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Oechsle v. Hart

Supreme Court of Ohio
Nov 22, 1967
12 Ohio St. 2d 29 (Ohio 1967)

Summary

holding that road conditions do not excuse violations of R.C. 4511.25 and 4511.26

Summary of this case from Falgner v. Sucher

Opinion

No. 40576

Decided November 22, 1967.

Motor vehicles — Traffic regulations — Duty to drive on right half of roadway — Unexcused failure negligence per se — Bad road condition no excuse — Skidding on ice within motorist's power to prevent — Charge to jury — Defense of sudden emergency.

1. Sections 4511.25 and 4511.26, Revised Code, impose a mandatory duty upon the operator of a vehicle to drive solely upon the right half of a roadway except under certain specifically designated circumstances, and an unexcused failure to comply with this duty constitutes negligence per se.

2. Skidding upon a wet or icy roadway due to bad road conditions alone does not excuse a driver from operating his vehicle upon the right side of the roadway as required by Sections 4511.25 and 4511.26, Revised Code. ( Kohn v. B.F. Goodrich Co., 139 Ohio St. 141, overruled.)

3. Where a motorist unexpectedly comes upon a patch of ice on a dry and otherwise clear roadway which causes him to lose control of his car which skids left across the center line of the highway striking plaintiff's car, the defense of sudden emergency is not available to such motorist and it is error for the trial court to charge the jury with respect thereto.

APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County.

There is no dispute as to the facts of this case.

It was cold but clear on the evening of January 6, 1960, in the city of Garfield Heights. Shortly after 7 p.m. on that evening, plaintiff in this case, Richard P. Oechsle, was driving in an easterly direction up Granger Road hill at about 35 miles per hour. He was accompanied by his wife, Irene. At the same time, the defendant in this case, Roberta J. Hart, accompanied by a friend, Helen Burdorf, was traveling about 20 miles per hour in the opposite direction on the same highway. Plaintiff's car was traveling in the centermost lane of a four lane undivided stretch of the roadway in the vicinity of a railroad overpass several hundred feet west of the intersection of Granger Road and Turney Road, and defendant's car was traveling in the curb lane. Each car had its headlights on.

Suddenly, as the two cars approached one another, defendant's car came unexpectedly upon a patch of ice extending across both the westbound lanes of Granger Road hill, but not into the eastbound lanes of Granger Road hill. Once upon the ice, defendant lost control of her automobile and slid sideways first towards her right — until she struck the curb — and then towards her left, across the centerline of Granger Road hill and into the traffic lane in which plaintiff was proceeding easterly. Plaintiff saw defendant's headlights weaving in his lane some two to three hundred feet in front of him, and, being unable to tell whether defendant's car was going to go farther to plaintiff's right, proceed directly in a head-on collision course, or return across the centerline to the proper side of the highway, plaintiff merely slowed down and made no attempt to swerve to avoid a collision until the very last instant, which was, unfortunately, too late.

Defendant's car "sideswiped" plaintiff's car, and then defendant was able to obtain control and bring her automobile to a halt. Plaintiff's car was positioned astride the two eastbound lanes on coming to rest after impact.

This suit was instituted by plaintiff in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County, whereby plaintiff seeks damages for physical injury and mental anguish caused to himself, for physical injury and mental anguish caused to his wife, and for loss of consortium. A trial of the cause was had wherein the evidence established that the ice patch defendant struck was brought about by water having backed up onto the road from a clogged culvert and freezing. Defendant offered no evidence of what caused her to go left of center other than her unexpectedly coming upon this patch of ice. The case was submitted to the jury — after the trial court had, at defendant's request, charged the jury as to the defense of sudden emergency — and a jury verdict for defendant resulted. The trial court then entered final judgment for the defendant.

The Court of Appeals, without written opinion, affirmed the judgment.

The cause is before this court pursuant to the allowance of a motion to certify the record.

Messrs. Dudnik, Komito, Nurenberg, Plevin, Dempsey Jacobson and Mr. Maurice Heller, for appellant.

Messrs. Arter, Hadden, Wykoff Van Duzer and Mr. Daniel C. Schipfer, for appellee.


