Universal Concrete Pipe Co. v. Bassett

200 N.E. 843, 130 Ohio St. 567, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 567, 5 Ohio Op. 214, 119 A.L.R. 646, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 350
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1936
Docket25391
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 200 N.E. 843 (Universal Concrete Pipe Co. v. Bassett) 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
Universal Concrete Pipe Co. v. Bassett, 200 N.E. 843, 130 Ohio St. 567, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 567, 5 Ohio Op. 214, 119 A.L.R. 646, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 350 (Ohio 1936).

Opinion

Stephenson, J.

It is becoming ultra-fasbionable in Ohio in personal injury cases to allege that tbe acts or omissions that proximately caused tbe injuries complained of were wanton.

Tbe term “wilful” is seldom used alone, but quite often tbe acts or omissions are characterized as both wilful and wanton. We have no degrees of negligence in Ohio. We define negligence as tbe failure to exercise ordinary care, and we can properly denominate such negligence as ordinary negligence. In some jurisdictions it is referred to as “simple” negligence, in *572 others “mere” negligence. There is “method in the madness” that prompts the nse of the word “wanton” in such cases. In the first place it is difficult of definition, but that is not its cardinal virtue. The unfortunate individual against whom wanton misconduct is charged is deprived of his plea of contributory negligence. He may have a plea of contributory negligence so chock full of merit that it would defeat a particular action for damages for ordinary negligence instanter, but when the party who institutes the action by simple legerdemain places the word “wanton” before the specifications of negligence, the unfortunate defendant is barred of the only meritorious plea he had, and he is driven to the extremity of a general denial — a most dangerous plea in an action for damages for personal injury.

That is not the only “wallop” that the little word “wanton” carries with it. It permits, in addition to compensatory damages, the assessment of punitive damages — damages by way of punishment, if you please; damages of such nature against which, when reduced to judgment, a discharge in bankruptcy can not be had; damages in such an amount as will cure the reckless driver of a motor vehicle from driving recklessly, and mayhap cure him from driving entirely, for if he must respond in punitive damages, the chances are that he will have nothing to drive.

The amount of punitive damages that can be recovered in a “wanton” case is limited only by the amount the injured party sees fit to insert in his petition, as our courts will not permit a party to recover more than he prays for.

Wanton misconduct is a veritable Gibraltar against which the storms of excessive damages, passion and prejudice can beat without avail, as no court will attempt to enter a remittitur against a verdict tinctured with punitive damages. Punitive damages should be awarded in a real, genuine, honest-to-goodness wan *573 ton misconduct case, but tbe party who injects the ingredient of 'wantonness in a case where the facts do not warrant it is playing with fire and may ruin a perfectly good case, if based on ordinary negligence.

Wantonness is a synonym for what is popularly known as “cussedness,” and cussedness is a disposition to perversity. An act or omission does not become wanton at the whim or caprice of the pleader, any more than a threatened injury in a suit for injunction becomes irreparable simply because the pleader says so. Facts must be pleaded which reveal on their face the element of wantonness, and they must be proved as pleaded.

Wanton negligence was first defined by the Supreme Court of Ohio in the case of Higbee Co. v. Jackson, 101 Ohio St., 75, 128 N. E., 61, 14 A. L. R., 131, viz.:

“3. To constitute wanton negligence it is not necessary that there should be ill-will toward the person injured, but an entire absence of care for the safety of others, which exhibits indifference to consequences, establishes legal wantonness. Such a mental attitude distinguishes wrongs caused by wanton negligence from torts arising from mere negligence.
“4. The simple violation of a statute or ordinance does not of itself constitute wilful and wanton negligence. * * *”

It will be noted that in this case and the following case cited the term “wanton negligence” was used. We no longer indorse the use of such term, as it is a misnomer.

The third paragraph of the syllabus in the case of Higbee Co. v. Jackson, supra, was approved and amplified in the case of Reserve Trucking Co. v. Fairchild, 128 Ohio St., 519, 191 N. E., 745, in the second paragraph of the syllabus, as follows:

“The term ‘wanton negligence’ implies the failure to exercise any care for the safety of those to whom *574 a duty of care is owing when the wrongdoer has knowledge of the great probability of harm to such persons which the exercise of care might avert and exhibits a reckless disregard of consequences.”

In the case of Payne, Dir. Genl. of Rds., v. Vance, 103 Ohio St., 59, 133 N. E., 85, the court was dealing with the issue of “wilful and wanton misconduct,” and in the eighth paragraph of the syllabus made the following pronouncement of law:

“An instruction to the jury which attempts to define wilful acts or wantonness, which does not include the element of defendant’s knowledge of plaintiff’s danger, or such conscious indifference to consequences as would be the equivalent of wilful and intentional injury, is erroneous.”

The crafty pleader would avoid the danger created by this definition by using the term “wanton misconduct” alone, and referring the court back to the third paragraph of the syllabus in Higbee Co. v. Jackson, supra, which was in no wise modified or overruled in the Payne case. “Wanton negligence” was specifically defined in the Eigbee case, and there is a combined definition of wilful and wanton negligence in the Payne case. In a situation of this character he would stand on the common sense proposition that as between a specific definition and a combined definition of a term by the same court, the specific definition must be given preference and precedence.

There has been a great deal of pioneering and experimentation in the courts of Ohio relative to so-called “wilful and wanton negligence,” and it is high time that we set ourselves right.

In the first place, there is no such thing as wilful negligence and there is no such thing as wanton-negligence.

Although actions for wilful or wanton conduct have often been treated under the head of negligence ac *575 tions, “An action based upon wilful or wanton misconduct is apart from tbe action for negligent conduct. * * * The difference is one of kind, not merely of degree. Negligence does not have for its base either wilfulness or wantonness, while misconduct which is merely negligent is never either wilful or wanton.” Bordonaro v. Senk, 109 Conn., 428, 147 A., 136.

A wrongdoer acts wantonly and wilfully only when he inflicts injury intentionally or is so utterly indifferent to the rights of others that he acts as if such rights did not exist. Conrad v. Wheelock, 24 F. (2nd), 996.

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Bluebook (online)
200 N.E. 843, 130 Ohio St. 567, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 567, 5 Ohio Op. 214, 119 A.L.R. 646, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/universal-concrete-pipe-co-v-bassett-ohio-1936.