Baltimore Transit Co. v. Bramble

2 A.2d 416, 175 Md. 334, 1938 Md. LEXIS 210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 16, 1938
Docket[No. 2, October Term, 1938.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 A.2d 416 (Baltimore Transit Co. v. Bramble) 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 Transit Co. v. Bramble, 2 A.2d 416, 175 Md. 334, 1938 Md. LEXIS 210 (Md. 1938).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury in the Baltimore City Court, in favor of Albert W. Bramble, for alleged injuries sustained by the plaintiff on September 6th, 1936, and grow *336 ing out of an accident which happened in Baltimore County, at a point at which what is known as the Old Bay Road, a public highway, crosses a single track line of the Baltimore Transit Company, the appellant; which company operates an electric street car service extending into and servicing rural territory adjacent to the City of Baltimore.

At the trial below, the appellee offered testimony tending to show that on the day of the accident he was a passenger in a 1929 Cadillac sedan automobile, which was being driven from a resort known as Bay Shore toward a resort known as Bay Side; that the course between the two points is over what is commonly known as the North Point Road, until it is intersected by what is known as the Old Bay Road, and thence over the latter road across the railway track of the appellant; that the general course of the former road is north and south, and that it parallels the railroad track a short distance to the east thereof; that the course of the Old Bay Road is east and west; that it comes to a stop at its intersection with the North Point Road at a distance of from 80 to 100 feet east of the railway track, and crosses the track approximately at right angles, and that the accident happened in the afternoon of a clear day.

The appellee testified that George W. Lewis, whose guest he was, occupied the left front seat of the automobile and drove it; that Mrs. Lewis occupied the seat beside the operator, and that he and a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis occupied the right and left rear seats, respectively. He further testified that he was, at the time of testifying, twenty-four years of age; that at the time of the accident he was employed as a chauffeur, that he had been familiar with the crossing for fifteen years, and had passed it many times; that he recalled when Mr. Lewis made the turn into the Old Bay Road, which point he estimated to be 80. feet distant from the railroad track; that the aproxímate width of the road was 22 feet; that Mr. Lewis was driving very slowly as he made the turn, and proceeded cautiously toward the *337 railroad track, stopping from 3 to 3% feet from the east rail, from which point the operator “looked and listened,” and that he did likewise. Further testifying the witness stated that the automobile was from 16 to 18 feet long and that the seat he occupied was 5 or 6 feet to the rear of the one in which the driver sat; that, from his position in the automobile, his vision as he looked to the left was cut off by a shed or garage, located south of Old Bay Road, and that looking to his right he had a clear view of from 300 to 400 yards. Detailing what happened about the instant of the impact, the appellee stated that Mr. Lewis then proceeded at a speed of from two to three miles an hour at which moment the witness first noticed a street car 50 feet distant, approaching from his left “at a terrific speed,” and at about the instant when the front wheels of the automobile were first starting across the east rail of the track; that the automobile was struck about midway on the left and pushed “quite a few feet up the track” before the street car came to a stop.

According to the testimony of the appellee, dense undergrowth eight or nine feet high, and trees three-fourths the height of the trolley poles, prevailed along the east side of the track, south of the crossing, and, as the street car approached, no whistle was blown. He explained that he “took it that Mr. Lewis had taken all provisions so far as approaching. He had looked and listened, and waited, and continued across. It didn’t seem necessary for me to get out and flag him on.”

Notwithstanding the growth along the track to which he testified, the appellee admitted, on cross examination, that such growth was low enough to permit him to have seen the trolley wire for a distance of 180 feet south ¡of the crossing.

In somewhat greater detail, Mr. Lewis portrayed the conditions and circumstances immediately connected with, or surrounding, the accident. His testimony bearing upon what happened just prior to the incident is as follows: “As I came to Old Bay Road, just before I *338 got there, I had to slow down to 6 miles an hour in order to make a right turn. I proceeded up the tracks, about 3% to ,4 feet of it; I put my car in neutral, looked to the left, and there was no car in sight, no whistle blown. I then started up my car, and as I put my first wheels over the cartrack, I looks to my left again and there was a car within 30 feet of me. I did the best thing I knew to do, and that was to get across the track, because I was in motion then, and it got me.”

The witness estimated the width of Old Bay Road as being from 30 to 40 feet and described the track as being the usual “T-”Eail type, laid on cross ties; the grade at the crossing being level, and there being a railroad warning sign of the usual type to his right, which he passed as he approached the track.

According to the testimony of this witness, the automobile was to his right of the center of Old Bay Road, approximately 6 feet from the north edge thereof, and the distance from where he was sitting was from 11% to 12 feet from the railroad track when he stopped.

When asked as to any obstructions which tended to cut off his view of the railroad, to his left, from the point at which he made the turn into Old Bay Road to where he came to a stop, Mr. Lewis stated: “There was houses, two houses, a dwelling house and then there was a garage. Between them is a distance of 30 to 40 feet, but I couldn’t see because of a grape arbor between the two places, and in addition to the shrubbery, the trees from 7 to 8 feet, I judge. So it cut my view off until I got within 17 feet of the track.”

He located the garage as being 17% feet from the track and 6 feet from the south side of Old Bay Road; testified that from the point at which he stopped, he could see to his left for a distance of 100 feet, and estimated the speed of the street car as it approached as being 35 miles an hour; he was familiar with the surroundings of the crossing having passed over it a number of times. As he proceeded over the first rail of the track he was moving “at a very slow walk,” he estimated *339 the height of the shrubbery and trees along the east side of the railroad, to his left, as being from 7 to 15 feet; the trolley poles 7 feet distant from the track stood at a height of 25 feet; the trolley wire set well above the trees and shrubbery and this was connected with a pole extending from the roof of the car; that he knew the position of a railroad “stop, look and listen” cross-arm warning sign to be either opposite his position in the automobile, when he stopped, or slightly back of his right, but did not recall that he noticed the sign on the occasion of the accident, and described the track as being practically straight for a long distance, as viewed both ways from the center of the railroad at the crossing, which he described as a dangerous one; he did not hear the sound of the street car as it approached him.

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Bluebook (online)
2 A.2d 416, 175 Md. 334, 1938 Md. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-transit-co-v-bramble-md-1938.