Cincinnati Traction Co. v. Stephens
Cincinnati Traction Co. v. Stephens
Opinion of the Court
The petition in this case contains an averment that the defendant so negligently and unskillfully ran one of its cars at a dangerous rate of speed, by omitting to- keep a proper lookout,. by omitting proper signals and by omitting to apply brakes to check the speed of the car, that the car struck the plaintiff’s decedent, without any fault or negligence on her part, so forcibly and violently that she was thereby killed. Excepting the allegation of corporate capacity and proprietorship and the allegation that the deceased sustained injuries which caused her death on the date alleged, the defendant' denied each and every allegation contained in the plaintiff’s petition. There was, therefore, no issue of contributory negligence 'in the pleadings; and in a careful reading of the evidence in the bill of exceptions we have not been able to discover any attempt on the part of the defendant to prove contributory negligence. The defense was apparently conducted on the theory that the death of this little girl resulted from an accident pure and simple; that the defendant was guilty of no actionable negligence in operating the car; and that under the circumstances the injuries to the deceased could not have been avoided. Whether or not this defense was made good on the trial does not concern us now. It is enough for our present purpose that there was no claim of contributory negligence asserted in the pleadings or in the evidence.
The defense of contributory negligence is inconsistent with a defense entirely upon the ground that the defendant was guilty of no negligence whatever; because the very definition of contribu
The trial court, almost at the beginning of the charge to the jury, said: “The action, therefore, is one of negligence, and the issue raised is one charging the defendant traction company with negligence, and, on the other hand, charging the deceased child with contributory negligence.” This was a misstatement of the issues and of itself was liable to mislead the jury. But it was followed by an elaborate discussion of the doctrine of contributory negligence, making that the chief feature of the case; and this was finally emphasized by the following instruction: “The burden of proving contributory negligence on the part of the child is upon the defendant, the trac-i tion company, to establish the same by a pre-. ponderance of the evidence.” Under such a charge, what would be more natural than for the jury to conclude, when it found no evidence whatever of contributory negligence and no insistence upon such a defense, that the defendant had failed in its defense, and that the plaintiff’s claim had been made out. In this respect we regard the charge to the jury as irrelevant, prejudicial and misleading.
During the trial the plaintiff, who is the father of the deceased, testified to the health, mental condition and age of the deceased and that she helped her mother in washing dishes, running errands and going to the grocery. He also testified that he himself was a common laborer, earning from
Also during the trial one Julia Nicholson was sworn as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff, and testified, on her examination in chief, that she did not see the deceased at the moment when she was struck by the car, but that when she last saw the deceased before she was stiuick, she was standing at the crossing in the street about two or three feet from the track and looking straight
The statements of the witness on the trial and the statements made in the paper which she admitted she had signed, knowing its contents, are flatly contradictory. "To this extent her credi
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.