DocketNumber: No 13109
Judges: Levine, Lieghley, Megill
Filed Date: 11/6/1933
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The question before us is whether the allegations of the petition and the opening-statement of plaintiff’s counsel disclose that any negligence which might be attributed to the defendant’s employee in walking across the street was the proximate cause of the collision between the ear driven by Forencz and the truck of plaintiff’s decedent.
It is not claimed in the petition or the opening statement of counsel that the act of defendant’s employee in walking- across the street was in violation of any law or ordinance. Reliance is had upon common law rule which imposes a duty to exercise ordinary care upon all persons using the highway. It is undoubtedly true that the defendant’s employee was under a duty to exercise ordinary care for his own protection while in the act of crossing the street.
It is noteworthy that there is a dearth of authority involving the question of holding a pedestrian, who was careless while in the act of crossing a street or highway, culpable for injuries caused to another person because of such alleged negligence. Many cases will be found which hold that if a person, while crossing the street or highway, fails to exercise ordinary care for his own protection and was injured by an oncoming vehicle, that the negligent conduct of the plaintiff while crossing the street or highway will defeat recovery on his part if it be found that his act or omission proximately contributed to the cause of the injury.
If the plaintiff is guilty of a breach of duty in failing to exercise care for his own protection while crossing a street or highway, and his conduct ■ proximately contributed to the cause of the injury he cannot recover for injuries sustained from a collision with an on-coming vehicle.
Whether or not his mere failure to look for the oncoming vehicle, while crossing a street or highway will make him legally culpable and give rise to a cause of action against him for injuries to a person driving a vehicle which comes into collision with him, we are not prepared to say. He is undoubtedly guilty of a breach of duty to himself by failing to take necessary precautions for his own safety.
Culpable negligence arises from a breach of duty by failing to take precautions for the protection of others if reasonably prudent persons would under the same or similar circumstances take such precautions.
The impulse of self-preservation dictates to persons of ordinary prudence the taking of such precautions for their own protection as in the common experience of men it was found that injury and sometimes death may result from the failure to take them.
The instances of injury to third persons caused by the mere failure of a pedestrian to look for on-coming vehicles are of such rare occurrence that it is doubtful whether it can be said that persons of ordinary prudence would exercise care in order to avoid injury to others. There can be no legal breach of duty to other persons if it be conceded that persons of ordinary prudence would not under the same or similar circumstances deem it necessary to exercise care for the protection of others from injury.
Since the measure of ordinary, care which the common law rule imposes upon all persons is guaged by the standard of care which persons of ordinary prudence exercise under the same or similar circumstances, the common experience of men must, of course, be considered; not only in determining whether persons of ordinary care exercise precaution under the same or similar circumstances for the purpose of avoiding injury to themselves, but also whether under similar circumstances persons of ordinary prudence take any precaution for the purpose of avoiding injury to others. As a general rule there is no breach of a common law duty unless persons of ordinary prudence deem it necessary to take precautions.
It may well be questioned, in view of the infrequency of injury to others arising from the mere fact that a pedestrian while crossing a street fails to look for on-coming-vehicles, whether his failure in that respect amounts to a breach of duty not merely to himself but to others as well. If wc were to hold that there is no breach of common law duty to other persons on the part of defendant’s employee, our inquiry would cease as there can be no actionable
We do not deem it necessary to decide this question as to the duty of a pedestrian to other persons and will therefore assume that his failure to look while crossing the street may, under some circumstances, amount to a breach of duty to other persons.
We are faced with two questions. (1), Does the record present a situation which justifies the court in determining the question of proximate cause as a question of law instead of leaving it to the jury to decide? (2), Was the negligence of defendant’s employee the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff’s decedent?
The answer to the first question is found in the case of Lake Shore & Michigan Railroad v Liidtke, 69 Oh St 384, second syllabus:
“What was the proximate cause of an injury is usually a mixed question of law and fact; but where the controlling facts are conceded or found, it is a question of law for the court.”
Gas Company v Archdeacon, 80 Oh St 27, op. page 38.
Hrovath v Cleveland Railway Co., 125 Oh St 67.
Drake v City of East Cleveland, 101 Oh St 111-120.
Since for the purpose of this case the facts contained in the plaintiff’s petition supplemented by argument of plaintiff’s counsel, must be taken as true, we are pf the opinion that the. court was within its power to decide the question.
The answer to question No. 2, involves a discussion as to the meaning of the phrase “proximate cause” and the application of the principle that there can be no recovery unless the negligence of the defendant proximately caused the injury.
In Miller v Railroad, 78 Oh St 309, syllabi 1 and 2, are as follows:
“1. In an action to recover damages for injuries sustained through the negligence of another, the law regards only the direct and proximate results of the negligent act, as creating a liability against the wrongdoer.
2. In contemplation of law, an injury that could not have been foreseen or reasonably anticipated as the probable result of an act of negligence, is not actionable.”
In the opinion on page 325 the court said:
"The rule is elementary, that a defendant in an action for negligence can be held to respond in damages only for the immediate and proximate result of the negligent act complained of, and in determining what is direct or proximate cause, the rule requires that the injury sustained shall be the natural and probable consequence of the negligence alleged; that is, such consequence as under the surrounding circumstances of the particular case might, and should have been foreseen or anticipated by the wrongdoer as likely to follow his negligent act,”.
The question of proximate cause is one frequently so near the border line as to cause much perplexity, but, generally speaking, it may be said in this state that the proximate is the producing cause; not the one supplying the condition but the one producing the injury. The one supplying the condition may be so intrinsically careless as to amount practically to a continuing invitation, so to speak, for a direct cause to join in producing a disastrous re-suit. But a condition which could not reasonably be expected to endanger and which but for some independent cause, would not have endangered, does not ordinarily amount to a proximate cause.
In Curran v Railroad Co., 124 NE (Ill.), 335, it is held:
“Where negligence does nothing more than furnish a condition making injury possible, and that condition causes an injury by the subsequent independent act of a third person, the two are not concurrent, and the existence of the condition is not the proximate cause of the injury.”
In the case at bar it cannot be denied that the producing cause was the act of the driver, Ferencz, who, in the language of the petition, “turned his said automobile directly into the path of the truck operated by the plaintiff’s decedent.” The act of the defendant’s employee in walking across the street was in our opinion merely one supplying- a condition but not the one producing the injury.
We have already alluded to the common erperience which shows that the failure on the part of a pedestrian to look when crossing a street or highway, for on-coming-vehicles, is usually productive of injury to such pedestrian only; that it is of rare occurrence that his mere failure to so look would produce injury to others and to hold that the act of defendant’s employee in walking across the street without looking
We are of the opinion that the trial judge was right in concluding that upon the admitted facts the alleged negligence of the defendant’s employee cannot be regarded in law as the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff’s decedent.
The liability of the defendant must, of course, depend upon the legal culpability of its employee and in view of our finding that there could be no recovery if suit were instituted against the employee, it follows that the employer cannot be held liable. The judgment of the Common Pleas Court is affirmed.