The basic question raised by this case is whether an operator of a motor vehicle is excused from compliance with Sections 4511.25 and 4511.26, Revised Code, relating to driving on the right side of the road where on an otherwise dry highway an icy or wet spot causes her car to skid left of center.

This case once again presents to this court the problem of the responsibility of a motorist who fails to comply with a specific safety statute.

During the past few years there has been a growing trend to impose liability on one whose violation of a specific safety statute causes an accident due to a self-created emergency. Thus a defective brake system did not serve to excuse the operator from liability in the following cases: Kehrer v. McKittrick, 176 Ohio St. 192; Kettering v. Greene, 9 Ohio St.2d 26 (for stop-sign violations); Spalding v. Waxler, 2 Ohio St.2d 1 (for a left-of-center violation); Bird v. Hart, 2 Ohio St.2d 9; Stump v. Phillians, 2 Ohio St.2d 209; Spalding v. Waxler, supra (for assured-clear-distance violations).

The case most analogous to the case at bar is Peters v. B. F. Transfer Co., 7 Ohio St.2d 143. In that case, the plaintiff was proceeding in a southerly direction upon a straight stretch of highway when plaintiff suddenly lost control of her vehicle, went left of center and skidded to a halt straddling the northbound lane. One of the defendant's truck drivers proceeding in the opposite direction was unable to stop, and his truck crashed into plaintiff's car causing the plaintiff serious and permanent injuries. There was no evidence to explain the cause of plaintiff's skid other than a wet or icy spot found in plaintiff's lane of travel down the road from where plaintiff's car came to a stop.

This court held that plaintiff's violation of Sections 4511.25 and 4511.26, Revised Code, was not excused by the fact that it may have been caused by a wet or icy spot in plaintiff's lane of travel.

The facts and circumstances of this case differ from the facts and circumstances of the Peters case in only three ways — none of which materially affect the outcome.

In Peters, it was the plaintiff who came upon the wet or icy spot. In this case, it was the defendant. In Peters, the evidence was inconclusive as to the very existence of a wet or icy spot. In this case, there is no quarrel as to whether such a spot existed. Both sides admit that it did. In Peters, the accident took place in daylight. In this case, the accident took place in the early evening.

Defendant cites three former decisions of this court in support of her argument that the icy spot on the road excuses her violation of Sections 4511.25 and 4511.26, Revised Code. Those three cases are: Francis v. Bieber, 10 Ohio St.2d 65; Satterwaite v. Morgan, 141 Ohio St. 447; and Kohn v. B.F. Goodrich Co., 139 Ohio St. 141.

Defendant in her own brief adequately distinguishes the difference between two of those cases and the case at bar when she states:

"The single difference between [the] Satterthwaite and Francis cases and the case at bar is the involvement of a third person who contributed to initiate the motorist's skid on icy pavement." (Emphasis supplied.)

In Francis, the defendant motorist herself testified that as she started to proceed down an icy hill she saw someone "stepping into my lane waving a flashlight." Upon applying her brakes to avoid hitting that person her car skidded on the ice, and she lost control and slid into plaintiff's car next to which plaintiff was standing. The impact caused the parked car to be thrown against plaintiff — severly injuring him.

The cause of the skid over which defendant had no control was not the icy road, but the person who stepped into the defendant's lane. The jury could well find that the occurrence testified to by defendant created an emergency situation over which the defendant had no control. Submitting the issue of "sudden emergency" to the jury was quite proper under the circumstances of that case.

Likewise, in Satterthwaite, where defendant's car skidded at a traffic intersection and crashed head on into plaintiff's vehicle, there was evidence to support defendant's contention that a taxicab suddenly pulled out from the north curb lane into the defendant's line of traffic moving westwardly, and that defendant was forced to apply his brakes and go left of center to avoid hitting the taxi.

In that case, the trial court denied defendant's motion for a directed verdict while allowing a subsequent motion for a directed verdict made by plaintiff. This court held that there was a question of proximate cause upon which reasonable minds could differ and the case was properly one for the jury. Again we have an instance where there is a factor to cause the skid of defendant other than the sole factor of icy pavement.

