Baltimore Consolidated Railway Co. v. State Ex Rel. O'Dea

46 A. 1000, 91 Md. 506, 1900 Md. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 46 A. 1000 (Baltimore Consolidated Railway Co. v. State Ex Rel. O'Dea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Consolidated Railway Co. v. State Ex Rel. O'Dea, 46 A. 1000, 91 Md. 506, 1900 Md. LEXIS 62 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The record now before us contains two bills of exception. One relates to a ruling of the trial Court in admitting a deposition to be read in evidence. The other concerns the action of the Court in rejecting some of the *508 prayers presented by the defendant. The suit was brought to recover damages. The equitable plaintiffs, who are the widow and children of Michael V. O’Dea, sued the Baltimore Consolidated Railway Company for the injury which they sustained by the death of O’Dea. They allege his death was caused by the negligence of the defendant. There is no dispute about any of the material facts, though there is some controversy over minor and unimportant details. The circumstances which are free from doubt are these: The defendant is a corporation which at the time of the accident, operated a street railway in Baltimore City. The city authorities were then engaged in laying water-mains under the surface of Henrietta street at and near its intersection with Charles street. In prosecuting that work the city employees used a movable derrick which was stationed on the day of the occurrence on Henrietta street- east of Charles street. This derrick was worked by a steam-engine located on Henrietta street west of Charles street. A cable reached from the derrick to the engine and consequently crossed-, at a right angle, the defendant’s tracks on Charles street. When the cable, extending east and west across Charles street, was tightly stretched it was at an elevation sufficiently high above the car tracks to allow the street cars going south on Charles street to pass under it; but in passing under it the conductor lowered the trolley-pole so as to prevent the pole from coming in contact with the cable. The cable was slackened or tightened as the exigencies of the work required. The city had a flagman or watchman stationed at the corner of Charles and Henrietta streets, in the vicinity of the derrick, to give warning when it was dangerous to pass under the cable, and to signal the motormen when it was safe to go forward. On the day of the accident a car of the defendant moving south on Charles street approached the place where the cable crossed the track. It stopped, according to the great weight of the testimony, just before reaching Henrietta street to let off a passenger, and before starting again the motor-man was sig *509 naled by the city’s flagman to proceed He obeyed the signal. The hood of the car cleared the cable but the base of the trolley-pole caught it and as the car advanced it dragged the derrick over and caused it to fall. It fell on O’Dea and killed him. Whether or not the cable was taut or was slightly slackened when the car started forward is a disputed question ; though the undoubted weight of the evidence shows that it was tightly stretched at that moment. If it was slack when it ought to have been tight, and by reason of being slack was dangerous when the car was started, the fault was obviously not that of the railway company, but of the city employees, for it was the duty of the latter to keep it taut and the management of it was exclusively in their hands. If it was slack the city watchman was guilty of negligence in signaling the motor-man to advance, if by advancing when it was slack there was danger of an injury being inflicted. The railway company had the right to run its cars. The running of the one in question was not, therefore, wrongful, nor was it an act of negligence. The possibility of an injury being done by reason of the car coming in contact with the cable, was a possibility which could not become a reality unless there was some negligence on the part of the city, either in not keeping the cable stretched when it ought to have been stretched, or in inducing the company’s servants to believe that it was safe to go under it when in fact it was not safe to do so. As it was the duty of the city to keep its appliances in a safe condition and to operate them with care, a failure to do either was the negligence of the city and not the negligence of the company.

It was claimed by the equitable plaintiffs that when the car started to go under the cable the conductor was in the forward part of the car collecting fares, and it is asserted that he should have been upon the rear platform. There is a conflict in the testimony as to his whereabouts. The overwhelming weight of the evidence shows that he was upon the rear platform and that he had the trolley-pole *510 rope in his hand; but we must assume, for the purposes of this discussion, that he was not where the defendant’s witnesses place him, but that he was in the forward part of the car, as described by two of the plaintiff’s witnesses. It was contended that the, failure of the conductor to be upon the rear platform was such an act of negligence as to render the company liable for the injury caused by the falling of the derrick ; and the defendant’s eighth prayer, which was conceded by the plaintiffs, admits that it was the duty of the conductor to have been on the rear platform. This concession became the law of the case whether right or wrong; Rosenstock v. Ortwine, 46 Md. 388 ; but we fail to see any relation of- cause and effect between the situation which the conductor occupied and the falling of the derrick. It was his duty to be in the forward part of the car to collect fares if fares were to be collected ; and his being where it was his duty to be was not a breach of a duty that he owed to any one, and was, therefore, not an act of negligence, particularly as it has not been shown that his failure to be on the rear platform, if in fact he was not there, had anything to do with the falling of-the derrick. If he had been on the rear platform he could no more have prevented the cable from slackening at the critical moment that it.did slacken, than he could have hindered it from doing the same thing whilst he was inside of the car. It is nowhere pretended that his omission to lower the trolley-pole caused the accident, for the cable never came in contact with the pole, but was caught by the base of the pole. If the cable. slackened slightly before the car reached it, the conductor’s presence on the rear platform would not necessarily have prevented the car from going on; because he had a right to rely on the assurance of the flagman that it was safe to advance. The flagman was stationed at the place for the specific purpose of giving notice when it was safe for cars to go under the cable, and the' conductor would have been guilty of no negligence in depending on that notice, unless, he saw, of .could have seen, that the flagman was in error *511 and that peril was imminent. But there is no evidence in the record to indicate that had he been on the rear platform he could have seen that there was such peril or that such peril existed. It is not pretended that the cable was so much slackened as to make it doubtful whether the car could safely pass under it; on the contrary it is only claimed that it was slightly slackened.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A. 1000, 91 Md. 506, 1900 Md. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-consolidated-railway-co-v-state-ex-rel-odea-md-1900.