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Jones v. Harmon

Supreme Court of Ohio
May 14, 1930
122 Ohio St. 420 (Ohio 1930)

Summary

In Jones, the appellate court determined that the trial court had erroneously instructed the jury on the duty to yield the right of way.

Summary of this case from Hopkins v. Dyer

Opinion

No. 22155

Decided May 14, 1930.

Error proceedings — Law of case inapplicable — Trial court, on retrial, to follow Supreme Court — Rule of law conflicting with Court of Appeals decision — Announced by Supreme Court after case remanded but before retrial.

Where, after a definite determination, the Court of Appeals has reversed and remanded a cause for further action in the trial court, and the unsuccessful party files a motion in this court for an order to certify the record, and such motion is denied, and the cause is thereupon again tried in the trial court, but, subsequent to the denial of the motion to certify, and prior to the second trial in the trial court, this court lays down a rule of law in conflict with the declaration of the Court of Appeals, it is the duty of the trial court to follow the ruling of this court, and not to do so is reversible error. ( Gohman v. City of St. Bernard, 111 Ohio St. 726, distinguished.)

CERTIFIED by the Court of Appeals of Logan county.

The case comes into this court upon certification of the record upon a finding of conflict with the case of Presti v. The Cleveland Ry. Co., 26 Ohio App. 536.

The facts are stated in the opinion.

Messrs. West Campbell, for plaintiff in error.

Mr. John P. Dickinson, Mr. George S. Middleton and Messrs. Hale McGee, for defendants in error.


This case arises out of a collision between automobiles driven by the plaintiff in error, Willis Jones, and the defendant in error Saloma Harmon, respectively, at the intersection of intercounty highway No. 236 in Logan county and the Greenville Treaty pike in the same county. Both automobiles were injured, and the plaintiffs below, who are a partnership doing business under the name of Harmon Harmon, at Bellefontaine, Ohio, filed an action for damages. The defendant joined issue by an answer and cross-petition, to which a reply was filed. The pleadings are not important in the discussion of the question presented upon this error proceeding, which arises out of the following conceded facts:

Jones was traveling upon a county highway and the Harmons were traveling upon an intercounty highway. Neither Jones nor Mrs. Harmon, who was driving the Harmon car, stopped before attempting to cross the intersection.

The case was tried in the court of common pleas of Logan county, resulting in a verdict against the Harmons upon the petition, and against Jones on his cross-petition. Error proceedings were prosecuted to the Court of Appeals of Logan county, and the judgment was reversed upon the ground that the court of common pleas erred in refusing to give before argument the following charge:

"Greater care to avoid a collision is imposed on the driver not having the right of way than upon the other. In such case it is the right of the one having precedence, to continue his course and it is the duty of the other to yield him the right of way."

Subsequently, within due time, Jones filed a motion in this court for an order to certify the record, which motion this court overruled. Thereafter the action was retried in the court of common pleas, and at the retrial the court gave to the jury before argument the charge refused at the first hearing. Verdict and judgment being rendered against Jones, he then filed his petition in error in the Court of Appeals, which court affirmed the judgment, and, finding the judgment agreed upon to be in conflict with the judgment of the Court of Appeals of the Eighth Appellate District in the case of Presti v. Cleveland Ry. Co., 26 Ohio App. 536, 160 N.E. 508, certified the record to this court for review and final determination.

Between the first and second proceedings in error, and prior to the second trial, this court decided the case of Heidle Schelle v. Baldwin, 118 Ohio St. 375, 161 N.E. 44, which held that the duty imposed by the right of way statute, Section 6310-28, General Code, read in conjunction with Sections 6310-30 and 6310-31, upon the driver of the vehicle upon the intersection of a highway is not a specific requirement to do or to omit to do a definite act, but rather a rule of conduct, and the rule of per se negligence is not applicable thereto. The Heidle case further held in the syllabus that it is error to instruct the jury in general terms that the law gives the right of way to the driver of the vehicle upon the main thoroughfare, without stating the conditions and limitations upon that right.

Hence the charge given by the court of common pleas at the second trial, in compliance with the instructions given by the Court of Appeals upon the reversal of the judgment in the first trial, was error under the holding of this court in the Heidle case.

