Mayor of Baltimore v. De Palma Ex Rel. De Palma

112 A. 277, 137 Md. 179, 1920 Md. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 1, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 112 A. 277 (Mayor of Baltimore v. De Palma Ex Rel. De Palma) 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
Mayor of Baltimore v. De Palma Ex Rel. De Palma, 112 A. 277, 137 Md. 179, 1920 Md. LEXIS 117 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered thei opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a judgment recovered against the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore and Goddard J. Mat-tingly'for injuries alleged to' have been caused by the negligent and careless manner in which lumber was piled or placed by Mattingly on one of the piers owned by the Mayor’ and City Council of Baltimore.1.

The pier in question is Pier No. 6, and is known as a lumber pier. It is located on Pratt Street, which runs east and west, that is to say, it extends from Pfatt Street, in a. southerly direction about fifteen hundred feet, into the river or harbor, and is from, seventy-five to one hundred feet wide. It is an uncovered concrete pile pier, designed and constructed for the use of merchants who need the use of a pier in their business, and in June, 1918, and for a number of years prior thereto, was devoted by the city principally or exclusively to the use of lumber merchants as a place to. unload and store lumber. The surface of the pier was paved and was divided into sections, and the lumber was so placed or piled in these *181 sections as to leave a driveway of irregular width, in the center of the pier. This driveway extended from the Pratt Street end to the southern or outer end of the pier, and was1 wide enough for two vehicles to pass when employed in hauling' the lumber. The lumber was stored on both sides: of the driveway in piles from seven to ten feet high. These piles extended from the driveway to the edge of the pier, and the only way to get out on the pier was along this driveway. There were two shacks at the Pratt Street, end, one: used by the clerks of the different lumber merchants and the other by Mr. Mattingly as an office, and there was a sign at the entrance: of the pier, located in the center of the driveway, marked “Pier 6, Pratt Street.” Space on the pier was leased to lumber merchants as a place to store their lumber, and was paid for by them according to the: space occupied.

The pier was under thei supervision and control of the chief harbor master of the city, whose duties were to enforce the harbor laws and regulations of the city, and to supervise the collection of charges for the use: of municipal piers. According to his testimony, and the instructions issued by bim, only those persons who- leased space on Pier 6, and those who-“had business: relations with them,” were allowed to go- on that pier, and during the: recent war, under the “Government regulations,” which were enforced as far as possible until after the signing of the Armistice, no one was allowed to go on the pier unless‘he had a pass. Special instructions had been given, to the assistant harbor master having charge of Pier (i to prohibit boys from going on the pier, and the police force of the city had been requested to assist in the enforcement of this regulation.

The plaintiff at the time: of the accident was about ten years of age, and had been told by his mother never to- go on Pier 6, that it was dangerous aud that he might fall in the water or “some lumber might fall” on him. About half past seven o’clock in the evening of June 3rd, 1918, he was asked by Misa Benneburg, a young girl about twenty years, of age, *182 if he knew where her brother David, a playmate of the plaintiff, was, and he took her out on the pier, where he thought he would find David and a number of other boys playing. According to his testimony, after he found David and the other boys on the pier between the piles of lumber, and pointed them out to D'avid’s sister, he started to go or run home and, as he was passing between the piles of lumber, several boards fell on him and he sustained, according to the testimony of the physician who attended him, a fracture of the left thigh. He had seen boys on one occasion climb on the piles of lumber, but did not- see them on top of the pile that night, and did not know “whether they were up on the pile or not.” The young girl who went on the pier with the plaintiff testified that they were on the pier at least ten minutes before tire accident happened, that the plaintiff did not climb up on the pile of lumber, that she did not see the boards fall and could not tell whether they fell from the top or side of the pile, that she was between the piles: of lumber where she had gone to see if the boys were there-, and that after she heard the plaintiff scream she found him under some boards.

Vincent Yamonico, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he had been on Pier 6, had seen other persons go> out on the pier, and had seen boys fishing and swimming on the pier; that he went on the pier to see the boats; that he had seen lumber boats and launches tied upi at.the pier, but did not see any there on the day of the accident, and that the only way you could get to these boats was to go along the central driveway and then between the piles of lumber to the side of the pier where the boats were.

Vincent L. Palmisano, another witness for the plaintiff, who was also one of the plaintiff’s counsel, testified that he had had occasion to go on Pier 6 “and to gp on submarines that had landed on the west side of it,” that a great number1 of persons went to see the submarines while they were at the pier, that both sides of the pier were used for launches and boats, and that people landing from these boats would have *183 to go through the lumber piles on the pier, that he went on the pier “out of idle curiosity” to see the submarines, and was not invited to do so by any city official. On crosgretxamr ination he said that the submarine Deutschland was at Pier 5, which was leased by the Government, and that he did not know that any submarines came to Baltimore before the Armistice was signed in November, 3918.

In addition to the testimony of the chief harbor master to which we have already referred, he futher testified that lumber vessels were the only vessels that docked at Pier 6, and that passenger launches were not permitted at that pier, that when you look at Pier 6- from Pratt Street you see nothing but wood, and that “there was no sidewalk down there.” John S. Mister, an officer of the police force of the city, testified that for several years; including June, 1918, he was in charge of a post comprising Piers, 4, 5 and 6; that Pier 6 was used for the storage of lumber; that he was on the pier from four to seven times a day, and that during the summer season when the children were out of school he was there more frequently than at other times because he had trouble in keeping them off the pier; that they would sometimes, go there to swim off the end of the pier; that, he had arrested from forty to fifty; that he had instructions from the marshal and harbor master “to keep people off the pier that did not belong there,” and that whenever' he saw children on the pier he drove them off; that lumber boats landed at Pier 6, but that pleasure boats landed at Pier 4 and at tbe city pier at the foot of Calvert Street. The testimony of Mr. Mat-tingly and his manager, Albert H. Lee, a,si to- the use of Pier 6, the class of persons who visited the pier, and the enforcement of the rule prohibiting children from going on the pier, was to the same effect as, the testimony of the harbor master and the police officer.

The plaintiff called in rebuttal Mr. James E.

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 277, 137 Md. 179, 1920 Md. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-de-palma-ex-rel-de-palma-md-1920.