Payne v. Healey

114 A. 693, 139 Md. 86, 1921 Md. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 114 A. 693 (Payne v. Healey) 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
Payne v. Healey, 114 A. 693, 139 Md. 86, 1921 Md. LEXIS 127 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment recovered by tbe appellee, Jacob M. A. Healey, against the appellant, John Barton Payne, Director General of Railroads', for personal injuries sustained by him, as well as for injury and damage to his automobile, caused by tbe alleged negligence of the employees of the defendant in the operation of the defendant’s train.

The record discloses that, on January the 6th, 1920, at the hour of one in the morning, the plaintiff and Dr. Fiery, a dentist, who was at the plaintiff’s house in Hagerstown, upon a professional visit to a member of plaintiff’s family, started *88 in plaintiff’s automobile for the doctor’s home. The plaintiff testified that, while going east on West Antietam Street, he approached the tracks of the Cumberland Valley Eailroad, which cross that street. At that time, he says, a freight train was approaching from the north. It was, however, going so smoothly that he did not hear it, but as soon as he saw it, he put .on his brakes and stopped his automobile. The train was on the west track, the one nearest to the plaintiff, and although the automobile was stopped before it reached the track, it nevertheless. was so near to it that the engine “picked” it up, and carried it down the track for more than three hundred feet to tlie point where the semaphore stood, on the west side of the railroad; while being carried down to the semaphore, the automobile moved smoothly; did not seem to jar very much, and he thought the right wheels were not off the ground; and it ran along as if it were on rails. While he was so carried along, he called as loud as he could to those on the engine to stop, and he heard someone else calling, “Stop, you have picked up an automobile.” Wbeu he heard the man calling, he was down the track half way from the point of the collision to the semaphore and he jumped from the automobile just before the crash came; that he heard the air-brakes thrown on, and the train stopped in about a car’s length; it Was moving about the same rate of speed when the machine struck the semaphore as it was when it picked him up. The automobile was a Packard about eighteen feet long and a very high one, and, while being carried down the track, it was' alongside of the engine, the front part at the cowcatcher. The top of the car was up and tlie back curtains were up, but the other curtains were not on at all. The car was totally wrecked except the motor, and the plaintiff was personally injured.

Upon cross-examination, the plaintiff stated that he was running about ten or twelve miles an hour down Antietam Street; and as soon as he saw the engine he put on his brakes and stopped; he could not tell how far he was away from the *89 track; whether ten, twenty, or thirty feet; he knew nothing about feet; and the defendant’s, counsel was unable to have him. state more definitely the distance he was from the track when he first saw the engine; he stated that he had a klaxon horn on the car, hut he did not blow it while being carried down the track by the engine. The witness further stated that he thought the train at the time of the collision was going at the rate of twenty miles an hour, but in this, as conceded by bis counsel, lie over-estimated its speed, as. it was moving only five or six miles an hour.

D. J. Minnichs, an employee of the Cumberland Valley Railroad Company, testified that at the time of the collision he was “at the watch-box,” which is located on the south side of Antietam Street and a short distance west of the west track of the railroad, and saw the collision, but did not have time to signal before the locomotive struck the automobile; that immediately after it happened, he called out; he did not recall what he said, and then swung his lantern; that he called to the engine-man who was in the; cab of the engine; hut did not know that he saw him. The witness was at the time at the watch-box and the engine was “right by him.” He gave the stop signal with the lantern, but the engine was by him, as he thought, west of Antietam Street, the watch-box being several feet west of the street, that is, it is off the street but right by the pavement; that when he said west, he was speaking in railroad terms, what they called west, which is in fact south. He further testified that he thought he heard somebody call out when the ear was struck; that as the automobile was about to cross the track, it veered to the right; it was close to the pavement and went over the edge of the pavement; and after the collision the automobile was alongside of the locomotive and facing in the same direction. “The engine part of the automobile was alongside; on the pilot of the locomotive, on the right-hand side.” The wheels of the automobile seemed to1 be on the ground. The witness, was- a brakesman and bad been one for four years and was able to *90 judge of the speed of trains; the train was going' about five or six miles an hour at the time of the collision, and when it stopped it was just past the semaphore; a little over the length of the engine and tender; that he did not hear anyone call out after the locomotive passed him; but heard someone when the automobile was first hit. After that he did not hear anyone calling.

Hpon cross-examination, the witness testified the first thing he noticed with reference to the accident was when the automobile came up Antietam Street, real close to him, and he heai'd the brakes which were then applied; the engine was about half way over Antietam Street crossing and this automobile ran out by the watch-box and on the crossing like; the automobile was near the crossing when he first saw it on the rigjitrhand side; he was a little off the street when he was struck, a little to the right of the street, not the whole automobile, but the right side of it would have taken in a little more than the street; the automobile was struck by the pilot of the engine and carried down the track by the engine on the pilot, that he did not notice it running on its own wheels.

W. G. Pídete, fireman upon the engine that collided with plaintiff’s automobile, testified that he was in the cab' of the engine on the left side, and with him on the engine were L. S. Feagan, the engineer,'and T. F. Price; the conductor; the engineer was on the right side, the same side as the automobile, and the conductor on the left side; the train was running five or six miles an hour as it crossed Antietam Street, and the speed was about the same from that point down to the semaphore; that he remembered the emergency brakes being thrown on; it was near the semaphore; the train stopped in about forty feet after the emergency brakes were thrown.

T. F. Price, the conductor, testified that he heard the application of the air brakes, and that the car stopped within about forty feet thereafter, and the train was going about four to six miles an hour.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 693, 139 Md. 86, 1921 Md. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-healey-md-1921.