However, the Court of Appeals in the second error proceeding held that under the case of Gohman v. City of St. Bernard, 111 Ohio St. 726, 146 N.E. 291, 41 A. L. R., 1057, the trial court was bound to give the charge in question, and that the Court of Appeals was therefore bound to affirm the judgment rendered in the trial court. The decision in that case, however, is not controlling here, for the doctrine of the Gohman case was specifically limited in the syllabus to the case where the unsuccessful party does not prosecute error to this court from a reversal of the judgment entered in the Court of Appeals. Here Jones did prosecute such error proceedings.

Moreover, it is pointed out in the opinion in that case, that, if the rule of the law of the case is not applied under such circumstances, the party who has received an adverse judgment in the reviewing court will be encouraged to retry the case and thereby gamble upon the probability of a favorable judgment at the hands of the trial court or jury, knowing that the way is open to him at any time again to gamble with a Court of Appeals composed of a different personnel. The court then goes on to state that, when a case has once been tried in the court of common pleas, and error prosecuted to the Court of Appeals, and judgment reversed for errors in the trial, if counsel is not satisfied with the declaration found in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, and the rule of law therein declared, as applicable to his controversy, no reason is perceived why he should not apply for certiorari to this court rather than return to the trial court for a long and expensive trial and another error proceeding to the Court of Appeals.

Here Jones took exactly the steps not taken by the unsuccessful party in the Gohman case. The Gohman decision does not, therefore, apply here, for the unsuccessful party did all he could to have the first judgment of the Court of Appeals reviewed.

We proceed, then, to consider the situation presented by the fact that the charge given to the jury before argument at the second hearing upon the merits had been previously held by this court to be reversible error in the case of Heidle v. Baldwin, supra. This is conceded by the Court of Appeals in the instant proceeding. Since the Gohman case does not apply, we are compelled to the conclusion that the trial judge was bound to take notice of the judgment or this court and to give at the second trial the charge applicable under the latest decision of this court. Not to do so was reversible error, and the Court of Appeals was incorrect in affirming the judgment of the court below.

Judgment of the Court of Appeals reversed.

Judgment reversed.

MARSHALL, C.J., KINKADE, ROBINSON and MATTHIAS, JJ., concur.

JONES and DAY, JJ., concur in the syllabus, but not in the judgment, since they do not agree with the law pronounced in Heidle v. Baldwin, 118 Ohio St. 375, 161 N.E. 44.


Summaries of

Jones v. Harmon

Supreme Court of Ohio
May 14, 1930
122 Ohio St. 420 (Ohio 1930)

In Jones, the appellate court determined that the trial court had erroneously instructed the jury on the duty to yield the right of way.

Summary of this case from Hopkins v. Dyer

In Jones v. Harmon, 122 Ohio St. 420, 172 N.E. 151 (1930), and Hopkins v. Dyer, 104 Ohio St.3d 461, 464, 820 N.E.2d 329 (2004), the Supreme Court recognized an exception to law of the case where an intervening decision from the Supreme Court case—i.e., a superior appellate court—was inconsistent with the law of the case determined by an intermediate appellate court.

Summary of this case from State v. Monroe

In Jones, the court clarified the law-of-the-case doctrine and held (1) that the trial court must follow the law of the case where the Supreme Courts review of that case was not previously sought, and (2) that the trial court has a "duty" to follow the Supreme Courts intervening decision where an appeal to the Supreme Court was sought and denied before the intervening decision was rendered.

Summary of this case from State v. Wallace
Case details for

Jones v. Harmon

Case Details

Full title:JONES v. HARMON ET AL., PARTNERS, D. B. A. HARMON HARMON

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: May 14, 1930

Citations

122 Ohio St. 420 (Ohio 1930)
172 N.E. 151

Citing Cases

State v. Monroe

Accordingly, there are exceptions. In Jones v. Harmon, 122 Ohio St. 420, 172 N.E. 151 (1930), and Hopkins v.…

Peterman v. Stewart

" Hopkins at ¶ 15. {¶ 38} The Court also explained, in Hopkins, that it has previously recognized an…