Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Deck

62 A. 958, 102 Md. 669, 1906 Md. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 62 A. 958 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Deck) 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 & Ohio Railroad v. Deck, 62 A. 958, 102 Md. 669, 1906 Md. LEXIS 13 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case is before us ‘for the second time. The first appeal is reported in 100 Md. 168.

On that appeal the legal principles which should control the case were established, and we do not feel called upon to restate those principles in this opinion, or to reinforce them by-reference to other authorities.

In order to prove the case stated in the declaration, the plaintiff, Louis Deck, testified that about 12 o’clock on the night of July 1st, 1899, he and several companions boarded a Baltimore & Ohio freight train, and rode as far as Oella, where they stayed until about 9 o’clock on the night of July the 2nd, 1899, when they°boarded another freight train of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad to return to Baltimore; but when the train reached the point where the plantiff was injured, it slowed down, and that he got off and started to walk ; that he had walked a short distance when a shot was fired, and the ball struck him in the back ; he afterwards heard other shots, but that the first shot be heard hit him ; that while he was lying on the ground a man named Will Thomas came up with a lantern, and Steiner, one of the defendants, came also, and that Steiner asked what was the matter, and that the plaintiff told him he was shot; thereupon Steiner said, “yes, the son of a bitch, if I hadn’t shot him, I would have kicked his ribs in ;” that he was about fifteen feet from the train when he was shot; that as soon as the ball hit him he dropped right down.

And one of the defendants, Charles Steiner, testified that *671 he had been in the employ of the defendant company for about twenty years in various capacities, that he was on duty as a special officer for the defendant company, on -the night of July 2nd; 1899, and was paid by that company, and received no pay from any other source than from the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, that his duties as special officer were to protect the company’s cars and property, and drive off trespassers from trains, and arrest them, and keep them off the property; that on the night in question he was at the place of shooting as a policeman of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company to protect its property, and in pursuance of his duty as policemna, commissioned by the State of Maryland for the preservation of law and order. And that John J. Hoffman, one of Deck’s companions on the night in question, testified that when they got near the city limits the train slowed up and Deck got off and said he was going home ; that “before the train stopped altogether some one came up, and told us to get off there that we were under arrest, and we were about to get off, and some one fired a shot; that witness turned in the opposite direction and ran ; that he had no pistol, and as far as he knew his companions had none; that there was no necessity for firing a revolver, because whoever the man was he could have arrested us without firing, a revolver.

Herkenhahn, another of Deck’s companions, testified that they boarded a freight train of the defendant company at Oella on the night in question to return to Baltimore, and that when the train got to Mt. Clare Junction “some man ordered them off and said they were under arrest;” that when the man ordered them off he started to shoot at them, and they got off on the opposite side and ran; that he had no pistol and did no shooting.

The plaintiff also proved by George J. Carlin that several months after the shooting Steiner told him that he had shot Deck, and by Dr. Smith he proyed that Deck was seriously and permanently injured.

The defendants offered evidence tending to prove that on July 2nd, 1899, when the freight train of the Baltimore & *672 Ohio Railroad Company, in charge of Conductor Severn, stopped at Frederick Junction, a station fifty eight miles from Baltimore, two men got off of the train, Deck being one of them ; that as .the train started to leave the station, the men got back on the the train, and were ordered off by the conductor ; that one of the men drew a pistol and held it in the face of the conductor, and said, “you son of a bitch if you come up here I will blow your.brains out” ; that the men afterwards got off of the train ; that the plaintiff was next seen at Bartholows, a station seven miles from Frederick Junction, and was then standing on the ground along side of a freight train in charge of conductor Willhide; that at Gaithersburg, a station thirty miles from Baltimore, a number of men were found standing on the bumpers of the cars and were ordered off by conductor Willhide ; that the men told the conductor “to move on, or he would be filled full of lead” ; and one of the men pushed the witness Schroeder in the back with a pistol and told him to'move on ; that Willhide sent a telegraphic message from Gaithersburg to the railroad authorities in Baltimore that tramps had taken charge of the train and to send relief; that in response to this message Steiner and Higginbotham were sent to the scene of trouble.

They met Willhide’s train near Sextonville, and the account given by the defendant’s witnesses as to the circumstances attending the shooting differ in many important particulars from that adduced in support of the plaintiff’s case.

The defendant’s evidence tends to prove that when the officers reached the train upon which the men were riding Higginbotham went to the north side of the train, and Steiner to the south; that Steiner attempted to put the men under arrest, and notified them that they were under arrest, that thereupon they pulled their pistols, jumped from the train to the ground and began to shoot; that they fired a number of shots, and appeared to be shooting at Steiner; that as soon as they ceased shooting, Higginbotham, who was four or five feet from the men, attempted to arrest them, when Deck jumped in. front of him, and was shot in the back by one of the men in the crowd; *673 that the shot which struck Deck was the last one fired; that after being shot Deck staggered across the west-bound track and fell. That immediately afterwards, Steiner came over to where the plaintiff was lying, and asked Higginbotham if he “had got any of them;” that it was at this point that the alleged declaration of Steiner, mentioned in plaintiff’s evidence, was made.

There is agreement in the record to the effect that the defendant, Steiner, was an employee of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company on the night the plaintiff was shot, in the capacity of detective, or special officer; that he was on duty as such employee for said company on that night, and that among other duties of said Steiner’s employment, it was his duty to drive trespassers off the trains.

These facts, which are the important and controlling ones in the record, are all that need be stated in order to enable us 'to pass upon the main questions presented upon this appeal.

During the trial four exceptions were taken by the defendants to the ruling of the Court upon questions or evidence. We will first consider these exceptions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 958, 102 Md. 669, 1906 Md. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-deck-md-1906.