Northern Central Railway Co. v. State ex rel. Burns

54 Md. 113, 1880 Md. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 54 Md. 113 (Northern Central Railway Co. v. State ex rel. Burns) 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. State ex rel. Burns, 54 Md. 113, 1880 Md. LEXIS 74 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted by the appellee, under the 65th Article of the Code (Act of 1852, ch. 299,) for the use of the infant children of Mrs. Ella Burns, to recover damages arising from her death, which happened on the Northern Central Eailway, and was caused, as stated in the declaration, by the alleged wrongful act, neglect and default of .the appellant’s agents, while she was lawfully walking on the railroad track of the appellant. The right of action in such case exists according to the express terms of the Code, only where the party injured (if death had not ensued) would have been entitled to maintain the action. This is the test prescribed by the statute, that is to say “it is incumbent on the plaintiff to prove that the death of Mrs. Burns was caused entirely by the negligence or default of defendant’s agents, and it must not appear from the evidence that want of ordinary care and prudence on the part of the deceased, directly contributed to cause her death.” Foy’s Case, 47 Md., 76; Lewis’ Case, 38 Md., 599.

With this principle in view, we proceed to state briefly the facts of the case, as shown by the testimony, and to consider the ruling of the Court below upon the prayers, and its instructions to the jury set out in the hill of exceptions.

As correctly stated in appellant’s brief “ there is no direct evidence that the deceased was struck by any of the engines or cars of the company, as there was no one who saw the infliction of the injuries from which she died. She was found lying wounded between the two tracks close to the track over which a train had just passed on its way to Baltimore, and as far as could he ascertained, there seemed to he no rational explanation of her injuries other than contact with some portion of the train of appellant, and therefore the appellant did not controvert in the Court below, or in this Court, that the injuries were so caused.”

[120]*120The accident occurred on the 7th day of June 1878, a little after eight o’clock in the morning, the train hy which she was believed to have been struck having left Wood-berry station, about a quarter of a mile distant, at seven minutes past eight, Philadelphia time. As shown by the map produced in evidence, and explained by the witnesses, the railway consists of two tracks a few feet apart, running along side of, and parallel to Jones’ Falls, on the. southwestern side of the stream. A train going toward Baltimore has the stream on the left, and on the right is a public park, with a gate through which pedestrians sometimes pass going into the park, or on their way to and from Baltimore. Across the stream is a footbridge, the end of which is on the land of the company about ten yards from the railway and about twenty-five yards northeast from the park gate in a diagonal direction. Many persons going to Baltimore and back, cross the railway between the bridge and park gate, but there is no public road or way there, nor any planks for convenience of crossing. As stated by plaintiff’s witnesses, persons going from the bridge to the park gate after crossing the bridge, sometimes continue on the side next the stream till opposite the gate and cross directly over the railway, sometimes they cross the railway immediately after leaving the bridge and walk to the gate, there being a foot path on each side of the railway ; and sometimes they cross diagonally from the bridge to the gate. There is no testimony showing at what point, or in what manner deceased got upon the railway.

The witness Wartman saw heron the road leading from Woodberry towards the bridge on the east side of the falls—she was walking quite fast and seemed to be in a hurry; a few minutes after her, the witness Wilhelm passed along in the same direction ; when he had crossed the bridge, he heard some one groaning and saw Mrs. Burns lying between the tracks of the railway waving [121]*121her hand. The spot where she lay, as stated hy the witnesses was about twenty yards from the bridge in a diagonal direction, and three or four yards from the park gate. She was lying near the south or west track with her head towards it. As stated by Dr. Williams one of plaintiff’s witnesses “ her shawl had fallen to her waist and her dress was not torn at all, and seemed very little deranged, it was just as it were wrapped about her person, it looked as if she might have been pushed aside; she was dying, and expired in a short time. Wilhelm states that before crossing the bridge, and when about one hundred and fifty yards from it, he saw a train of cars going towards Baltimore on the west or south track ; it was then a short distance beyond the place where he afterwards saw deceased lying. It is probable she was struck by that train. The place where the accident happened is in the open country. South of Woodberry there is a curve in the road, and there were three trees on the west side of the falls, near the foot bridge; but these did not obstruct the view; according to all the testimony there was a clear unobstructed view of the railway for the distance of two hundred yards; for that distance an approaching train could be seen from the end of the bridge, or from any point between it and the railway, or on the railway.

On the east side of the Falls nearly opposite the park gate is a large cotton mill which was then in operation, the noise of which and of the water, according to the testimony of some of the witnesses, drowned the noise of an approaching train, and prevented a person from hearing it.

On leaving Woodberry the bell on the train was rung, but no bell was rung or whistle sounded as it approached the place of the accident. The evidence is that it was not customary to give any such signals at that place, unless some one was seen on, or approaching the railway. The only evidence in the case as to a look-out upon the train, is that of the engineer and fireman, who testified that [122]*122from the time they left Woodherry, they were in the cab, the engineer on the west and the fireman on the east side, each having his head out of the window carefully looking out. This vigilance continued till they reached a culvert below the park gate, about fifty yards beyond the foot bridge, where they shut off the steam on approaching Mt. Vernon. They explain that they always run slowly and carefully, and keep a sharp lookout on this part of the road, it being their duty todo so, for the reason that at Mt. Vernon there are switches connecting with the freight yards, where the freight trains of the company are made up, and they are liable to have flagmen on the tracks signalling them that the freight trains are in the way near the Mt. Vernon freight yards. Neither the engineer nor the fireman saw the deceased, nor did they know any thing of the accident till they heard of it, after the train had reached Baltimore.

There was no blood on the locomotive, nor any marks of the collision. The wounds on the person of the deceased, as testified by Dr. Williams, were a cut on the left side of the head, beginning on the left and extending towards the right side, a cut over her right eye, and her left shoulder seemed to he broken as her left arm seemed to he useless. Her knees were skinned and her hands scratched. There was some blood on the ballast, and on the cross-tie where she was lying between the tracks, but nene between the rails on. the west track on which the train was running, nor any on the rails themselves.

Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Md. 113, 1880 Md. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-central-railway-co-v-state-ex-rel-burns-md-1880.