Deck v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

59 A. 650, 100 Md. 168, 1905 Md. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 59 A. 650 (Deck v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) 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
Deck v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 59 A. 650, 100 Md. 168, 1905 Md. LEXIS 3 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injury.

Louis Deck sues the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company and Charles A. Steiner. The ground of the action is that Steiner who is alleged to have been in the employ of that company, in the regular course of his business, shot the plaintiff, seriously and permanently injuring him. The defendants pleaded the general issue.

During the taking of the testimony of the plaintiff which was offered to establish the responsibility of the Railroad Company for the assault and shooting of the plaintiff, the plaintiff reserved four exceptions, which relate to rulings on the evidence. At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony on this question a prayer at the instance of the defendant was offered taking the case from the jury — from which ruling the plaintiff also excepted. Judgment was entered in favor of the Railroad Company and the plaintiff has appealed.

In the further progress of the case against the remaining *179 defendant, Charles A. Steiner, he reserved two exceptions, one to the ruling on evidence and the other to the granting of the plaintiff’s two prayers and the rejection of his first prayer. Judgment was entered against the defendant, Steiner, and he also appealed. There are therefore, two appeals in this record and we will consider them in the order in which they were entered. But before doing so we will briefly state the facts of, and the circumstances under which, the shooting was done.

It appears from his own testimony and that of other witnesses, that on the first of July, 1899, the plaintiff and several companions, without authority, boarded a freight train of the defendant company and rode thereon to Oella a short distance beyond Ellicott City, where they spent the day. On the same evening they boarded another freight train of the same company, without authority, for the purpose of returning to Baltimore and when it was approaching the city and was near Mt. Clare station the plaintiff and his companions were ordered to leave it. The plaintiff testifies that he was already off the train and about fifteen feet from it when he heard several shots fired, by one of which he was hit and seriously injured. First, then we will consider the questions presented by the appeal of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s first exception was taken to the refusal of the Court to allow the witness to say whether from the point where he was ordered off the train,[if it was daylight, he could see the city of Baltimore, if looking towards the city. We are unable to see what relevancy the question or the answer thereto could possibly have had to the issues involved. The shooting took place about x 1 o’clock at night — and whether :he city of Baltimore could or could not have been seen in laylight from the point indicated does not appear to be imxortant or relevant. Nor do we find anything in the plaintiff’s ¡econd exception which was taken to the ruling out of the estimony of the witness Thomas tending to show that the lefendant Steiner was a Battimore & Ohio Railroad detective, ar testimony as to the fact of Stener’s employment by that ompany as a detective was subsequently admitted without bjection.

*180 We find no error in the ruling complained of in the plaintiff’s third and fourth exceptions. After testifying that he was a Lieutenant of Police and was employed by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company as a policeman atthe time of the shooting and that he was paid by that company, the defendant Steiner was asked on cross-examination whether he held a commission as policeman from the State. This ques-. tion was allowed to be answered against the objection of the plaintiff. This constitutes the third exception. The witness answered that he had such a commission and he was asked to produce it, which he did, and read it to the jury. Whereupon the plaintiff filed a motion to strike out all the testimony of this witness in relation to witness being commissioned as police officer by the State of Maryland. This motion was overruled, and this action of the Court is the ground of the plaintiff’s fourth exception.

We think it was very material that the jury should have been informed exactly how and in what capacity Steiner was acting. He had testified in chief that he was a police officer of the defendant, that he was employed and paid by it, büt this was not all. He was also a State’s officer and as such commissioned as a special policeman of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company. It was but right, we think, that the defendant should be allowed to infoi'm the jury that it had availed itself of the provisions of law which were passed for the purpose of giving corporations the benefit of capable men commissioned by the State to protect their property, and that it had not selected one of its own employees for that purpose.

This brings us to the consideration of the only important question involved in this appeal and that is presented by the plaintiff’s .fifth exception which is based on the ruling of the Court granting the defendant’s prayer taking the case, or this branch of it, from the jury.

Was there any evidence in the case legally sufficient to: prove that the defendant Steiner did the shooting complained of?

In the first place the plaintiff himself testifies that shortly *181 after he was shot and lying upon the ground, Thomas, a brakeman came over with a lantern and Steiner came also and asked what was the matter; that plaintiff replied that he was shot and Thomas picked him up and showed Steiner where the ball entered, and Steiner said “yes, if I hadn’t shot the son of a bitch I would have kicked his ribs in.’ ’ It is true that the witness Thomas contradicted this statement of the plaintiff, but it was for the jury to determine which one they would believe. Again the witness Carlin testifies that Steiner told him he shot the plaintiff. We conclude therefore, that the testimony on this point was legally sufficient to show by whom thé shooting was done.

Second. Is there any legally sufficient evidence in the case that Steiner was in the employ of the defendant company at the time of the shooting? This question must also be answered in the affirmative, for Steiner himself testifies that he was employed and paid by the defendant company as policeman at that time, and the commission he held from the State showed that he was appointed as “special policeman” of the Railroad Company. Other witnesses testified to the same effect, either that he was a detective of the company as testified to by the plaintiff and the witness, Morrison, or that he was such special officer or policeman at the time in question.

But the important question remains to be considered whether at the time of the shooting Steiner was attending to the business of the company, and if so, whether he was acting within the scope of his duty.

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Bluebook (online)
59 A. 650, 100 Md. 168, 1905 Md. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deck-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-md-1905.