Village of Ashtabula v. Bartram

2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 372
CourtAshtabula Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 372 (Village of Ashtabula v. Bartram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ashtabula Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Ashtabula v. Bartram, 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 372 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Laubie, J.

This is a proceeding in error, brought to reverse a judgment of the court below in an action wherein Bartram was plaintiff, and the village of Ashtabula was defendant, to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff by reason of a defective railing or fence at the side of one of the streets of the village; where Main street runs upon the side of Mill hill. There were two watering-[373]*373troughs on this part of the street, and the accident occurred opposite the upper watering-trough. At that point the hill to the right of the road on the east, descended abruptly for 75 feet; and along the side of the street on the hill there had been erected, by the village, a fence, apparently for the purpose of preventing either teams or people from falling over the precipice.

At the time in question, the fence was out. of repair at the point opposite the upper watering-trough. There was some dispute as to the extent to which the fence was down at, that point, but the weight of the evidence is that it was down for a distance of thirty-two feet, and it was at that point, as the plaintiff was driving down the hill, that he received the injuries in question, by his horse shying to the eastward, and precipitating the buggy in which he was riding over the precipice.

The plaintiff alleged that the street was dangerous for travel without a bar* rier, and which it was the duty of the defendant to build and maintain; that defendant had constructed a fence as a barrier, but had negligently and knowingly allowed the same to be out of repair for an unreasonable length of time, etc.1, upon which issue was taken by the defendant, and contributory negligence upon the part of the plaintiff was alleged.

The evidence which the plaintiff in error relied upon to show contributory negligence was largely in reference to the character of the plaintiff’s horse, and his careless driving. Upon this point the testimony was conflicting, and we can not say that the verdict of the jury on that point was clearly against the weight of the evidence.

The next proposition made is that the court erred in admitting evidence to show that the fence, at the point of the accident, had been repaired shortly after the accident, by the village. We have not been able to see that the court committed any error^in admitting that evidence. It was competent, at least for one purpose, if for no other, and that was as' tending to prove an admission by the village that it was its duty to maintain and keep the fence in repair. The objection to the evidence was a general one, and if it was competent for one purpose in the case it would not be error to admit it because it might be incompetent for another.

The principal point relied upon as error, however, by the plaintiff in error,, is that evidence of prior accidents to other persons, of a similar character, at the place in question, yras admitted by the court to go to the jury; to the admissibility of which, and to the court’s charge in’ reference thereto, the defendant excepted. In admitting the evidence, the court said: “We would say, it is. competent for the purpose of showing the dangerous character of the street at that point, as requiring a barrier. Also competent for the purpose of showing-that the corporation had notice of its dangerous character.” The part of the charge which relates to this evidence, is as follows: “Now, gentlemen of the jury, as bearing upon this first proposition, evidence has been introduced of previous accidents at this place. That evidence has been permitted for two different purposes. One to show that the place was a dangerous place, and might require the establishing or construction of a railing, or a barrier. In the next place, it is evidence competent, as tending to show that the corporation had-notice of the extent of the defect or tearing away of the railing, which they may be bound to keep at this place.”

It seems, therefore, that the evidence was admitted for two purposes, and the question here made is whether or not it was admissible for those purposes, or either of them. It is claimed on the part of the plaintiff in error that it was not admissible for any purpose, and that seemed to be their objection below— a general objection to the testimony, upon any phase of it, that it was incompetent.

I think it fairly appears that the court was limiting the application of. this evidence, so far as the place of accident was concerned, to the dangerous condi[374]*374tf<?n of the street for want of a barrier — not that the street itself on its surface was dangerous, or that an obstruction existed upon the street. Confining it to that, was such evidence competent to show the existence of a dangerous place, over which.and down which teams might be precipitated because there w,as no barrier to prevent it, and to prove notice thereof to the village? The evidence disclosed that these ■ prior accidents had occurred some two years before the accident complained of by the plaintiff, and if there had been a failure of proof to connect the condition of the railing at that time with its condition at the time of the accident in question, then it might have been incompetent; but the evidence in the case, and from the same witnesses, disclosed that the same defect in the fence .existed from the time of those accidents until the accident complained of by the plaintiff, and until the fence was repaired a month thereafter.

It is true that at the time of the prior accidents, the street at the point in question was icy and slippery — in one case a sled heavily loaded with grain slid upon the ice and went partially down the precipice, or at least to its edge, where the sled caught upon one of the posts of the fence that still remained there, and Ayas held by it from being precipitated down the hill. One of the horses did go over, but was held by the harness a sufficient length of time until they could get him-up and out of the dangerous position which he was in. In the other case the driver was driving down the street with a wagon loaded heavily with wheat, and because of the ice the hind wheels slipped, and the wagon, horses and all were precipitated down the precipice. So far then as the condition of the street is concerned, it- was not the same in the prior accidents as in the one complained of by the plaintiff, for his accident occurred in the month of May, and at a time when the road was not slippery, and there was no ice, and when instead of the slope of the street being toward the precipice, caused by the bed of ice from the,overflow of water from the trough, the slope was in the other direction. The condition of the surface of the street therefore was entirely different in the cases, and if the court had allowed the evidence to be given for the purpose of showing anything else but that it was dangerous by reason of the -want of a barrier at that place, it would have been erroneous, because to render such testimony admissible in any case, it must appear that the conditions were substantially the saíne in each case — in this case the condition of the fence, not the street.

Upon the question stated we have examined nearly, if n.ot quite all the American cases, and have given the matter a very thorough consideration, and 1 state the -'result of our labors upon the point.

. Cases where evidence was admitted of similar accidents at other and different times, suffered by other persons than the plaintiff at the same point, group themselves generally into three classes: 1. Cases of fire communicated by sparks from railroad engines, to property adjacent to and along the line of the railways. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-ashtabula-v-bartram-ohcirctashtabul-1888.