Pennsylvania Railroad v. Hoover

120 A. 526, 142 Md. 251, 1923 Md. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 120 A. 526 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. Hoover) 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
Pennsylvania Railroad v. Hoover, 120 A. 526, 142 Md. 251, 1923 Md. LEXIS 21 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The declaration in this case alleges that while the plaintiff was in the defendant’s railroad station in Atlantic City, New Jersey, waiting as a passenger to board a train upon which he was to1 travel to Baltimore, Maryland, he was pushed from the station platform under a moving train and seriously injured as a result of the defendant’s negligence. It is charged that the defendant was negligent in that it permitted the platform “to he overcrowded with passengers. *253 without proper police protection, and not having proper guard rails” to prevent passengers from being pushed from it while awaiting their trains, “and further because the defendant, its agents, servants and employees, opened a gate to approach” the train which the plaintiff intended to board, at a time when another train was passing, and, because of the opening of the gate, the passengers, in their attempt to pass through it, pushed the plaintiff from, the platform against and under the moving; train and he thus received the injuries which the declaration described. The defendant has appealed from a judgment for the plaintiff entered on the verdict of a jury. The principal question we are asked to consider is whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support the recovery.

It was testified by the plaintiff that when the accident happened he was about to start on his return from Atlantic Oity to Baltimore on an afternoon train scheduled to leave at a quarter past two o’clock. E'or his transportation he held the unused portion of a round-trip ticket, which he had purchased in Baltimore and by the partial use of which he had come to Atlantic City a week earlier, and also a ticket covering the additional fare required on trains which, like the one about to he hoarded by the plaintiff, were assigned to what was known as the Delaware Biver Bridge route. Having procured this supplemental ticket in the station building, the plaintiff had proceeded to the concourse in the rear, where he waited for the opening of a gate in an iron picket fence, through which he would pass to a platform beside which stood the Baltimore train. The track which this train occupied was designated as Ho. 3. Parallel with it, hut on the other side of the platform along which it extended, was track Ho. 2. The picket fence stood at right angles with the course of the tracks and at a distance of twenty-one feet from the rear of the station building. At intervals there were “'accordion” gates in the fence affording admission from the concourse to the series of train platforms. To the left of the *254 plaintiff as lie stood facing the gate nearest his train, the floor of the concourse terminated at track No. 2 which extended beyond the picket fence and the station. There was no barrier along tbe part of track No-. 2 on which the concourse platform abutted, as this space was sometimes needed and used for the accommodation of passengers entering or alighting from car's on that track. At the end of the picket fence near track No. 2 was a swinging gate, six feet and two-inches wide, which hinged on the same post to which the accordion gate through which the plaintiff expected to pass was attached. When the swinging gate is closed it is fastened in that position by a floor bolt. Between tbe end of that gate and the edge of the platform at track No: 2 is an open sp-aee nineteen inches wide. On the gate is a warning sign in these words: “Danger. Do not pass around the end of this gate.”

According to the plaintiff’s testimony, he was standing in the rear of the- crowd of passengers who were waiting for the Baltimore ti’ain gate to- he opened. He was five or ten feet, as he estimates, from the open end of the concourse platform to- his left. As he stood there a train was being moved on track No. 2 into- a position for receiving passengers, and while one of the cars was passing the line of the picket fence, a man in uniform opened the swinging gate, and in the- rush of the crowd towards and through this opening the plaintiff was swept under the moving cár on trad*: No-. 2 and severely injured. A fatal result of the accident was narrowly avoided by ,the successful effort of the p-laiutiff to roll his body off the track just before it was reached by the approaching wheels of the ear. In addition to a permanent injury to his left knee, he suffered a shock to his nervous system which has had serious and long-continued effects.

The testimony of the plaintiff is supported by that of his son, as to the circumstances of the accident, and it is contradicted in material details by the defendant’s witnesses. But the proposal to have the case withdrawn from the jury *255 necessarily assumed the truth of the plaintiff’s narrative. The legal sufficiency of the evidence to support a recovery is denied by the defendant upon the theory that it fails to prove any structural defects, or an overcrowded condition of the station area, to which the accident may properly be attributed, or any causal connection between the movement of the train, and the plaintiff’s fall.

The right of the plaintiff to have the case submitted to the jury could hardly be sustained if it depended solely upon tbe absence of a guard-rail from the edge of the platform from which he was thrown, or upon the question as to whether the approaches to the, trains were then overcrowded. A guardrail along the platform at the place where the accident occurred would have prevented the use of the adjacent track for the purpose already indicated. There does not appear to have been any fault in the plan or construction of the platform itself in regard to which it should be held to have been negligently maintained. The eases cited in the argument on this point presented conditions very different from those with which we are now concerned. The proof does not show that, at the time of the accident, the space in front of the train gates had been, allowed to become so crowded as to subject passengers to tbe risk of injury because of that condition, independently of the action by which the crowd was- induced to move in a particular course. It was not because of the presence of an excessive number of persons that the plaintiff was injured, but because of the sudden movement of the assembled passengers' towards a gateway opened'in tbe barrier separating them from the train which they were impatient to enter. The cases, cited in the briefs, which deal with accidents due to the overcrowding of passenger1 accommodations, will not be reviewed as they differ materially from the present case in their controlling facts.

The situation of the platform from which the plaintiff fell, and the presence of the crowd before the1 gates, were conditions which made the accident possible, but which in *256 themselves might exist without negligence. If the passengers had been permitted to pass, only through the accordion gate in front of which they were gathered, and which was farther removed from the edge of the open platform bordering, track No-. 2 on which a train was, moving, there would have been no inducement for the sideward rush of the crowd which carried the plaintiff off the, platform and under the train. It was the opéning of the swinging gate near the edge of the platform along track No,. 2 that caused the crowd impulse of which the accident was, the, immediate consequence. If there had been no moving train on track No,.

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Bluebook (online)
120 A. 526, 142 Md. 251, 1923 Md. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-hoover-md-1923.