Zivkoff v. Pennsylvania Rd.

90 N.E.2d 148, 86 Ohio App. 84, 40 Ohio Op. 505, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 621
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1948
Docket361
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 N.E.2d 148 (Zivkoff v. Pennsylvania Rd.) 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
Zivkoff v. Pennsylvania Rd., 90 N.E.2d 148, 86 Ohio App. 84, 40 Ohio Op. 505, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 621 (Ohio Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Putnam, J.

Plaintiff’s decedent was killed by defendant’s train, while driving an automobile across the Spring street crossing in the village of Loudonville. This action for wrongful death resulted. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony the court directed a verdict1 for the defendant. This appeal on questions of law results.

The basis of the court’s action was that, although the evidence showed the defendant guilty of negligence, it also showed the plaintiff’s decedent was guilty of contributory negligence which was a proximate cause of his death. The plaintiff claims that the evidence presented a jury question because of the facts peculiar to the case, together with the presumption of the use of ordinary care attaching to the actions of the decedent. The defendant maintains that the case comes squarely within the principles announced in the cases of Patton, Admx., v. Penna. Rd. Co., 136 Ohio St., 159, 24 N. E. (2d), 597, and Lang, Admx., v. Penna. Rd. Co., 59 Ohio App., 345, 18 N. E. (2d), 271. Inasmuch as the court’s action in directing a verdict was confined to the proposition of contributory negligence, this review will be limited to that phase of the case. The court stated that the evidence presented a jury question as to the negligence of the defendant as far as speed was concerned. The court had previously sustained a demurrer to some twenty interrogatories of *86 the plaintiff going to this point and felt that this would have prejudiced the plaintiff had excessive speed not been shown otherwise.

Inasmuch as the defendant intimated in argument, although the contention was not stressed, that there was no evidence of defendant’s negligence as to speed by reason of its claim that an ordinance of the village of Loudonville limiting the speed of trains, alleged in the petition and denied in the answer, was unreasonable and invalid, it is well to point out that the plaintiff also alleged negligence of the defendant' in not having proper warning signs at this dangerous crossing in the closely built-up section of this village. The court excluded evidence of the dangerousness of this crossing and the company’s knowledge' of the same. In the case of Woodworth, Admx., v. New York Cent. Rd. Co., 149 Ohio St., 543, 80 N. E. (2d), 142, in the course of the opinion the court said:

“The law does not require railroad companies to place signals, gates or flashers at highway crossings unless ordered by the Public Utilities Commission, or unless such crossings are especially dangerous or there exist special circumstances which render such precautions necessary for the public safety. None of these exceptional conditions was shown. Cleveland, C., C. & I. Ry. Co. v. Schneider, 45 Ohio St., 678, 693, 17 N. E., 321.”

In the light of the above we feel, therefore, that the pleadings and the evidence did or should have presented a jury question as to the negligence of the defendant.

The facts as shown by the evidence are substantially as follows. The railroad involved was the main line of the defendant’s Pittsburgh and Fort Wayne and Chicago road. It is a double-track road with continual heavy traffic. The train was an eastbound fast pas *87 senger train. Spring street intersects the tracks at not quite a right angle in a northwest-southeast direction. There, are four tracks at the crossing, two main line and two sidetracks, one on the north side and one on the south side. The sidetrack on the south side angles away from the eastbound main track so at the east side of Spring street the' distance between the sidetrack and the southeast bound main track is something less than 30 feet. Spring street is 60 feet wide. At the center of the street the distance would be considerably less. Approaching the tracks from the south Spring street has a pronounced upgrade. The south track is lower than the main track. Approaching from the south on Spring street the view to the west is cut off by a house, an embankment and trees until the south sidetrack is about reached, when at this point there is a view to the west of about 2,000 feet.

The accident happened after dark between eight and nine o’clock on April 4, 1945. The leaves on the trees were not out and a high wind was blowing but its direction was not shown. There was no watchman at the crossing, no gates, no lights of any kind or warning devices of any kind except a crossarm railroad sign on the east side of Spring street at the edge of the south main tracks and within the tree line. There was a street light about one block south on Spring street. There was no ¿yewitness to the accident. Plaintiff’s decedent, a young man 18 years of age, lived in Mansfield some 20 miles away. There was no evidence that he was familiar ■ with this crossing. On the night in question he was last seen on Main street in Loudonville coming out of a restaurant with two ice-cream cones. He got into his car in which was his girl friend, a 16 year old high-school girl. He drove west on Main street and turned north *88 into Spring street. A Mrs. Hughes who lived on the west side of Spring street, two houses from the crossing, testified she was in her living room to the front of the house and heard the train and then a crash. She ran up to the crossing where she met a Mrs, Darling and her daughter, who lived north of the tracks. She and the Darlings were the first on the scene. The Darlings did not testify. She looked for an automobile but all she found was a hubcap. The body of the decedent’s girl companion was found some distance east of the crossing between the east and westbound tracks, dead and badly mangled. The train stopped with its engine about North Adams street, some 2,500 feet east of Spring street. The automobile with decedent’s body therein was on the front of the engine.

These are the essential facts except for a claim made by the plaintiff in support of his position that there may have been an engine on the south sidetrack to the west of the Spring street crossing at the time of the accident which obscured the decedent’s vision. We will consider this first. This is based upon the testimony of one Max Peoples, the undertaker. He testified that sometime after the accident he saw an engine west of the crossing at Spring street but he did not know whether it was on the south sidetrack or the eastbound main track. Without going into details, a careful calculation from all his testimony shows that this could not have been less than 20 minutes after the accident. This could be of no probative value because there is no other testimony on this point and from this alone even if it would aid the plaintiff, to place the engine on the south sidetrack west of the crossing before the accident would require two inferences, one based upon the other — first, that the engine was on the south sidetrack, and, second, that its position was unchanged since before the accident. This is *89 not permitted and the jury conld not have considered it for that purpose.

Consequently, we must approach the problem with the proposition that once the south sidetrack was nearly reached there was an unobstructed view to the west of at least 2,000 feet. The facts in the instant case are not the same as in the case of

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.E.2d 148, 86 Ohio App. 84, 40 Ohio Op. 505, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zivkoff-v-pennsylvania-rd-ohioctapp-1948.