Mayor of Baltimore v. Terio

128 A. 353, 147 Md. 330, 1925 Md. LEXIS 129
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 128 A. 353 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Terio) 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. Terio, 128 A. 353, 147 Md. 330, 1925 Md. LEXIS 129 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment recovered in the Superior Court of Baltimore Oity, by the appellee, Eli Term, against the Mayor and 'City Council of Baltimore.

On November I, 19'21, between five and six o’clock P. M., a street car, with a trailer attached, operated by the United Railway and Electric Company and headed east on Eayette Street, stopped! near the southwest comer of 'Fayette and Holliday Streets to discharge passengers. Immediately behind it, at the time, was ,a. truck belonging to the Eastern Cement Company, a partnership, which had stopped to await the discharge of passengers from the oar. After the passengers had been discharged and the oar had started on its way, the track proceeded to pass between the trailer and the curb on the south side of Fayette Street. Soon after starting, the oar proceeded to make its turn northward from Fayette Street into Holliday Street, and ,as it did so-, the rear end of the trailer swung toward the south curb of Fayette Street, thereby greatly reducing the distance between the trailer and the curb. The truck, at this time being directly opposite the rear of the trailer, was struck by it and forced against the *333 curb, and the right rear portion of the truck came in contact with a can, a “trash receptacle for the aollleiation of paper and other debris;” placed upon the sidewalk by the Spotless Street System Company, with the consent of and under a contract with the city. The can, when struck by the truck, Was carried or forced1 by it against a lamp post upon the side1walk at that point, and with the onward movement of the truck it was forced past the lamp post, and when released therefrom, it was thrown across the sidewalk, striking the plaintiff, Eli Terio, Who, at the time, was proceeding in a westerly direction, near the center of the sidewalk, inflicting personal injuries upon him. The appellee sued the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, The United- Railway and Electric Company, Harris D. Dassele and Gustav Clanzmanco; partners trading as The Eastern Oement Company, and the American Spotless System, to recover for the personal injuries sustained by him under the above circumstances.

The record discloses that the suit against the cement company was dismissed, in open court, by the plaintiff, and at the dose of the plaintiff’s case there was a directed verdict in favor of the railway company and the Spotless Street System Company. The case then proceeded -against the city alone, and the judgment -appealed from was entered upon a verdict rendered by the jury against the city.

In the course of the trial, four exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court. Two- of these related toi the evidence, and the -others to- the prayers.

We will first consider the fourth exception, which relates only t-o- the ruling of the court upon the prayers offered at the conclusion of the evidence and which apply only to the case against the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.

The city’s first prayer -asked fhat the jury he instructed that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient, under the pleading, to entitle the plaintiff to recover; and the ■second prayer asked for a directed verdict for the -defendant because of a want of evidence, under the pleading, legally sufficient “to prove any negligence on the part of the defendant, the Mayor and City 'Cbuncdl.” 'These prayers, if con *334 sidered .and treated as variance prayer's, were properly refused, as they do not comply with the statute, chapter 110 of the Acts of 1914; and if intended as demurrers to the evidence, and axe so treated, though, as we have held, not in proper form as demurrers, Heath v. Michael, 145 Md. 277, the court committed no error in refusing to grant them upon the evidence found in the record.

The court, we think, in submitting the defendant’s negligence to the jury by the city’s fifth prayer, properly disposed of that question. •

" It is contended by the plaintiff that the city was negligent in placing the trash can upon the isideiwalk so near to the Outer edge of the curb, and permitting it to remain there, as to be struck by the truck while upon the travel way of the street; and also, in not, in Some way, securing ¡the can in the location in which it was placed, so .as to prevent its removal by persons upon the sidewalk from a place of safety to one of danger.

By the evidence of both the plaintiff and the defendant, the wheels of the truck never went upon the curb'or sidewalk, and it was the bub of the wheel projecting over the curb that struck the can. As to the location of the can, the evidence is somewhat conflicting;. Soane of the witnesses located it near to 'the outer edge of the curb, while others placed it at a point tooi far therefrom, it would seem, to he struck by the huh of the wheel of the 'truck while the wheel was still in the roadway; but this could not have been so, for by the undisputed evidence in this case, it was struck by the huh while the wheel was still in the street. This evidence, we think, was sufficient to go to the jnry as tending to show the negligence of the defendant in respect to- the location of the can upon the sidewalk.

The court .also refused the third, sixth, seventh and ninth prayers of the defendant. The instruction asked for in the third prayer was in effect that the plaintiff could not recover, if he, after discovering the position of peril in which he was placed, could, by the exercise of ordinary care have avoided the injuries complained of. This prayer was properly re *335 fused, .'as there is no evidence tending to show that he, ait such time, by ordinary care, could have avoided the injury.

By the sixth prayer the court was asked to- instruct the jury th!a,t though they should find that the city was negligent in placing and maintaining the can in the manner described in the evidence, nevertheless, the verdict should he for the city, if they further found that the force of the blow which moved the can from its position, would have mioved it had the city, “exercised reasonable care in placing and maintaining^’ it. Apart from other objections that might be urged against it, this prayer iis obviously defective, for the reason that had the city exercised ordinary or reasonable care, in locating the can sufficiently far from the outer edge of the curb, not to have been struck by the huh of the truck, the accident in this ease would not have happened and the plaintiff would not have been injured.

The court was asked by the city’s seventh prayer to say as .a matter of law -that the negligence of the city in not properly locating and maintaining the trash Can was not the proximate cause of the injury suffered by the plaintiff-.

Upon the facts and circumstances of this case, as disclosed by the record, the learned, judge below, we think, correctly ruled in refusing this prayer.

The question of proximate cause of injury is in very many Cases difficult of determination. It is not a question of science or legal knowledge, as is said in Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469

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Bluebook (online)
128 A. 353, 147 Md. 330, 1925 Md. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-terio-md-1925.