17 Ohio App. 243 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1923
This was an action for damages to plaintiff in error’s automobile, struck by a car of the Traction Company on Colerain avenue in the city of Cincinnati.
The only question presented is whether plaintiff in error was entitled to a special charge requested by him on the last-chance doctrine. No complaint is made of the general charge, and there could be none, as the general charge is a masterly presentation to the jury of the issues and the law applicable to the case.
The plaintiff in error presented five special charges, all bearing on the question of last chance, which were refused, and, as above stated, this refusal is the only ground of error presented.
Special charge number five is as follows:
“If you find from all the evidence in this case that although the negligence of the plaintiff may have contributed toward getting him into a position of danger, yet if this negligence had ceased for a sufficient time prior to the accident to have enabled defendant, its servants and employees, after it knew of his situation of peril, to have avoided the accident by the exercise of ordinary care on its part, and it failed to do so, your verdict should be for plaintiff.”
This is a proper statement of the law applicable to the last-chance doctrine.
The bill of exceptions is in narrative form, and the substantive matter bearing upon the question of the last chance is, in narration, as follows: That the plaintiff in error in his Ford automobile was following defendant in error’s car along Cole-rain avenue; that the street car came to a sudden stop and discharged a passenger; that owing to the fact that plaintiff in error was running immediately behind such street car he was unable to stop his auto and avoid hitting the street car immediately in front; that to avoid hitting the passenger alighting from the street car, on his right, he swerved his automobile to the left, placing the front part over and on the outgoing track
There are other recitals in the bill of exceptions, showdng a violation of the ordinance of the city by the plaintiff in error, and showing that the plaintiff in error was negligent in getting in the position that he did. But nowhere in the bill of exceptions is there any proof that at any time the agent of the defendant company knew of the perilous position of plaintiff in error. Not only does the record fail to show knowledge of any perilous position of the plaintiff in error on the part of the defendant in error, but, to the contrary, it does show a case of concurrent negligence.
Under this state of the record the plaintiff is not entitled to a charge on last chance. The re
Judgment affirmed.