Klein v. United Railways & Electric Co.

137 A. 306, 152 Md. 492, 1927 Md. LEXIS 139
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 137 A. 306 (Klein v. United Railways & Electric 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
Klein v. United Railways & Electric Co., 137 A. 306, 152 Md. 492, 1927 Md. LEXIS 139 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case grows out of a' collision between an automobile in which Mrs. Rose Klein, the appellant, was a passenger, and a train owned and operated by the United Railways and Electric Company, the appellee. The accident occurred at about four o’clock in the afternoon of July 5th, 1925, at the intersection of the North Point Road with appellee’s single track railway, about one and a half miles from Bay Shore Park, in Baltimore County. The railway tracks at the crossing are of “tram” construction, similar to that used in the ordinary city street, are flush with the road, and the road itself is level there. On either side of the crossing the tracks are of “T” rail construction and for a distance run through a “cut” several feet below the surface of the adjacent land.

At the time of the accident, Mrs. Klein was a passenger in a Studebaker sedan automobile owned and driven by her brother-in-law, Harry A. Goodman, which was proceeding southerly along the North Point Road towards Bay Shore Park. As the car approached the crossing, Mr. Goodman, the driver, was on the left front seat, Mr. George Klein, appellant’s husband, was on the right front seat, and with them was Mr. Goodman’s “little boy, Stanley.” Mrs. Klein was *495 seated in the middle of the rear seat, with Miss Lillian Goodman on her left, and Miss Anna Goodman on her right, and with them was a child two and a half years old.

As the automobile approached the crossing, Goodman saw the train approaching from his left about three hundred feet away, but he continued his course and started over the tracks, but before he cleared them the train struck the automobile, dragged it for some distance, and overturned it. As a result of the collision, Mrs. Klein was seriously, painfully and permanently injured, and on October 7th, 1925, she brought this action against the appellee in the Baltimore City Court to recover compensation for her injuries, on the theory that they were occasioned by its negligence. At the conclusion of the trial of the case the court directed a verdict for the defendant, and from the judgment thereon the plaintiff appealed. The only question submitted by tbo record is whether the court orred in that ruling, and in dealing with that question it becomes necessary to review and value so much of the evidence as tends to support the plaintiff’s claim.

The crossing is, as we have stated, formed by the intersection of the North Point Road, running at that point approximately north and south, and the tracks of the appellee running east and west. So far as the record discloses, it is in the open country, and the construction of the railway on either side of it appears to bo adapted to the operation of railway cars at high speeds. Eor a distance of something over two hundred feet north from the railway tracks, the bushes on the east side of the road are cut away, so that one approaching the crossing along the North Point Road from the north, when two hundred feet from the crossing, had an unobstructed view of a car coming west for four hundred feet east of the crossing, and as he got nearer the track his view lengthened, until at a distance of fifty feet from the track he could see a car approaching from his left for six hundred feet. A plat filed by agreement in this court indicates that adjacent and east of the crossing is a landing for passengers, on the north side of the tracks, and some distance farther *496 to the east is a whistling post. The same plat indicates that the highway is about sixteen feet wide, and that four warning signs indicating danger and a railway crossing are located north of the crossing on the west side of the road, at irregular intervals, the most distant being five hundred feet from the tracks.

The evidence is conflicting, but resolving all conflict in favor of the appellant, and giving her the benefit of all inferences which could naturally and legitimately be drawn from it, it nevertheless conclusively shows that the accident must have happened in one of two ways, and the question before us is whether in either case the plaintiff was entitled to recover.

The appellant’s contention is, and there is evidence to support it, that the street car approached the crossing at a “terrific” rate of speed, that, as it approached, a “procession” or “parade” of automobiles also approached it, proceeding slowly and with a comparatively short space between the cars, that the railway cars were accustomed to stop at the crossing to take on or discharge passengers, that the North Point Road at that crossing is a heavily travelled state road, and that the “procession” of automobiles was steadily, in full view of the motorman operating defendant’s car, crossing in front of it, with no break or “opening,” and that under such circumstances Goodman, who was operating the automobile in which appellant was a passenger, was justified in assuming that the motorman would reduce the speed of his car or stop, so as to permit Goodman to cross the tracks in safety.

The appellee’s contention, on the other hand, is that its car approached the crossing at a moderate rate of speed, that it gave sufficient warning of its approach, and that, as it approached, the motorman saw the ‘“procession” approaching the crossing, and reduced the speed of his car, but, having given warning of his approach, he assumed that persons operating the automobiles would not leave a place of safety and place themselves in front of an oncoming railway train, *497 and increased his speed as he approached the crossing, and that he did not realize, until too late to avoid the collision, that Goodman intended to drive over the tracks in front of the car, and that no negligence should be attributed to the motorman for acting on that presumption.

The conflict in the evidence related mainly to the speed of the car as it approached the crossing, and as to whether the motorman, after first reducing its speed, increased it again just before he reached the crossing. Appellant also suggests that there was testimony that no warning was given, but an analysis of the evidence fails to support that contention, to which we will refer later.

Mrs. Klein, the appellant, testified that when the automobile in which she was riding was one hundred and fifty feet from the crossing, she looked for approaching “street cars,” but saw none, and did not look again until she heard “the whistle and saw the car at the same time,” when the automobile was on the tracks; that the “motorman did not blow his whistle until he was almost on top of the machine”; that she did not “hear” any whistle until he was on top of the machine; that the car was coming at a terrific speed, and that the motorman looked as “if he wanted to slow down, but he was going so fast he could not slow down”; that there was quite a string of cars approaching the crossing, and the one in front of the Goodman automobile was about ten feet from it, and it “got across all right,” that “there are no houses or fences or buildings nor trees or woods, that is open country.”

Harry A.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 306, 152 Md. 492, 1927 Md. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-united-railways-electric-co-md-1927.