Conowingo Bridge Co. v. Hedrick

53 A. 430, 95 Md. 669, 1902 Md. LEXIS 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 20, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 53 A. 430 (Conowingo Bridge Co. v. Hedrick) 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
Conowingo Bridge Co. v. Hedrick, 53 A. 430, 95 Md. 669, 1902 Md. LEXIS 202 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Conowingo Bridge Company was incorporated by the Act of 1858, chapter 217. By its charter it was authorized to build and maintain a toll-bridge across the Susquehanna river at Conowingo, in Cecil County.

This is an action brought by Jacob Hedrick against the Bridge Company to recover damages for injuries he sustained while walking across the bridge. The case was tried in the Circuit Court for Cecil County before a full bench and a jury. The verdict was for the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed.

The questions presented by the record for our considera, tion arise upon the exception to the ruling of the Court upon the prayers. No other exception was taken during the trial below.

Defendant’s bridge is a wooden, covered structure with a gate at each end. It consists of 10 spans of 100 feet each. The gates are in charge of two gate-keepers who sell tickets and admit travelers to the bridge. On the night or evening the plaintiff was injured, he left his home to go to Baltimore via. the Columbia and Port Deposit Railroad. The station of that road is located at Conowingo, on the Cecil side, of the river. He says that he reached the toll-house at dark, bought a ticket from the gate-keeper, Mr. Stewart, and started across the bridge on foot carrying a satchel in his hand. It was so dark in the bridge that it was impossible to distinguish *678 objects, the openings in the sides affording little or no light. When he got about half-way over he was run down and injured by a man riding a bicycle, who was going in the same direction the plaintiff was walking.

The witness Prigg, the bicycle rider, testified that the gatekeeper told him the way was clear and he got on his wheel aud started across. He says he was not going at a reckless speed, but about five or six miles an hour; that the way he was looking he could have seen in front of him if there had been a light. Mr. Stewart the gate-keeper denied that he had told Prigg the way was clear, but admitted that he gave him no notice that the plaintiff was on the bridge. He and two other witnesses also testified that the evening had not sufficiently advanced to require lights in the toll-house and that it was light enough in the bridge to see objects and persons. It was also in evidence that the defendant furnishes lanterns which are kept at the toll-houses for the use of travelers ; that there -was no notice that lanterns would be supplied. It does •not appear that a lantern was offered to the plaintiff or that he asked for one.

The plaintiff .offered five and the defendant seven prayers.

All the plaintiff’s prayers were granted except the first, and in the place of this rejected prayer the Court granted a substitute of its own. The defendant’s seven prayers were all rejected ; but the Court granted an instruction of its own as a substitute for the sixth. There does not appear to be any exception to the action of the Court in granting its substitute for defendant’s sixth prayer. We will first consider the rulings upon the defendant’s prayers.

By its first the defendant asked the Court to take the case from the jury, because there was no legally sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant or its agents; but we think the record discloses ample evidence—sufficient, certainly, to justify a submission of the case to the jury. In addition to the absence of any light on the bridge, it appears that the gate-keeper sold the witness Prigg, a ticket to cross the bridge without taking any precaution to protect the plain *679 tiff in a place which he described as being so dark he could not see his hand before him. However, we do not consider it necessary to elaborate this question, because the defendant’s counsel practically abandoned their contention in this respect at the hearing and do not insist upon it in their brief.

Defendant’s second prayer asserts the legal proposition that negligence cannot be imputed to the defendant by reason of the absence of artificial lights on the bridge at the time of the injury. But whether the defendant was guilty of a want of reas’onable care, that is to say, of negligence, in failing to provide lights is a question for the jury to consider in connection with all the facts of the case. Negligence, in a case like this, it has often been said, “is not so much a question of law as a question of fact, depending for its determination upon a consideration of all the attendant facts and circumstances.” North. Cent. R. W. Co. v. Price, 29 Md. 440.

The third and fifth prayers of the defendant were also properly refused. Both of them undertake to separate the alleged negligence of Prigg in running over the plaintiff, from that of the defendant in failing to light the bridge. They assert the proposition that if the act of Prigg was the sole cause of the injury it necessarily follows that the plaintiff cannot recover as against this defendant. .The error, however, consists in an effort to segregate the acts of the defendant, from those of Prigg when it is apparent they are parts of one transaction. In a case like this, therefore, where there is evidence tending to prove want of care both on the part of the defendant and Prigg, it would only mislead and bewilder the jury to submit to them the question of remote and proximate cause. As was said by Creswell, J.: “It seems strange to say that A shall not be responsible for his negligence because B has been negligent likewise, C being the party injured.” The Bernina, L. R. 12 Prob. Div. 58.

■ But this question has been so elaborately and ably discussed in the recent case of Washington & Georgetown R’d v. Hickey, 166 U. S. 522, that we will content ourselves by reference to it and citation from the opinion of the Supreme Court which *680 was delivered by Justice Peckham. The plaintiff in that case was injured (as was held by the Court) by the joint and concurrent negligence of a driver of a street car and the negligent lowering of the gates at a point where the street car line was crossed by a steam road. The Court was requested to instruct the jury that if they should find that the commotion and confusion which led to the accident were caused by the negligent lowering of the gates upon the street car, which the driver of that car had no reason to believe would be thus lowered, and if the driver could have crossed in safety but for such lowering, then the street car company was not responsible. There were other prayers offered by the defendant upon the same theory, namely, that the acts of the driver and those of the gate keeper could be properly separated ; but the Court said: The vice in this contention “consists in the attempted separation into two distinct causes (remote and proximate) of what in reality was one continuous, cause. It leaves out of view the action of the driver as to whether he was or was not negligent, provided the jury should say the accident would not have happened if the gates had not been improperly lowered. * * * This is an attempt to separate that which, upon the facts in this case, ought not to be separated. Thé so-called two negligent acts were, in fact, united in producing the result, and.they made one cause of concurring negligence on the part of both companies.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

L. & N. R. R. v. Loesch
284 S.W. 1097 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1926)
Firor v. Taylor
81 A. 389 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1911)
Mayor of Baltimore v. Beck
53 A. 976 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 430, 95 Md. 669, 1902 Md. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conowingo-bridge-co-v-hedrick-md-1902.