Uncapher v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co.

188 N.E. 553, 127 Ohio St. 351, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 351, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 238
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1933
Docket24177
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 188 N.E. 553 (Uncapher v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Uncapher v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co., 188 N.E. 553, 127 Ohio St. 351, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 351, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 238 (Ohio 1933).

Opinion

Stephenson, J.

The parties occupy the same rela *356 tive positions here as in the courts below and they will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, respectively.

Plaintiff makes ten assignments of error in his petition in error, but seems to place reliance in but two of them in his brief. This court cannot search the record for error that is not in some wise adverted to in the brief of the complaining party, notwithstanding the assignments contained in the petition in error. Errors not treated in the brief will be regarded as having been abandoned by the party who gave them birth.

Plaintiff devotes his brief to the following alleged grounds of error:

First, that the answer of defendant was argumentative, and such argument should not have been read to the jury and included in the charge of the court; and especially should the contents of the answer not have been repeated.

Counsel for defendant with much vehemence deny that the judge read the answer to the jury.

This answer does violate some of the well-known rules of pleading. It is argumentative and redundant. Outside of the allegation of contributory negligence, there is nothing in the answer that could not have been shown under a general denial. Notwithstanding the prejudicial nature of this answer, counsel for plaintiff, for some reason best known to himself, was content, to use a popular expression, “to string along” with it, as he interposed no motion to it; and it is not until the trial judge parades the answer before the jury that he begins to appreciate its pristine ugliness.

The record does not divulge whether the trial judge read from defendant’s answer or not. If he did not, he either incorporated the answer in a written charge, or gave it to the jury orally in hese verba.

We do not concede that the failure of counsel to interpose a motion to an argumentative answer furnishes any license to the trial judge to glorify the contents of such answer in his general charge to the jury. This *357 court has time and again frowned upon the practice of reading the pleadings in a case by way of a substitution for defining the issues. Unless the pleading is a model of clarity and conciseness, it is just as vicious to recite its contents as to read it. Pleadings, while required under the law to contain only plain, concise statements of fact, are in the main couched in the language of the law, a tongue unknown to the ordinary layman, and it is the duty of the trial judge to reduce the pleadings to their lowest terms, and to present to the jury understandable issues of fact, uninfluenced by the exurberance of the pleader.

As counsel for plaintiffs in personal injury eases are, without warrant of fact in many instances, injecting the allegations of willfulness and wantonness into their petitions, so are counsel for defendants likewise! combining the defenses of contributory negligence, sole negligence, and unavoidable accident in their answers. The party who puts these issues into the case without factual support is usually furnishing the other party a club with which to beat him over the head. If this were the “head and front of the offending” it would not arouse comment; but these frivolous issues, and they are frivolous without factual support, furnish to the unsucessful party an invitation to prosecute error in cases that but for such fantasy would end in the trial court, where they should end.

In his second assignment of error, plaintiff complains that the trial judge charged the jury on the defense of unavoidable accident, when no such plea was made and there was no testimony upon which to base such charge.

The fact is that defendant denied specifically each and every allegation of negligence, contained in plaintiff’s petition, pleaded sole negligence of plaintiff, and contributory negligence; and the trial judge must have concluded that by the use of the following language he likewise made a plea of unavoidable accident, namely, *358 plaintiff “recklessly, carelessly and negligently drove said automobile upon said defendant’s north bound main track immediately in front of and into collision with defendant’s said locomotive * *

This averment in no wise pleads unavoidable accident. It is a good plea of sole negligence, or contributory negligence, as the case may be. It unequivocally charges the plaintiff with negligence. Bouvier defines “unavoidable accident” as an inevitable accident, which could not have been foreseen or prevented by using ordinary diligence, and resulting without fault. This definition was adopted from the ease of United States v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. (D. C.), 189 F., 471.

“Inevitable accident” is defined by the same author as any accident which cannot be foreseen and prevented. This definition was adopted from Trent & Mersey Navigation Co. v. Wood, 4 Doug., 287, 290, opinion by Lord Mansfield; McArthur & Hurlbert v. Sears, 21 Wend. (N. Y.), 190, 198; Fish v. Chapman & Ross, 2 Ga., 349, 46 Am. Dec., 393.

There is a more succinct definition, namely: An unavoidable accident is such an occurrence or happening as, under all the attendant circumstances and conditions, could not have been foreseen or anticipated in the exercise of ordinary care as the proximate cause of injury by any of the parties concerned.

Can there be an unavoidable accident when one of the parties is negligent? Most certainly not.

Inevitable accident occurs “only when the disaster happens from natural causes, without negligence or fault on either side, and when both parties have endeavored, by every means in their power, with due care and caution, and with a proper display of nautical skill, to prevent the occurrence of the accident.” Sampson v. United States, 12 Ct. Cl., 480, 491: Union Steamship Co. v. New York & Virginia Steamship Co., 65 U. S. (24 How.), 307, 16 L. Ed., 699.

*359 It will be noted that the cases cited above are maritime cases, but maritime law gets all its strength from the usages and customs of nations, and it is only operative in any country in so far as it is adopted by the laws and usages of such country. It has no inherent force of its own. The Lottawanna, 88 U. S. (21 Wall.), 558, 22 L. Ed., 654.

A few examples of unavoidable accident may be apropos:

A rat made a hole in a box where water was collected in an upper room, so that the water trickled out and flowed on plaintiff’s goods in a lower room. Carstairs v. Taylor, L. R., 6 Ex., 217.

Pipes were laid with plugs properly made to prevent bursting, and a severe frost prevented the plugs from acting and the pipes burst and flooded the plaintiff’s cellar. Blyth v. Birmingham Waterworks Co., 11 Ex., 781.

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Bluebook (online)
188 N.E. 553, 127 Ohio St. 351, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 351, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uncapher-v-baltimore-ohio-rd-co-ohio-1933.