The Kohn case, however, does support defendant's contention that the trial court acted properly in this case. In Kohn, a wrongful-death action, the defendant truck driver offered no explanation for his failure to remain on the right half of an icy bridge pavement other than:

"Well, I was going along in good shape until some — something struck my left rear wheel, seemed to grab it so that [the] truck swerved out of the right-hand path, went clear across the other side, I cannot say what it was * * *." (See page 144 in the opinion.)

This court reversed a judgment rendered on a jury verdict because the trial court merely charged the jury that violation of Section 6310.17, General Code (analogous to Section 4511.25, Revised Code), constituted negligence per se without explaining what circumstances would constitute a legally sufficient excuse for non-compliance with the statute. Since no evidence of a cause of skidding other than icy pavement was present in the case, the opinion must be read as approval of the theory that a slippery road condition alone could have excused the accident.

This court now believes that the rule of the Kohn case is not the better view. Kohn v. B.F. Goodrich Co., 139 Ohio St. 141, is therefore, overruled.

The defendant in the instant case relies upon the doctrine of sudden emergency. However, every unexpected occurrence does not constitute a sudden emergency. As was stated in paragraph five of the syllabus of Spalding v. Waxler, 2 Ohio St.2d 1:

"An emergency which will relieve a motorist of his duty to comply with a safety statute regulating vehicular traffic must arise as the result of something over which he has no control. A self-created emergency, one arising from the driver's own conduct or from circumstances under his control, cannot serve as an excuse."

Skidding upon wet or icy roadway pavement is a circumstance within the power of motorists to prevent. Bad road conditions, alone, should not excuse a driver from the mandatory requirements of Sections 4511.25 and 4511.26, Revised Code.

It is unquestionably true that under the usual test of foreseeability the holding of defendant responsible for the act of skidding on a random ice patch on an otherwise clear highway is a harsh result. However, the operator of a motor vehicle is responsible for keeping his vehicle under control and on his side of the road. This is true irrespective of the condition of the road. Violation of Sections 4511.25 and 4511.26, Revised Code, is negligence per se. It follows that defendant must bear the loss, for it is her violation of those statutes that caused the loss. Peters v. B. F. Transfer Co., 7 Ohio St.2d 143. Cf. Stump v. Phillians, 2 Ohio St.2d 209.

In the instant case, the trial court's charge dealing with the sudden emergency doctrine reads as follows:

"If you find by a preponderance of the evidence that at the time and place here involved, as defendant operated her automobile westward on Granger Road she suddenly and without fault on her part came upon a patch of ice upon the highway and skidded thereon and that solely as a result of skidding on the ice, and not by reason of any misconduct on her part, her automobile was caused to cross the center line of Granger Road and to strike plaintiff's automobile, then your verdict should be for defendant." (Emphasis supplied.)

It was error for the trial court to so charge the jury as the sudden emergency doctrine was not properly in the case, where the only justification offered for defendant's driving in the left half — i. e., the "`wrong side" — of the roadway was that she unexepectedly encountered an isolated patch of ice on an otherwise clear highway.

The judgment of the Court of Appeals is hereby reversed, and the cause is remanded to the Court of Common Pleas for a new trial with instructions to direct a verdict for plaintiff on the issues of negligence and proximate cause and for a determination of the amount of damages.

Judgment reversed.

TAFT, C.J., O'NEILL, SCHNEIDER and BROWN, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Oechsle v. Hart

Supreme Court of Ohio
Nov 22, 1967
12 Ohio St. 2d 29 (Ohio 1967)

holding that road conditions do not excuse violations of R.C. 4511.25 and 4511.26

Summary of this case from Falgner v. Sucher

finding that ice constituted a circumstance within the driver's control, so the violation of two other safety statutes because of ice constituted negligence per se

Summary of this case from Smith v. Woolace Elec. Corp.

reviewing various cases

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

Oechsle v. Hart

Case Details

Full title:OECHSLE, APPELLANT v. HART, APPELLEE

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: Nov 22, 1967

Citations

12 Ohio St. 2d 29 (Ohio 1967)
231 N.E.2d 306

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