Hagerstown & Frederick Railway Co. v. Wingert

105 A. 537, 133 Md. 455, 1919 Md. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 A. 537 (Hagerstown & Frederick Railway Co. v. Wingert) 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
Hagerstown & Frederick Railway Co. v. Wingert, 105 A. 537, 133 Md. 455, 1919 Md. LEXIS 6 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment recovered by the appellee, Carrie G. Wingerd, against the appellant, The Hagerstown & Frederick Railway Company, for personal injuries sustained by her in alighting from the defendant’s oar, upon Washington street, in Hagerstown, resulting from the alleged negligence of the appellant corporation: (1) in the use of a car having its foot-hoard of a “dangerous, unusual and extraordinary distance” above the ground or street, (2) in not providing for the plaintiff a step or some other proper object to assist the plaintiff in stepping or alighting from said car or foot-board to the street below, (3) in not warning, the plaintiff of the alleged excessive, dangerous and extraordinary height of the car step< above the street, and (4) in not assisting the plaintiff in alighting from the car.

The plaintiff, at the conclusion of the case, offered five prayers. Of these, the first, second, fourth and fifth were granted. The third was refused. The defendant offered nineteen prayer’s. Its first, second, third, ninth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth and eighteenth were rejected. Its fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, tenth, sixteenth, *457 seventeenth and nineteenth prayers were granted, and its eighth prayer granted as modified.

The defendant excepted to the rulings of the Court in granting the plaintiff’s first, third and fifth prayer, and in rejecting its second, third, ninth, eleventh, twelfth, fifteenth and eighteenth prayer. This is the only exception found in the record.

The defendant’s first prayer asked the Court to instruct the jury that there was no legally sufficient, evidence entitling the plaintiff to recover. This prayer, we have said, was refused.

A number of times has this Court said that there must be evidence legally sufficient to prove negligence and to connect that negligence with the injury, before a Court is justified in allowing a case to go to the jury. Baltimore & Yorktown Turnpike Road v. Cason, 72 Md. 380; Callis v. United Railway & Electric Co., 128 Md. 411, and other cases. There are cases, however, where the proof of the injury has., under certain circumstances, raised a presumption of negligence on the part of the carrier. B. & O. Railroad Co. v. State, Use of Mahon, 63 Md. 144, but this case does not come within that class of cases.

The car used on this occasion and the one in which the plaintiff was riding was what is known as an open summer type car, with running boards and steps extending along its entire length. The passengers made their exit by stepping •from the car to the running board and then to the step below and from the step to the ground or street. The accident occurred on the evening of the 26th of June; 1916, between ten and eleven o’clock. The car stopped at a point on West Washington street- in Hagerstown at or near the public square and in front of Hoffman’s, dry-goods store. This was; in what is known as the Great White Way of Hagerstown.

William H. Eeynolds., a policeman of that town testified that on June 26th, 1916, he was in charge of the White Way Light. The lower lights, were turned off at eleven o’clock, the top lights were left on until day-light in the morning. *458 One of these 'White Way poles stands right in front of the door of Huffman’s store. That pole like all the others has three lights.

Other witnesses who testified expressed some doubt as to all of the lights being: on at the time of the accident, but Mrs. Wingert, the plaintiff, testified that as she approached the square, she noticed her daughter standing in front of Hoffman’s store, thus showing that the street was sufficiently lighted, not only for her t'o see but to rcognize her daughter standing in front of the store, some distance away. The street at this point, which was paved with vitrified brick, was on a level with the top- of the oar rail.

The Court below in granting the defendant’s fifth prayer, held there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to entitle the jury to find that the defendant was guilty of any negligence in the failure to furnish the plaintiff with any movable step to assist her in alighting, from said car and in the failure of the employees of the defendant to assist said plaintiff in alighting therefrom. This was, a proper ruling upon the evidence offered.

Ordinarily there is no duty on the part of a carrier to assist passengers in boarding or alighting from its train or cars. See cases cited in note to Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Ellen Dyer, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 816.

The duty, however, to- assist passengers off and on trains and cars may arise from special circumstances, as when there is some unusual danger or difficulty from the place or means afforded for alighting, or the condition under which the party is required to alight, or otherwise, makes it reasonably apparent at the time that difficulties or dangers attend the act of alighting. Note to Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Ellen Dyer, supra.

In the case before us, we find no unusual danger or difficulty arising from the condition of the party or the place where the plaintiff was to alight from the car or the means afforded her of alighting or otherwise that were apparent to-the defendant or its agents that made it their duty to assist *459 her from the car, or of which she should have been warned or notified. Therefore, the sole remaining act of negligence charged against the defendant is the use of the car with the foot-board or step of the alleged dangerous, distance above the ground.

The plaintiff offered several witnesses who testified that they, on different occasions in getting on the train, had heard others complain in the presence of the conductor about the step being so high and that they could hardly get on the car. One of these was asked by the counsel for the plaintiff, “Hid you make any complaint to any of the operators or any of the officials of the Hagerstown & Frederick Railway Co., in reference to the difficulty in getting on and off that car,” and she replied, “Not seriously jokingly 1 did in way to ridicule the car.”

Mr. Long, one of the counsel for the plaintiff, testified that he measured the car, which was car No. 101, at Frederick, on Tuesday immediately preceding the trial of the case, and that, from his measurement it was 22 8/10 inches from the top of the lower foot-hoard to the top of the rail. His measurement was made, as he states, with a “Western Maryland Standard Tape Line.” He also measured car No. 103, which measured 18 inches from the top of the step* to the top of the rail. This it seems was measured at Hagerstown.

Upon cross-examination, he stated that 101 was. in the ear barn at Frederick, the last car in the barn, clear back against the rear end of the trade at the time he measured it. The interior of that bam is not paved. It is on the dirt.” He was then, asked: “Therefore, when you got down from, the car you had to get down on the ground ? A.

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 537, 133 Md. 455, 1919 Md. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagerstown-frederick-railway-co-v-wingert-md-1919.