Maryland Electric Railways Co. v. Lapp

120 A. 250, 142 Md. 163, 1923 Md. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 120 A. 250 (Maryland Electric Railways Co. v. Lapp) 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
Maryland Electric Railways Co. v. Lapp, 120 A. 250, 142 Md. 163, 1923 Md. LEXIS 10 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

*164 Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee recovered a verdict against the appellant for injuries sustained by the alleged negligence of the appellant in running one of its cars out of Camden Station in Baltimore on a track which it at that time used for its cars in and out of that station for what is known as its Short Line. This is an appeal from a judgment rendered on -that verdict. The appellee was in the employ of the Baltimore and Ohio Kailroad Company as a distributor in the oil house of the latter company in the yards below that station. He was on night duty and before leaving was required to go to an office of the railroad company to report. It was about 6.30 o’clock in tlie morning. He walked from the oil house along the side of the track, on what he spoke of as a “wagon drive,” for about two squares, and started to cross over the track used by the appellant, to go to the office where he reported. He was struck by a car of the defendant and was badly injured. It was a car which was due to leave Camden Station for Aimapolis at 6.30 A. M. and it struck the ¡appellee about twenty feet below the -shed of 'Camden Station.

The plaintiff offered one prayer, which was on the measure of damages and was granted, and the defendant offered nine, the second, seventh, eighth, and'ninth of which were granted, and the others were rejected. The only bill of exceptions in the record contains the rulings of the lower court in granting the plaintiff’s prayer and rejecting the first, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth of the defendant.- The appellant relies chiefly on the alleged error in rejecting the first prayer, which asked the court to instruct the jury “that under the pleadings in this case there has been offered no¡ evidence legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover and that their verdict must therefore be for the defendant.” It claims that by that prayer it raised the question of the sufficiency of the evidence as to its negligence, 'and also- that of contributory negligence upon the part of the appellee. It is contended on the part of the appellee that the'lulling on that prayer does not present the question of contributory negligence, but under *165 the view we take of the ease it is not necessary to pass on that. In our judgment there is no evidence of negligence on tlie part of the defendant legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover. The only evidence of negligence suggested was that there was no headlight burning on the ear. The plaintiff (appellee) said he had just quit work, and it was necessary (o cross the tracks to go to the office; that he had to go over there before he went home. His evidence is thus given in, the record: “So I had a clear view of that place for two -squares before I got there to cheek and it was nothing in sight, and when I got at the track I started — I looked up and down, which I am always careful about that, and I have been there over thirty some years, and was never hurt by an engine and cars. I looked up and down. It was no light, on no engine, or no whistle or bells blowing. As I stopped over the track this struck me.” He was asked how far from the Camden shed he was hit and replied: “I guess about twenty feet. It is no lights in the bottom part of that shod and the engine had none either, so it was impossible for mo to see any light at all.” This then appears in his testimony: “Q. What do you mean by the engine? (Witness) : Sir ? (Mr. Sullivan) : lrou :said the engine. You don’t mean engine? A. Ho, sir; tire motor. Q. The electric car? A. Yes, sir.” He then said: “When I left the oil house I have about two squares to walk straight up the wagon drive, just clear view of the shed.” He said he was still in the Baltimore and Ohio yards and continued: “So I walked up there. As I went across to go in the office then I looked up and down and was careful, there was nothing in sight anywhere, and there was no lights or nothing. The morning was a little murky and they struck me.” Again, he said he walked up twro squares and repeated, “Olear view of the shed all the way,” and then he started to cross.

He said further in his examination in chief that he didn’t see any engine around there, but engines were up and down that yard all the time, six or eight of them every night. In point of fact, he called as a witness Charles A. Bell, a *166 locomotive engineer who was working in the Baltimore and Ohio yards at Oamden, who .testified that he was on his engine about forty feet “from where Mr. Lappi was standing when he was hit.” Pie said that his yard engine was standing still at the time of the accident, facing west, hut that he was looking backwards out of the engine toward Oamden Station; that his engine was on track Ho. 4, behind the inbound train which he had followed up to the station for the purpose of pulling out the cars. The 'Short Line car was on track Hoi 5; lie saw Mr. Lapp and he then saw the car, seeing them both- almost at the same time. Mr. Lapp' was. straddling the right hand rail and the ear was bearing down on him; the plaintiff was about forty feet from the witness. The morning was not very clear, quite hazy, dark and foggy. He was asked: “Yon say about forty feet? A. I seen the car about forty feet before it hit Mr. Lapp — about the time it hit Mr. Lapp. Q. About forty feet from you? A. Between thirty and forty.” The witness was to the left of the Short Line car, facing out from Oamden Station; his engine was standing on the track about eighteen feet distant from track No\ 5, on which the Short Line car was approaching.”

The plaintiff must have been very much confused, as he swore he did not see any engine, and could see nothing, when his witness, the engineer, could not only see the car, but could see him thirty or forty feet away. The witness Edwards, who went into Oamden Station on a Baltimore and Ohio train due there at 6.30' A. M. on track Mo'. 4, said some one told him that Mr. Lapp' was hurt. He went over to see him and found him lying on the ground, on the west side of the track used by the Short Line, just before he was picked up. Lie was asked: “Did you notice whether the Short Line car had a light on it or not?” and .answered, “Mo, sir, it hadn’t a light.” Agiain he was asked: “Do you know what kind of lights they have? A. Yes, sir. Q. What kind? A. A big light about that big around and have two> bars across the front and where the bars are they hang the lights on them. Ql Is it a portable light ? A. It is a portable light. *167 Q. You are absolutely sure there was no light on that ear this morning ? A. No light whatever. I walked right around the front of the Short Line car. Q. You took especial notice of no light? A- No light there because I would have seen it. It would have lit the whole place up if there had been.”

Tt is dear that he was speaking of a headlight on the ear and. he did not even know' whether or not there was one on the car before the accident, although the- motorman admitted that there was not. He did not get there until after the, accident and on orossrexamination was asked: “You don’t know whether there was a headlight on it before tbe accident ?” and replied, “I can’t say. Q. All yon know, there was- no headlight after the accident ?' A. When I went out. Q. You don’t know whether the motorman turned it off to- keep from blinding people? A.

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120 A. 250, 142 Md. 163, 1923 Md. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-electric-railways-co-v-lapp-md-1923.