Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. State ex rel. Griffin

141 Md. 520
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 Md. 520 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. State ex rel. Griffin) 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. State ex rel. Griffin, 141 Md. 520 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Auicnsrs, J’.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Carroll County against the Baltimore and Ohio Bailroad Company in favor of Giles Griffin, father of Thomas F. Griffin, infant, who was killed by the starting of a freight train while the boy was crawling under the bumper between two of the cars. The accident occurred on July 15th, 1920, at Sykeevillo where the tracks of the company are crossed by the public road leading from West Friendship in Howard County to Westminster in Carroll County.

The declaration alleges that the defendant was accustomed to, and did, for a long time before the accident complained of, unlawfully block and obstruct the public road crossing its tracks near its railroad station at Sykosville with its cars for a long per iod of time, and that the traveling public, using said highway, was compelled, and the defendant did suffer and permit it to cross its tracks by passing between said cars, and that it was the duty of the defendant to safeguard and protect said traveling public using said highway when obstructed by its cars; that on July 3 5th, 1920, defendant obstructed and blocked said highway by permitting its cars to stand thereon for a long period of time, to wit, thirty minutes, and the said Thomas F. Griffin and the traveling public, while using said highway, were suffered and permitted by the defendant to cross over its tracks between its cars, -and the defendant negligently and carelessly omitted to guard him or it from the danger of said car-s or trains being moved, and while the said Thomas F. Griffin was crossing said railroad, the defendant, without any warning, negligently and carelessly started up and moved its cars upon the said Griffin and ran over and killed him; that his death was caused by the negligence and want of care on the part of the defendant, without any negligence or want of care on the part of the said Thomas F. Griffin or Giles Griffin directly contributing thereto; that it is provided by the Public Local Laws of Maryland relating to Carroll County, that no person or corporation, its officers. [522]*522agents or employees engaged in the business of a common carrier ‘shall suffer or permit his or its engines, tenders or cars or portions thereof to stand on or obstruct any street or highway in Carroll County where it crosses a railroad for a longer period than five minutes at any one time, or in shifting to obstruct public traffic over any street or highway for a longer period than five minutes at any one time; that the said Giles Griffin was .greatly injured and damaged by the killing of said Thomas F. Griffin.

The defendant pleaded the general issue pleas.

The only exception in the record i® to the refusal of the court to withdraw the case from the jury on a demurrer to' the evidence.

It appears from the evidence that Giles Griffin, a colored man, lives with his family in Howard County, near S-ykesville; that on the day of the accident the mother of the boy, Thomas, who was about four and a half years old, sent him and his sister, aged eight or nine years, to Sykesville. to buy several small articles. When they got to tbe crossing on their way home a ■ long, train with about eighty empty-cars was across the public road. After waiting some time the little girl climbed over the bumper of the car nearest, the crossing and called to her brother to follow. He could not climb over the bumper, so tried to crawl under, but before he got through, a helping or shifting engine humped the rear car, setting the train in motion. The boy was run over and killed.

Several witnesses testified that the train had blocked the crossing for more than half an hour, and that when it started they heard no hell or whistle or other warning. Two of the witnesses so testifying were sitting on one of the tracks waiting for the train to move and were in a position where- they would naturally have heard any warning; and others were near by, also waiting. At this point the trains going west, as this one was, had a rather steep up- grade. They stopped-there for water and were frequently stalled. A number of [523]*523witnesses testified that the crossing had for many years been blocked frequently, often several times a week, and from ten to thirty minutes at a time; and that on these occasions people, adults and children, were in the habit of climbing over or under the bumpers, aud that this was known to the station agent and to the assistant train master. Hone of the employees of the company was at the crossing to give warning when the train started. There was no other crossing within a mile or more, available to pedestrians.

The long delay at the crossing on the occasion of the accident was. due, according to defendant’s witnesses, to the pulling out of a coupler which necessitated the talcing out of the broken car. These witnesses testified that the blocking was 'only for the time necessary to get the train in condition to start. They also testified that the signal to start was blown before the train moved.

But in passing on a prayer to take a case from the jury the testimony of the plaintiff must be taken as true.

We decided in Hempel v. Hall, 136 Md. 174, that the case was properly submitted to the jury on the question of negligence on the testimony of a witness, who was in a position to hear a signal if it had been given, that she did not hear the signal, although there was positive testimony that the signal was given. It was likewise so hold in United Rys. & Elec. Co. v. Crain, 123 Md. 332.

In our opinion, the cases of Balto. & Ohio R. R. Co. v. State, use of Fryer, 30 Md. 47; McMahon v. Northern Central Ry. Co., 39 Md. 438; and Sheridan v. Balto. & Ohio R. R. Co., 101 Md. 50, are conclusive on the essential questions involved in the present case, and require an affirmance of the judgment appealed from. The case was properly submitted to the jury. In view of the full discussion, in the cases last cited, of the law of negligence and contributory negligence as applied to facts strikingly similar to those here under consideration, a further discussion would he but repetition and would serve no useful purpose.

[524]*524In the McMahon and the Fryer cases, supra, the parties injured were children, and in those cases the difference between tlie amount of care required of children and that required of adults in protecting themselves is fully recognized. The present case is stronger than the Sheridan case, supra, in that the injured party in the Sheridan case was an adult. And it .is stronger than the McMahon case because in that case there was no evidence to show that the blocking of the street had any bearing upon the accident, whereas in the present ease there is evidence from which the jury might properly have found that the blocking of the public crossing had some connection with the killing of the son of the equitable plaintiff.

It is not necessary for the decision of this appeal to pass' on the legal effect of the violation of the local law forbidding the blocking of the public road for more than five minutes; but the case of Balto. & Ohio R. R. Co. v. State, use of Miller, 29 Md. 252, is authority for the proposition that where a railroad company in operating its trains violates a statute providing certain safeguards and precautionary measures, it is bound to use the utmost vigilande.

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Bluebook (online)
141 Md. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-state-ex-rel-griffin-md-1922.