Whitney v. Niehaus

4 Ohio App. 208, 28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 518, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 273, 21 Ohio C.A. 273, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 208
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 Ohio App. 208 (Whitney v. Niehaus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitney v. Niehaus, 4 Ohio App. 208, 28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 518, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 273, 21 Ohio C.A. 273, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 208 (Ohio Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Gorman, J.

This is a proceeding in error to reverse a judgment of the court of common pleas in sustaining a demurrer of the defendants, the commissioners of Hamilton county, to an amended petition of plaintiff, Josephine Whitney, and dismissing said defendants at the plaintiff’s costs.

Briefly stated, the plaintiff’s petition and amended petition counted on negligence of the defendants as joint tort feasors, whereby she suffered grave personal injuries while driving a horse and buggy along the Lawrenceburg and Harrison road in Whitewater township, Hamilton county. After setting out the official capacity of the commissioners and that said road was, at the time of the happening of the events related, a county road in Hamilton county and within the jurisdiction and under the control of said commissioners, plaintiff further [210]*210states that the defendants (the commissioners and Bernard Niehaus) were, on and prior to March 17, 1912, repairing and improving, said county road by grading, draining and placing macadam, rock and other material thereon, at a point where the Whitney road, a township road, intersects said county road; that the defendants, by their agents and employes, negligently, wrongfully and unlawfully caused to be dug a ditch about six feet wide and two feet deep within the limits of said county road at its said intersection with and across the face of said township road; that said defendants, in disregard of their duty, negligently and wrongfully permitted said ditch to remain open, unguarded, unprotected and unlighted during the night of March 17, 1912, by reason whereof said defendants negligently and wrongfully permitted said county road at said place to be in bad repair, unfit and -unsafe and inherently dangerous for use in public travel. Plaintiff further avers that she was riding in a buggy drawn by a horse driven by her husband along said county road on said night, and while turning to the right to enter upon said township road the said buggy fell into said ditch on said county road, thereby throwing her violently out of the buggy and injuring her severely about her body. She prays for damages in the sum of $5,000.

A demurrer to this amended petition was interposed below by the defendants, the commissioners of Hamilton county, on the ground that the averment's thereof did not state a cause of action against the demurring defendants.

The demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiff not desiring to plead further as to the defendant com[211]*211missioners, they were therefore dismissed with their costs.

The case is now in this court on error for a reversal of said judgment on the ground that the demurrer should have been overruled and not sustained. At the outset it is claimed by the prosecuting attorneys, who officially represent the commissioners, and conceded by counsel for plaintiff in error, that the commissioners are not liable for these injuries of plaintiff, however negligent they may have been, unless there is a liability imposed by statute.

Section 2408, General Code, does impose a- liability on the commissioners of a county in their official capacity for damages received by reason of their negligence or carelessness in not keeping any public, state or county road or bridge in proper repair. This law was enacted in 1894, prior to which time no liability attached to the board of commissioners for any injuries or damages sustained by reason of its neglect to keep the highways or bridges under its control in proper repair. No right of action at common law could be maintained for such negligence, and the liability being statutory the statute must be strictly construed in favor of the county officials.

Now it is contended by counsel for defendants in error that the amended petition of plaintiff is fatally defective and open to demurrer because of the failure to aver, first, that the county road in question was an improved road; second, that the board of commissioners had notice of the defective condition, either actual or constructive; third, that it fails to aver that the ditch or trench complained [212]*212of was in the traveled portion of the roadway; and, .fourth, that the doctrine of respondeat superior does not apply to negligent acts of an independent contractor performing work on the public roads under contract with the county commissioners, and that although the amended petition fails to aver that the defendant Niehaus was acting as an independent contractor, nevertheless the court must take judicial notice of the fact that, under the statutes, the commissioners had no power or authority to make improvements or repairs of a county road except by letting' the work to an independent contractor, and therefore Niehaus must have been employed as- an independent contractor, for whose acts of negligence in the prosecution of the work the commissioners are not responsible, assuming that he was negligent and that his negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.

In view of the fact that this proceeding is one to review the action of the court below, we have considered the claims of counsel as though presented in the order made on the arguments on the demurrer in the court of common pleas.

As to the first contention of counsel for the. commissioners, the court believe it is sufficiently answered by calling attention to the language of the statute, Section 2408, which imposes a liability on the commissioners in their official capacity for damages received by reason of their negligence or carelessness in not keeping in proper repair any public, state or county road or bridge. The liability is not limited to damages arising from failure to keep in repair improved county roads only, and therefore no averment that the road was an improved county [213]*213road was essential. Furthermore, the question of whether or not this Lawrenceburg and Harrison road was an improved or unimproved road is one that could be determined by the proof, and if the board of commissioners are liable for damages on improved roads only, then the question might again be raised on the trial under the evidence; or the commissioners may plead by answer that the road was an unimproved one for the repair of which no duty rested upon them. It is averred that the defendants were, at the time of the injuries sustained by plaintiff, engaged in improving and repairing said road, and this, together with the averment that it was a county road, under the jurisdiction and -control of the commissioners, together with the language of Section 2408, General Code, appears to us to be sufficient to make the amended petition proof against the demurrer as to the point urged.

As to the absence of an averment of notice, actual or constructive, to the commissioners, of the existence of the ditch, it is true that for an ordinary defect in the highway caused by the wearing away of the surface and not caused by an act of commission of the public authorities, notice of the existence of the defect must be averred, or allegations must be set out showing the length of time the defect has existed, so that constructive notice may be inferred; but where the defect is in the original plan of the work or in the construction by the public authorities, no notice need be averred, as the public authorities are, in such cases, the original wrongdoers. See City of Alliance v. Campbell, 17 C. C., 595 (affirmed without opinion, 53 Ohio St., 650); Village of Groveport v. Brad[214]*214field, 2 C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio App. 208, 28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 518, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 273, 21 Ohio C.A. 273, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-niehaus-ohioctapp-1915.