Wheeling & L. E. Ry. Co. v. Fisher

15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 566, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 120
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 566 (Wheeling & L. E. Ry. Co. v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeling & L. E. Ry. Co. v. Fisher, 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 566, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 120 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

HAYNES, J.

(Orally.)

A petition in error was filed in tbis court to reverse tbe judgment of tbe court of common pleas. The action was brought by Hattie I. Fisher, administratrix, against the railroad company for the purpose of recovering damages from the railroad company occasioned by the death of her husband, which, it is averred, was caused by the negligence of the defendant company. Such proceedings were had in that ease as that a verdict was rendered by the jury for the plaintiff in the sum of $7,500 and a judgment was entered upon that verdict. And this petition in error is prosecuted for the purpose of reversing that judgment and to set aside that verdict.

The accident occurred at a place called Rock Point; in the southeastern part of the state and about three or four hours run this side of Wheeling. An outline of the facts is: In that part of the state the country is broken and rolling and at various places there are cuts through which the railroad passes, the last one in that section being this Rock Point, as it is called. In the immediate neighborhood of this point the last station is a place called Rockford, which was about four miles from the Rock Point and the road from there runs along to a point about a mile and three-quarters east of Rock Point where you arrive at a place called the Summit Point, making it up grade the most of the time to that point, and from there it was for some distance down grade, the next station being two or three miles beyond Rock Point'. From this summit down to Rock Point there is a drop of seventy feet in the grade.

The decedent had left Wheeling with a freight train on April 4, 1901, at 5:35 in the evening, or afternoon. He arrived at Rock Point at about 9:35 in the evening. He had stopped at Rockford about a half an hour, waiting for a passenger train to pass to the eastward, and after it had passed this train started for the next station. When he reached the summit and as he come over the summit and the train was partly across the summit, he shut off the steam and from that point the [568]*568train run by its own weight. "When he.arrivefl at this point the train struck a falling rock about six feet long by three feet wide and three feet thick. The locomotive passed over the rock and passed on 150 or 200 feet along the ties, being thrown off of the rails, where it turned over and the engineer, H. H. Fisher, was killed. The fireman, who was in the cab with him, had' the good fortune to escape with scarcely an injury, although he went over in the locomotive with the engineer.

This Rock Point is the point of a hill, and this cut that I speak of is a cut through that point. The point itself, when you come to the center of the point, is said to be from 35 to 50 feet high and 150 to 200 feet wide, that is, the point itself; the cut however is from 600 to 900 feet long and is on a curve; the road curves around this point. The point is cut away, not perpendicular perhaps; it is cut off at the base and comes near the railroad track; at the top it extends back; it is formed of gravel and rock, some loose earth, rock, sand and stone under, and during the wet season or during the time the frost is coming out of the ground in the spring, pieces of rock and gravel work loose, become detached and fall upon the track, and this is known to occur from time to time. The railroad company at times had employed a watchman, or rather the foreman of the section gang had been in the habit from time to time of sending a man out as a watchman at this point, when he thought there was serious danger of rock falling. This, however, was not a fixed habit, but'was done from time to time according to the judgment evidently of the section foreman. On this particular night in question there was no watchman sent out.

It is contended in the petition that the railroad company was guilty of neglig'ence contributing to the death of the engineer, in that it had failed to send out a watchman to wratch along the track at this time, knowing, or having reason to know that there was danger of rock falling at that point..

Conceding now that the jury would be fully warranted in finding that the railroad company was guilty of negligence in not sending out a watchman at that'time, having no watchman there, the controversy in the case has turned upon the fact as to whether or not the engineer himself was not guilty of contributory negligence in causing this disaster ; whether he was not, in. fact, the real cause, the real active person in the matter of negligence in respect to the accident.

The railroad company, while this foreman did sometimes send a man out there, did not rely upon the fact that a watchman might be sent out, perhaps did not place a great deal of reliance upon it; but whether they did or not, they did from time to time send out telegrams and dispatches to their' conductors and engineers in regard to their [569]*569duty in the matter; and on the morning of this day they had sent from the office of the assistant superintendent at Toledo, an order directed to the engineers and conductors on the road, which had been delivered to the engineer and conductor of this train, a telegram which read as follows:

“Reduce speed to five miles an hour through the cut east of Valley Junction. ’ ’

Now Valley Junction was thirty-six miles west of this point. The company had been carrying forward some works there either of repair or improvement of the road and the tracks were said to be in a very unsafe condition; and that part of the telegram related to the passage of trains on that side of Valley Junction. It then‘continues, ‘‘and look out for rocks falling in cuts east and west of Rockford.” Now Rockford is the station I have spoken of about four miles from this point, and there were cuts, as I have said, east of that point and also this cut west of it.

Now this engineer had this order in his pocket. Tie had his train composed of forty-five cars; they were all loaded; some with steel bars; some with coal; some with merchandise and perhaps some other things, but they were loaded to their full capacity; and weighed perhaps, if I remember right, an aggregate of 1,530 tons. The train had in it thirty of those cars, equipped in the most perfect manner with air brakes. And it is said by experts that fifteen air brakes would have been sufficient to handle that train. With thirty of those he had full and complete power to control his train; he had a good engine; it was a well equipped train; it had some fancy name which I have forgotten.

Some question is raised here in regard to the construction of this telegram, this order, what the engineer should understand by it, what should be its meaning, and considerable testimony has been taken by the parties, of experts, engineers and others, in- regard to the meaning of a telegram of this kind, what the engineer should understand it to mean. The testimony on behalf of the railroad company and perhaps some of the testimony on behalf of the plaintiff is that it means that he is to keep a lookout for rocks and keep control of his train, so that he can stop it upon seeing a rock within the line of his vision.

Well, to an ordinary person, there should be no question as to the fair construction of that telegram; he shall look out for falling rock; he must look to see if any have fallen, keep watch in front of him; it is notice to him that these rocks are likely to fall upon the line of his tracks; that he is to look out for them and avoid them.

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15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 566, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeling-l-e-ry-co-v-fisher-ohcirctlucas-1904.