Steubenville & Wheeling Traction Co. v. Brandon
Steubenville & Wheeling Traction Co. v. Brandon
Opinion of the Court
The petition charged that at the time of the collision the car, a large passenger car, was being operated on the street negligently, carelessly and recklessly and at a high and dangerous rate of speed; that the motorman was not on the lookout for persons and vehicles approaching the street crossing; that he did not have the car under proper control; that he negligently failed to sound the gong or give other timely or any warning of the approach of the car toward the street crossing, and had the motorman approached the crossing with his car under proper control as he might have had it, he could and would have seen the wagon in ample time to have stopped or so checked the car as to have prevented a collision; and that, when finally seeing as he did the approach of the horse and wagon and that they were about to be driven across the track, and upon seeing as he did the perilous position Brandon was in because of the high rate of speed of the car, the motorman could have stopped or checked the car by the exercise of ordinary care and thus averted the injury, but said motorman nevertheless carelessly, negligently and recklessly failed to exercise such care.
The answer was a general denial and the plea of contributory negligence, which was denied by the reply.
The question presented, therefore, was whether or not the plaintiff’s evidence sufficiently supported his case to give him a right to go to the jury. The court of common pleas was of opinion that
There seems no substantial question but that the plaintiff’s evidence, if believed, showed a case of actionable negligence unless we are to assume that the Company had a right to operate its car at a dangerous rate of speed, without warning of approach at crossings, and thus throw all the burden of care on the traveler seeking to cross a street on which the track is laid and the car operated. This we are not ready to concede. Each party had an equal right to use the street at the crossing, making due allowance for. the fact that the car runs upon a fixed track, and by reason of its greater weight being less easy to stop than the smaller vehicle. A duty to be on the lookout to avoid danger is just as fully imposed on the motorman operating a car as upon the driver of another vehicle, and a street car company must operate its cars with reference to the rights of others traveling on the street. The only different right which the railway company has arises from the necessity of the car confining its travel to the tracks, and the consequent inability to .turn out to avoid collision. Furthermore the duty is imposed on the company to so operate its cars as to keep them under control at street crossings in order thereby, so far as may be, to avoid injury
The duty by one intending to cross a street-car track to look for the approach of a car before attempting to cross has not yet been held by this court to be an absolute duty, and its omission negligence as matter of law. The rule in this state as to vigilance on the part of one about to cross a known steam railroad track was established by this court in C. C. & C. R. Co. v. Crawford, 24 Ohio St., 631. It is to the effect that ordinary prudence requires one about to cross a track of a steam railroad to use his faculties of hearing and seeing to avoid injury, and the omission to do so, without reasonable excuse therefor, is negligence which will defeat a recovery for an injury to which such negligence contributed; but such omission will not defeat the action if by due diligence in their use the consequence of defendant’s negligence would not have been avoided; nor will a failure be regarded as negligence if, under all the-circumstances, a person of ordinary prudence would be justified in omitting to use them, the question of negligence and contributory negligence being a mixed question of law and fact to be decided by the jury unless the circumstances of the case admit of no rational inference but that of negligence. The effect of the entire holding is that the omission to look is not negligence in all cases and as matter of law, and it remains the
But, assuming that Brandon was guilty of some negligence in driving on the track, yet if the motorman, in the exercise of even ordinary care, after he saw the horse and appreciated Brandon’s peril, had time and opportunity to avoid the possible consequences by checking the car, and neglected to so exercise such care, such neglect would be negligence and might properly be regarded as the proximate cause of the injury.
. Such a situation presents a case where different minds might reach opposite conclusions, and thus was a proper case for a jury under proper instructions.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.