Pennsylvania Railroad v. State ex rel. McGirr

61 Md. 108, 1883 Md. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 21, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 Md. 108 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. State ex rel. McGirr) 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. State ex rel. McGirr, 61 Md. 108, 1883 Md. LEXIS 75 (Md. 1883).

Opinion

Yellott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was instituted for the benefit of the equitable plaintiffs, the widow and children of Arthur McGirr, who was killed on the 27th day of September, 1882, at the intersection of the Pennsylvania Railroad with Valley street, in the City of Cumberland; the declaration averring that the defendant’s locomotive, impelled at an unlawful rate of speed through a populous part of the town, was [114]*114negligently and recklessly driven against the deceased, as he was lawfully and properly proceeding across the track of the railway to his place of business; thus crushing and instantly killing him by the collision. The ground of defence is contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.

The testimony, presented by the record, discloses the fact that the deceased, at the time of the fatal occurrence,, was passing along Valley street from his residence to his place of business, protected from the rain, which was falling, by an umbrella extended over his head and shoulders; and that, at the instant when he was about to cross the track of the railroad, he was crushed and killed by an engine operated by the agents of the defendant. The section of the city surrounding the scene of the collision is compactly built, and the street, along which the deceased was walking, is a frequented thoroughfare. The track of the defendant’s road runs parallel with, and in close proximity to, that of the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad ; and- at the locality, where the tracks of the roads are carried across the line of the street, a flagman, in the employ of the defendant, had his appointed station, and it, was his especial duty to designate by signal the approach of the trains running over the rails of the road. The evidence adduced by the plaintiff tends to prove the absence ■of-this watchman when the collision occurred; while that of the defendant shows that he was near his own house, but at some distance from the crossing. It is apparent that the -usual intimation of danger was not given, and the watchman’s-statement that he called to the deceased is in conflict with the countervailing testimony of a witness,, who says, that at the moment of the fatal catastrophe, she saw him coming from the garden adjacent to his house. This fact, as well as that in relation to the alleged intoxication of the deceased, is involved in obscurity by the doubts created by contradictory testimony.

[115]*115The evidence shows that on both sides of the street, along which the deceased was walking, were houses, and from the house in contiguity to the track, on the side proximate to the approaching train, was a fence which partially obstructed the view, and extended to a point almost in immediate contact with the exterior line of the road; there being an intervening space of only a few feet between the rail of the road and the extremity of the fence. There is evidence tending to show that at the place where the railroad has been constructed over the street its track is nearly hidden from view at all points below the house in which the watchman lives. There is evidence that the whistle was sounded and the. bell rung as the train approached the crossing; the engineer saying that he saw the deceased when the locomotive was within eighty or one hundred feet of that point and indicated the danger by sounding the whistle. This testimony is in apparent conflict with that of witnesses, who say that they heard no whistle sounded after the train passed a point near the cotton factory, situate at a distance of several hundred yards from the crossing. An ordinance of' the City of Cumberland, offered in evidence, prohibits a rate of speed exceeding six miles an hour within the corporate limits. The engineer admits that the rate of speed was beyond the maximum designated by the ordinance, and other witnesses estimate the rapidity of the running to have been twenty miles an hour. It is proved by the plaintiff and admitted by the engineer on cross-examination, that immediately anterior to the occurrence of the accident, the engine liad been detached from its train for the purpose of making a “running switch,” which was a mode by which the cars, conveying the passengers and impelled by their own momentum, iu the rear of the locomotive, were to be thrown upon a diverging track at a point some distance beyond the crossing.

The first question to be determined is that which is presented by the exception of the defendant to the rejection [116]*116of its first, second, and third prayers. These prayers are based upon the assumption of the legal insufficiency of the plaintiff’s evidence to support the action. The granting of these prayers by the Court would have ended the controversy ; and its refusal to give the instructions asked for presents an important question for determination.

In actions of this nature when the questions of fact are numerous, and many of them obscured by contradictory testimony, and thus involved in doubt, Courts have never shown any disposition to ignore the legal maxim, ad questiones facti respondent juratores. On the other hand when there is some prominent fact in the cause, clearly ascertained, and conclusively demonstrating that the injury complained of was directly and proximately produced by the negligence of the injured party, it is the duty of the Court to instruct the jury that there can be no recovery in the action.

In 39 Md., 449, it is said that “cases may'and sometimes do occur, in which the uncontradicted evidence proves such a glaring act of carelessness on the part of the plaintiff as to amount in law to contributory negligence, and in such it is the duty of the Court, when requested, to decide the question without the intervention of the jury. But in no case ought the Court to take the question of negligence from the-jury unless the conduct of the plaintiff, relied on as amounting in law to contributory negligence, is established by clear and uncontradicted evidence.” McMahon vs. North. Cent. Railway Co., 39 Md., 449.

In 29 Md., 438, it is said that “ Negligence is a relative term, and in cases of the character now before us, it is very much dependent upon the particular facts and circumstances of each case that occurs. What may be gross negligence in one case, may not be so in the light of the particular facts of another; and ordinary care in one state of case may be very gross negligence in another and a different case.”

[117]*117“The general rule is that negligence is a question for the jury to decide upon all the facts and circumstances of each case.” Pittsburg & C. R. R. Co. vs. Andrews, 39 Md., 343.

“[Negligence is the absence of care according to the circumstances, and is always a question for the jury where there is reasonable doubt as to the facts, or as to the inferences to be drawn from them.” P. & R. Co. vs. Killip, 88 Penn. St., 412.

The determination of the question, presented in the cases just cited, necessitated the application of a principle which cannot be successfully controverted. As it is an ethical proposition, which carries with it an axiomatic force and cogency, that there can be no recognition of an abstract right or wrong, it is apparently impossible to predicate negligence of any particular act, until the relation, in which it stands to its surroundings, has been clearly ascertained, and is fully comprehended.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 Md. 108, 1883 Md. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-state-ex-rel-mcgirr-md-1883.