Court Opinion

ID: 9288706
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-29 16:53:14.468022+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:04.879599
License: Public Domain

Swing, J.
*292This case is in this court on error to the judgment of the Superior Court of Cincinnati, Ohio.
In that court Murray’s administrator recovered a judgment against The Cincinnati Street Railway Company and the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railway Company for the wrongful killing of Murray, in the sum of three thousand dollars. The facts, in brief, are: Murray was a passenger on the street railroad, and at the crossing of Harrison street in Cincinnati, and the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railway Company, there was a collision between the street car in which he was riding and the cars of the railroad company, and Murray was killed.
The railroad company had gates at this crossing, and they were not lowered so as to prevent the street cars from passing over, and a watchman stood at the gates. The evidence of the street car company tended to show that the gateman signalled for the cars to pass over, while that of the railroad company was to the effect that the gateman signalled for the street cars not to come. The street car company did not slop the car and did not send an employe aheád to see whether steam cars were approaching and whether it was safe to cross, but relied on the gates of the railroad company being up and the invitation of the gateman to pass over.
There were other facts in the case, but the foregoing facts raise the question presented to us in argument.
The court charged the jury, at the request of the railroad company, p. 21 of charge, as follows :
“ The statute of Ohio made it the duty of the Cincinnati Street Railway Company to cause the car to come to full stop not nearer than ten feet nor more than fifty foot from the crossing of the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company at Brighton, and before proceeding to cross said steam railway tracks, to cause some person in its employ to go ahead of said car and ascertain if the way was clear and free from danger for the passage of sai.d street car, and not to proceed to cross until signalled to do so by such person so employed as aforesaid, or said way was clear for their passage over said *293tracks; and I charge you that the omission of such duty is negligence upon the part of the defendant which will render it liable in damages if you find that the death of the- decedent resulted from such omission or could have been avoided by the observance of this duty.”
The question involved in this charge is raised in several different portions of the charge given and in charges requested to be given by the street car company, and refused by the court. The consideration of the question here presented, however, will dispose of all of them.
In our judgment, the view taken .by the court was correct.
The law of May 4, 1891, 88 Ohio Laws, p. 581, was passed to “ provide for the safety of passengers on street cars.” The duty it imposes on the street car company is what the court charged the jury, and it provides that the street car company shall be liable to the passenger in damages for the failure to perform these duties, if the passenger is injured thereby.
But the street car company urges that the law requires steam railroad companies to erect gates and keep gatemen at certain crossings, and that when the gates are up it is an invitation to persons to cross over; and further, that in this case the evidence tended to show that the gateman signalled for the street err, and therefore the street car company was relieved of the duty imposed by this statute. But we are unable to see the force of this reasoning. The statute makes no exception of this kind, and we think it reasonable if the legislature had intended any such exception, that it would have been incorporated in the law. The legislature is presumed to have known of the law in regard to gates and of the decision in the 35 Ohio St., p. 627, and if they had intended such an exception, it would have placed it there, and not left it to the courts to read it into it. Besides, there could hardly be a case which *294would more clearly show the wisdom of the legislature' i® providing as it has done, as we regard it, than the present ease, for a man’s life was sacrificed by not obeying this law.
John W. Warrington, for the Cincinnati Street Railway Company.
Judson Harmon, for the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railway Company.
Bateman & Harper, for the administrator.
The testimony of the railroad company tended to show that fhe ¡gates at the critical moment would not work ; that they were attempted to be lowered, and that failing in this the gate-man tried to stop the car»from crossing by signalling with a gong and hallooing. These signals, the testimony tended teshow, were taken by the street car company’s servants as signals to pass on. If the street car company had obeyed the plain letter of the law, it is not reasonable to suppose that any •such mistake would have occurred. The employe would have seen the approaching train, and the street car would not have crossed in the face of the steam cars. To prevent just such an accident as this, it seems to us, is the purpose of the law. The passenger had a right to rely on its observance, and being injured omaccount of its non-observance, gives him a right of action against this street car company.
We think the passenger clearly had his right against -the street car company for its failure to observe this law if injury resulted therefrom, and the jury found that it did.
The judgment of the Superior Court of Cincinnati will, therefore, be affirmed.