Northern Central Railway Co. v. Green

76 A. 90, 112 Md. 487
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 76 A. 90 (Northern Central Railway Co. v. Green) 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
Northern Central Railway Co. v. Green, 76 A. 90, 112 Md. 487 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought to recover damages for the killing of two horses of the plaintiff by a freight train of the defendant, while the horses were fast in a trestle bridge into which they had fallen upon the private right of way of the defendant. As the legal sufficiency of the evidence adduced to prove the negligence of the defendant, and that such negligence was the sole cause of the death of the horses, without any negligence on the part of the plaintiff directly contributing thereto, is challenged by the prayers that were refused, it will be necessary to state somewhat fully the testimony in the case.

At the time of the accident, or just before its occurrence, two of the plaintiff’s sérvants, John Scarborough and Robert Williamson, were hauling coal in a wagon drawn by these horses, from Sherwood station on the N. O. Railway to plaintiff’s residence about a mile distant. Scarborough was the plaintiff’s driver, and Williamson was his helper in loading and unloading. While returning to the station with the empty wagon, both men being then in the wagon, the bolt which fastened the tongue to the wagon broke of fell out, and the horses ran off with the pole and double and single trees attached. Scarborough was pulled off the wagon by the horses, thrown down, and the reins tom from him, and Williamson was left in the wagon. When the horses reached' the car from which they had been loading coal, they ran upon the track of the railway towards Lutherville, Scarborough and Williamson running after them. Learning the direction the horses had taken, these men followed up the railway and *496 found both horses on the south bound track fast in.a trestle bridge over a small stream, both horses resting on their bellies on the ties, all four legs of each horse hanging below the ties. The pole was still attached by the neck yoke, but the double and single trees had been lost. This Bridge is something over a quarter mile north of Sherwood station where the horses went upon the track, and about three quarters of a mile from Lutherville station, and between these two points the track is straight, but curves to the northeast a very short distance above Lutherville station.

William Davis was walking on the track going south as the horses approached in a run going north, and ran to meet them about ten yards south of the bridge, but was unable to stop them- and when they struck the bridge they fell through the ties as above described. Davis was a colored man and the first person at the spot, about two minutes before anyone else. He called two other colored men in a field nearby, and these came next, with another colored man, and about the same time, Scarborough came, followed by Williamson a little later. The next man on the spot was Mr. Kane, a salesman for a city firm who was driving across the track on a private road 800 feet south of the trestle, when the horses came up in front of him at full speed. He tied his horse to a fence and went up to the trestle where the horses were fast, with four colored men and two white men around them. When Scarborough came up, one of the colored men, Jenkins, told the others that if they would go and get some lumber from a shed nearby, they could get the horses out, and Scarborough and some others got a number of boards from this shed, and laid them close together on the ties, thinking by this means to get the horses out, which were then apparently uninjured and perfectly quiet. Mr. Kane testified that when he got there the pole was still attached, but was unhooked while he was there; that someone said there would be a train along shortly, and he said, “if you men will keep on carrying lumber I will go up and stop the train,” and that he did then go up the track “about a quarter of a mile,” and that *497 ■when he saw the engine turn the curve at Lutherville he waved his hat and handkerchief, looking toward the train all the time, and not seeing what was behind him; that the train approached and when it came up to him he jumped to the side, and turned and came back towards the bridge; that he was too far up the track to see when the horses were struck, though he knew the engine passed the bridge where the horses were, and that the engine and about half a car length were b'eyond the bridge when the engine stopped. One of the horses was killed outright; the other was badly injured, but after the engine was backed, it got up and could walk, but it was afterwards necessary to kill it to relieve its suffering.

Scarborough said', Mr. Kane said, while they were getting' the boards, he would go up and signal the train, and he went, but that he did not know how far up he went, and that he saw the smoke of the train near Lutherville before it got to the station. Davis said he spoke to a white gentleman about stopping the train who said he would take charge of it; that he, Davis, thought the boards were of no use, and that the only way to save the horses was to have the train stopped, and get a derrick to lift them put of the trestle. Jenkins said he could see the smoke as the train came round the bend, and he said, “here comes the train,” and the white gentleman replied,-“you work on the horses, and I will stop the train.”

The train was composed of twenty-five cars all loaded, mostly with coal, averaging thirty-four feet in length, and the grade from Lutherville to the trestle a medium down grade. The engineer, Mr. Wilson, was an experienced man running as such on that railway ten years. He said': “When I came round the curve I saw a gang of men at work, trackmen I supposed, and I ran about half the distance, probably about 275 yards, then I saw a man run up the track and wave a handkerchief. I threw my brake in emergency, threw sand on the rail, reversed my engine and ran into the horses; that was the best I could do, and I did everything that could possibly be done.” He said gangs of trackmen are met every *498 four or five miles, and no signal is ever required for them. Their foreman looks out for them. If the men at the trestle whom he took to he trackmen, had been such, and the condition of the bridge was dangerous, the rule required them to send a man with a red flag as far up as Lutherville to signal him to stop in time to avoid the danger. He first saw the signal when he was about 275 yards from the trestle, and he supposed the bridge was in a dangerous condition. His first thought was to stop as quick as he could to avoid danger to the crew and the train. This was his duty under a strict rufe.

The conductor, Mr. Miller, was on the engine at the time. He said they were, about 250 yards from the trestle when he saw the man signalling, and at once he heard the air go on, and the train was going about 25 miles an hour. The fireman, Mr. Taylor, was firing as they came towards the trestle, and did not either see the men on the trestle, or the man signalling until he heard the engineer “slap on the emergency brake” when he jumped up' to look, but immediately after looking into the fire box while firing, one cannot see clearly. When about two car lengths from the trestle he jumped off, as he was taking no chances, and the conductor jumped also.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 90, 112 Md. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-central-railway-co-v-green-md-1910.