Wheeling & Lake Erie R. R. v. Suhrwiar

22 Ohio C.C. 560, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 809
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. 560 (Wheeling & Lake Erie R. R. v. Suhrwiar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeling & Lake Erie R. R. v. Suhrwiar, 22 Ohio C.C. 560, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 809 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Hull, J.

This is the second time that this case has been in this court. A judgment in favor of the plaintiff below for $5,000 was affirmed at a former term of this court, (20 O. C. C., 558), and the case was thereafter taken to the supreme court, and was by the supreme court reversed on the ground that the trial court [561]*561'had erred in refusing to give an instruction requested by the defendant below. The case was tried again, and a verdict •returned for $10,000, upon which judgment was entered by the court of common pleas, and it is this judgment which is sought to be reversed in this proceeding in error.

The general grounds of error complained of or claimed by the plaintiff in error, are that the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant below; that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, and not sustained by sufficient evidence; that the court erred in its charge to the jury and in its refusal to give certain requests of the defendant below; and that the damages are excessive, and that the judgment should ’be reversed on that ground.

The action was one for personal injuries which the defendant in error claimed he sustained on account of the negligence >of the plaintiff in error, in running a locomotive at a highway ■crossing in the city of Toledo. On the morning of July 20, ■1899, a little before six o’clock in the morning, standard time, the plaintiff with his brother was riding in a lumber wagon, as it is called, there being nothing on the running part of the wagon except a long board reaching from one side 'to the other. The brother was driving the horse, there being only one horse hitched to the wagon. The plaintiff below was sitting behind his brother on this board, perhaps three or four feet ■behind. The defendant in error had gotten on the wagon •with his brother some 500 feet west of the railroad crossing, •on Buckeye stre'et, the crossing of Buckeye street, with the 'Wheeling & Lake Erie railroad being north of their depot 'in Toledo, perhaps a mile north! — some distance at least. As I say, he' got on the wagon, as he claims, about 500 feet west •of the crossing, and his claim is, and it is the testimony of liis brother, that the view was so obstructed at the ■crossing that they were unable to see approaching trains until they were very near to the main track. And the plaintiff below claims that he looked and listened, and that his brother did likewise, as they were approaching the crossing, and neither saw nor heard the locomotive. The plaintiff below was sitting with his face towards the south, or toward the depot, and his brother was sitting with his face toward the [562]*562north, both sitting on this plank which ran lengthwise of the wagon; and he claims that he was unable to discover, or to see or hear any train or locomotive as it approached, until the horse’s front feet were on the main track — there being at this crossing a main track and two side tracks/ — and just at this time, the plaintiff below claims, a locomotive appeared behind these obstructions, running at the rate of from 20 to 30 miles and hour; Suhrwiar at that time being, as he claimed, from fourteen to sixteen feet from the main track, the horse’s fore feet, as I have said, being on the track. He testifies that he remained on the board until he was nearly to the railroad track, and then jumped off, jumping forward — running and jumping, probably — so that he cleared the track, but when he was beyond and east of the track, the locomotive struck the hind wheels of the wagon, and the hind part of the wagon was broken off, and one of the wheels, it is claimed, was thrown upon his back, from which he sustained serious injuries.

The plaintiff below, Frederick Suhrwiar, is co-orborated in his testimony by his brother John, who was with him, and to some extent by one or two witnesses who were in the neighborhood, and either heard the crash at the time of the collision, or saw something of it. Both Fred and John Suhrwiar testify that no signal, either by bell or whistle, was given before the locomotive was seen.

At the close of the testimony of the plaintiff below the railroad company moved the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant below, which was refused and overruled by the court; and this, it is claimed, was error. After the overruling of the motion the railroad company declined to offer any testimony, and the case went to the jury upon the testimony offered by the plaintiff below alone. The jury was charged by the court, and returned a verdict for $10,000.

It is claimed by the railroad company that under the undisputed facts in this case, and upon the testimony of the plaintiff himself, he was not entitled to recover. The claim is, that according to his own testimony, he was guilty of contributory negligence.

According to the testimony, no signal was given on the locomotive, either by bell or whistle, until almost at the very instant [563]*563that the accident occurred; but the claim of the railroad company is, that notwithstanding the evidence showed negligence on its part, Suhrwiar himself was guilty of contributory negligence, and therefore that he cannot recover, under the well established rule in this state, and everywhere, practically. It is claimed that under his testimony he saw the locomotive approaching when he was from fourteen to sixteen feet from the track, the horse being at this time, on a walk, going from a mile and a half to two miles an hour, and it is urged that he then, having an opportunity to get off the wagon, not availing himself of it, but staying on, and attempting to cross the track, thereby .took his own chances as to injury, and that his conduct and acts upon the occasion in question were in law contributory negligence, and bar a recovery.

No testimony having been offered by the defendant, the question is squarely presented to the court, practically as a question of law, whether the facts were such that the court can say, 'as a mattter of law, that the jury were not warranted in finding that the defendant in error was not guilty.of negligence contributing to his own injury.

The engine was coming backward, the tender being ahead, according to the testimony, with some considerable coal piled up upon it. There, was no man on the tender or in sight on the locomotive keeping a lookout.. Suhrwiar was familiar with this crossing. He lived in that vicinity; he crossed it a good many times; and on this morning in question he had before that time gone across four times, and had gone over it but a short time before the accident, for the purpose of putting his cows in a pasture, and had. just, done this when he got qn the wágon with his brother to return. He knew that trains and locomotives passed about this time of day rather frequently; and according to the testimony, as I have stated, the view was obstructed as the crossing was. approached from the west. There was a coal shed of.considerable height — eleven feet high —on one side; there was a wood shed or wood house which also obstructed the view, to some extent; there were high fences on that side of. the track; and there was.a car standing near the crossing which also obstructed the view, as the crossing was approached. When the- case was here before the record contained evidence as it does now of these obstructions, [564]*564but it did not contain the positive statement of the plaintiff below, as it does now, that he saw the locomotive when within from fourteen to sixteen feet of the crossing.

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22 Ohio C.C. 560, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeling-lake-erie-r-r-v-suhrwiar-ohiocirct-1901.