff in error divides the charges of negli[185]*185gence into three: First. No engineer. Second. Unsafe place. Third. Defective belt. And it is claimed that the charge of negligence as to there being no engineer is insufficient because the plaintiff did not in his petition deny that ■he had the means jf knowledge, although he did deny that he was wholly ignorant and had no knowledge of the fact that there was no engineer.

There is some uncertainty under the decisions of Ohio, as to whether the averment on the part of the plaintiff that he had not the means of knowledge is necessary in a petition of this kind.

The syllabus in the case of Coal & Car Co. v. Norman, 49 Ohio St., 598, does not require that averment-in order to make a good petition. That opinion is based largely upon what is said by Wood in his work on Master and Servant.

“It is necessary, to aver in a petition in a case of negligence. ”

And it is not there stated that the averment in question ■is necessary to make a good petition.

In the case of Coal and Mining Co. v. Adm’r. of Clay, 51 Ohio St., 542, where the court is discussing what it is necessary for the plaintiff to show in order to make out his ■case, the court does say that it is necessary for him to show that he had not the means of knowing the dangers to which he was exposed.

The defendant below filed no demurrer to the petition, nor did he in any way by motion or by raising the question in any manner on trial bring this matter to the attention of the court. The question was not raised on the motion for a new trial, nor is it one of the grounds of error stated in the petition in error. It seems never to have occurred to the plaintiff in error that the petition was in any manner defective until on the hearing of the case in this court, and that question hence was not raised at any time prior thereto. And although it has been held in this state that if the petition is defective in that it does not state a cause of action, the objection to the petition may be raised at any time and in any court in which the case may be pending, and if the petition is found so clearly defective that no cause of action is stated in it, it might be proper and it is proper for thq reviewing court to take that matter into considera[186]*186tion in disposing of the case; but a reviewing court will,. under all the circumstances herein narrated, extend to the pleading a liberal construction and will not render any aidt in the support of such a claim beyond what it is compelled to do.

The separating of the causes or charges of negligence as. is done by the plaintiff in error, does not determine Ihe question of whether a cause of action • is stated or not, for, in determining whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover ■ under his petition, all the averments of his petition were to. be considered, and if upon all the averments he has stated a cause of action, the petition is not defective on the ground., here alleged. And, in connection with this, it is urged that the want of an engineer was not the proximate cause-of the injury the plaintiff below received.

It is impossible in this case, to so divorce the causes that.-, were active in bringing about the injury complained of.

If an engineer had been standing close by the engine, much of the injury received by the defendant in error most-likely would not have occurred; there is ground for claiming that the delay in stopping the engine, greatly aggravated his injuries and added to what, he would otherwise.have received.

These different charges of negligence all enter into to - make-up the cause of action, and because there may be no.averment that the defendant in error had no means of knowing that there was no engineer, would not in and of itself-prohibit a recovery under the petition, even if that allegation is necessary.

It is claimed that the petition is defective also in that the plaintiff does not aver that he did not have the means of"knowing of the unsafe condition of the place where he was.called upon to work; that his averment is, that he did not have equal means of knowledge with the defendant,

It is claimed that the petition is defective wherein it alleges the defect that is claimed to exist in the belt, for the reason that the measurements set out in the petition are in- • compatible with the belt’s dragging and wearing itself out in the manner averred. This defect claimed to exist in the petition, is clearly not well taken; and, as to the petition as- - a whole, none of the matters set forth by counsel for the - [187]*187defendant in error having been heretofore noticed, nor the •court’s attention at any time called to them, we hold that at this time the averments are such that the petition is sufficient to support the judgment obtained in the court below.

It is claimed that the court erred in the admission of testimony. On page 10 of the record, the question was asked, “What was the ordinary method in use there of fastening these layers together when they were separated, before this accident?” The court, before allowing the witness to answer the question, ascertained how long the witness had been at work in the factory prior to the time of the injury; and, in answering that question, the witness answered, “I worked there about seven years, Why, they used to have these and pegs and glue and different kinds of ways of fastening these together.” And then the question was asked, “Whether they had these hooks also?” And to this, there was an objection, a ruling and an exception, and the answer was, “Yes, sir.” We find no error in the rulings of the court in those questions and answers.

On page 76 of the record, it is claimed that the court •erred in allowing the case to proceed after it was admitted ■by the attorney for the plaintiff below, that he would not •claim, in presenting the testimony, that the belt was over the main shaft and also over the shaft of the hammer, but was free from the hammer shaft and only on the main shaft, and in that position was dragging upon the floor, * And, ■thereupon, the attorney for the plaintiff in error, asked that all the testimony to the effect that this belt had been dragging upon the floor, be withdrawn from the jury, The court refused to take that testimony from the jury, and there was an exception noted, and the question was raised at other points in the hearing of the case.

We think that the fact that the belt was upon the hammer shaft, being alleged in the petition, was merely a description of the surroundings, and was not the statement of a fact that was in any way intended to bring negligence to the defendant below, nor was it a fact upon which any liability was to be fastened upon the company in any manner in the trial of the case. This being true, it was merely descriptive of the situation of things, and entirely immaterial in the case. The only question was, “Did the belt drag up[188]

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio C.C. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toomey-v-avery-stamping-co-ohcirctcuyahoga-1900.