162 N.E.2d 487 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1958
This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment entered upon a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $15,000.
On the night of September 16, 1953, plaintiff was driving east on Napoleon Street in Fremont, Ohio. Defendant's single track, running from northeast to southwest, intersects Napoleon Street at an angle at grade. Defendant's engine and tender, engaged in a backing movement southwest pulling two freight cars, and the automobile driven by plaintiff collided at the grade crossing with resultant injury to plaintiff. A single railway cross-buck sign was located from plaintiff's direction of approach on her left-hand side of the street west, or on the far side of the track. From a point 75 feet west of the crossing, plaintiff had an unobstructed view to the northeast from which direction the train was approaching the crossing at an obtuse angle and at a speed of from 10 to 15 miles per hour.
Although plaintiff had lived in the area for some years, she testified that she was unaware that she was about to cross a railroad track. It was a dark night, with no street lights at the intersection. There is the usual conflict in the evidence with respect to the burning of the headlight on the tender of the engine1 and the sounding of the bell and whistle for the crossing.
The case was submitted to the jury on four specifications of negligence:
First: Failure to maintain at the crossing lights or flasher signals, watchmen or gates, should the jury find the crossing unusually hazardous.
Second: Failure to give a signal by bell, whistle or otherwise, as required by Section
Third: Failure to maintain a sign or signal on the south side of the crossing as required by Section
Fourth: Failure to keep a lookout for vehicles on Napoleon Street.
In response to interrogatories submitted by defendant, the jury found the plaintiff free from contributory negligence and found defendant negligent in the following particular:
"We feel that there was not sufficient warning at the south side of the Napoleon Street crossing west of the Nickel Plate tracks."
In general, cases involving the question whether compliance by a railroad with statutory requirements as to warning signals measures the full duty of the company as to giving notice to travelers approaching the crossing of the imminence of the approach of a train, fall into three categories:
1. Those supporting the view that such compliance does not necessarily mark the railroad's entire duty and consequently a jury may base a finding of negligence upon the railroad's failure to give extra-statutory signals.
2. Those supporting the view that compliance with statutory provisions is all that is required at an ordinary railroad crossing, but not all that may be required of the railroad in the way of warning signals if the crossing is unusually dangerous.
3. Those supporting the view that, irrespective of the nature of the crossing, no more can be required of a railroad than fulfillment of applicable statutory requirements. 5 A. L. R. (2d), 115.
Ohio has adopted the intermediate view. Cleveland, C., C. I. Rd. Co. v. Schneider,
In the Croke and Lacey cases, an additional qualification was inadvertently added, namely: that before a question of additional precautions can be submitted to the jury there must be evidence that the crossing is unusually hazardous and that itis *428 made so by the railroad company's use of it. The italicized portion of the principle is inaccurate and misleading and is not supported by the decisions of the Supreme Court herein cited.2
The third paragraph of the syllabus in our decision in theCroke case is therefore modified by striking therefrom "and that it has been made so by the railroad's use of it."
With regard to a railroad's extra-statutory responsibility as a result of hazards at a crossing over which the railroad has no control, the Supreme Court has recently specifically held that a railroad is under no duty to provide extra-statutory warnings at a grade crossing, where such warnings are not required by any order of the Public Utilities Commission, if there is no substantial risk that a driver in the exercise of ordinary care may be unable to avoid colliding with a train that is being operated over the crossing in compliance with statutory requirements. Hood v. New York, C. St. L. Rd. Co., supra
(
With regard to the submission of the claim that the railroad was negligent in failing to maintain a sign or signal on the south side of the crossing in compliance with the provisions of Section
Section
The submission to the jury of the third specification of negligence was therefore error prejudicial to the defendant.
With respect to the fourth specification of negligence, there was uncontradicted evidence that a member of the train crew was keeping a lookout and warned the engineer when he became aware of the imminence of the collision. This issue should have been withdrawn from the jury. *430
The following errors occurred in the general charge:
Instructing the jury that it should determine whether under the circumstances the crossing was hazardous and whether defendant should have maintained additional warning devices.
Instructing that there is no duty other than the statutory duty to sound bell or whistle, unless the jury find from the evidence that the crossing was hazardous.
Submitting the question of whether the defendant had complied with the provisions of Section
Defendant contends that by its answer to the interrogatory, the jury found that the defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to erect another sign at the south side of the Napoleon Street crossing west of the Nickel Plate tracks, and that under the principle announced in the second paragraph of the syllabus in Masters v. New York Cent. Rd. Co.,
"When a special finding under Section
On the other hand, it is the duty of a court to harmonize if possible, a special finding of a jury with its general verdict. *431
Thus, where the answers are inconsistent or in direct conflict with each other, and it is impossible to harmonize them, they cancel each other and should be disregarded by the court.Klever v. Reid Bros. Express, Inc.,
In the Masters and McBride cases, the interrogatories were properly submitted and the answers thereto were upon pertinent issues in the cases proper for the consideration and determination of the jury.3
In the instant case, the answer was upon an issue erroneously submitted to the jury and, in a legal sense, must be disregarded except as indicating that the erroneous submission of the issue was prejudicial. Croke v. Chesapeake Ohio Ry. Co., supra
(
Furthermore, there was sufficient, although conflicting, evidence to warrant the submission to the jury of the claim that the defendant failed to comply with the provisions of Section
We therefore conclude that the answer to the interrogatory is not so irreconcilable with the verdict in a legal sense to require us to enter final judgment for the defendant. We admit the question is not free from doubt and that our judgment may be in conflict with that pronounced in Johnson v. Gernon, supra, and Miljak v. Boyle, supra.
The judgment of the Common Pleas Court is reversed and the cause is remanded thereto for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
DEEDS and SMITH, JJ., concur.