Glick v. Cumberland & Westernport Electric Railway Co.

92 A. 778, 124 Md. 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 92 A. 778 (Glick v. Cumberland & Westernport Electric Railway Co.) 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
Glick v. Cumberland & Westernport Electric Railway Co., 92 A. 778, 124 Md. 308 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee operates an electric railway between Cumberland and Westernporf, in Allegany County, Maryland.

Between Frostburg and Westernport the track of the appellee, for the greater portion of the way, is located on the side and occupies a part of one of the public roads of the county. The railway runs through the open country, the track is constructed with “T” rails, and the cars are operated at a high $peed.

*310 At a point called Reynolds the appellee erected a ear barn, one hundred and twenty feet long, and about thirty-seven feet wide, on one side of the public road and a power house on the opposite side. Assuming that the public road, at this point, runs north and south, the barn is on the east side of the road, and the track of the appellee, for the entire length of the barn, is located between the bam and the driveway of the road. Just below the south end of the barn the public road makes a sharp curve and crosses from the west side to the east side of the railway track. South of this crossing, towards Westernport, the railway track runs on the west side of and on a level with the public road. A person driving north on the road has, for a long distance before reaching the crossing, an unobstructed view of the railway track and the crossing, but until he reaches the point where the road turns to cross the track his view of the track beyond or north of the crossing, and of a car approaching the crossing from the north, is partially if not completely obstructed by the car bam. The evidence further shows that when you are traveling over the road south of the crossing the barn also interferes with the sound of a car approaching the crossing from the north, and the sound of its whistle, and that the moto-rman in charge- of the car cannot see a person driving on the public road south of the barn until that person reaches the point where the road turns to cross the railway track.

On the day of the accident which gave rise to- this suit, and which occurred about four o’clock in the afternoon of July 28th, 1913, the appellant drove in his automobile, a seven passenger touming car, from -Cumberland to- a village called Eranklin, several miles south of Reynolds. He was accompanied by his wife and two'friends, and the car was driven by an experienced chauffeur who had been in the employ of the appellant for several years.

The appellant and the chauffeur were familiar with the road, the location of the appellee’s track and knew that the cars were operated at great speed. They drove over the crossing on their way down to Franklin, and after remaining *311 there about half-an hour started back to Cumberland over the same road. As they approached the crossing, with a clear view of the track and the crossing, the chauffeur says he was driving at the rate of about fifteen miles an hour until he got to within about thirty feet of the crossing, when he reduced the speed of the automobile to about eight or ten miles an hour, and changed from high to the second gear in order to get sufficient power to take him over the crossing, there being a slight ascent from the east side of the road over the crossing to the west side of tlie track. The appellant and the chauffeur say that as they approached the crossing, and were traveling at the rate mentioned, they were looking and listening for a car, but did not see or hear one. The chauffeur states that when he “got almost on the track” he saw a car coming from behind the barn, “and when I got stopped, the front wheels were on the track and the car struck me.” He says further that as they drove up the road towards the crossing the machine made very little noise, and not enough “to drown the sound of” a car or its whistle; that it was a clear day, and that he can hear the whistle of a car half a mile away; that the automobile makes a little more noise when running on the second gear; that the bam obstructed the view of the track beyond the crossing; that he did not stop the machine to look or listen for a car, and that the fender on the car struck the right front wheel of the automobile and turned the automobile around. The appellant, who was sitting in the front seat with the chauffeur, says that they passed a car on their way down to Franklin, and that when they were returning and were approaching the crossing lie looked and listened for a car; that the barn obstructed his view of the track beyond the crossing, and that as lie did not see or hear a ear “we kept on until we seen the approach of a car, and the man stopped, and unfortunately we were left on the track, and the ear struck us and shoved us eight or ten feet down the track.” As the result of the collision the auto *312 mobile was damaged and the appellant’s head was cut and his ltnee injured.

The motorman of the electric car, whose testimony was corroborated by the conductor and a number of passengers on the car at the time of the accident, states that he blew the whistle for a road crossing a 'short distance north of the barn; that as he approached the barn he blew the whistle again for the crossing at which the accident happened, and reduced the speed of the car to about seven or eight miles an hour; that there is a slight descent in the track from the north end of the barn to the crossing; that as he was coming along towards the south end of the barn, when he got about twenty feet from the crossing he saw the appellant’s automobile approaching the crossing; that the automobile was about fifteen feet from the track when he first saw it; that he threw on the brakes of the electric car, locked the wheels of the car and did everything he could to .stop it. He describes what followed as follows: “As I got to the crossing I was almost to a stop and this auto came right up, and right on that crossing is where we both met, and he run his car right into my fender, his front wheels right into my fender. The glass on the front of his car was broken, and my fender was broken and berrt up.” He states1 further that when the .car and automobile collided the car pushed the automobile two or three feet before the car stopped; that he was looking towards the crossing as he approached it; that he saw the automobile as soon as it was possible for him to have seen it, and that he stopped the car within about twenty-two feet.

At the conclusion of the testimony the Court below withdrew the case from the jury on the ground that the plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence, and this appeal is from the judgment accordingly entered for the defendant.

That a railroad track is a signal of danger, and that one attempting to cross it must, in order to' avoid the imputation' of negligence, first look and listen, and if the view be obstructed, slop, look and listen for an approaching car, is a *313 principio too firmly rooted in the law of this State to admit of any further question. It expresses the fixed standard of necessary caution and care, and has for its object tlie protection not only of those who travel on the public roads hut also those who require the service of steam and electric ears. In the case of P., W. & B. R. R. Co. v. Hogeland, 66 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
92 A. 778, 124 Md. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glick-v-cumberland-westernport-electric-railway-co-md-1914.