1 Ohio App. 135 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1913
Plaintiff here, Louie Stockberger, was plaintiff below. The action was brought to recover damages for injuries sustained by the alleged negligence of the defendant. The trial judge, at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, on motion directed a verdict for the defendant. That is the error complained of.
The defendant was engaged in shipping saw logs at the railroad station at Hiram, Portage county. Near the station, for a distance of about three hundred feet, the defendant had piled saw
There are many cases cited which undoubtedly sustain the defendant’s theory of proximate cause in this case, but to adopt it would be to exclude the existence of the logs upon the highway from the consideration of the jury altogether. The later and better cases, it seems to us, point out a better rule, which is well illustrated in the case of Meyer v. The Milwaukee Elec. Ry. & Light Co., 116 Wis., 336. The first proposition of the syllabus is:
“In an action for personal injuries, an instruction to the jury defining ‘proximate cause’ as the ‘direct and natural,’ and the ‘direct and producing cause without the existence of which such injury would not have occurred’ is incorrect. It is not essential that the negligence complained of should be the direct cause of the injury. It is sufficient that the natural and probable cause, from which an ordinarily prudent and intelligent person ought, in the exercise of such intelligence, to have foreseen that an injury might probably result from the alleged negligence under like circumstances.”
The trial judge in this case on the question of proximate cause gave the following instructions to the jury, page 339:
Speaking of this charge the judge delivering the opinion says, page 339:
“It cannot be doubted that this instruction is incorrect in several respects. Primarily, it is said that the negligence, in order to be the proximate cause of the injury, must have been the ‘direct and natural’ and the ‘direct and producing cause, without the existence of which such injury would not have occurred.’ It is somewhat surprising that, after all that has been said by this court in recent years upon this subject, correct definitions of this somewhat metaphysical conception of proximate causation in cases of negligence should be evaded by trial courts. It is not essential that the negligence should be the direct cause of the injury. It suffices that it is the natural and probable cause. It is the natural cause when it acts directly in producing the injury, or sets in motion other causes so producing it and forming a continuous chain in natural sequence down to the injury; thus linking the negligence with the injury by a chain, of natural and consequential causation, although the
This case, it seems to us, makes clear the distinction we have been attempting to make here, viz., that the proximate cause of the injury in this case is not necessarily the cause which directly produced the injury, that is to say, the running away of the team, but it is that cause which from all the facts proved an ordinarily careful and prudent person would say probably led to the final event as a natural consequence. This is a question for the jury and not for the trial judge. The judgment is reversed.
Judgment reversed.