Pennsylvania Railroad v. Yingling

129 A. 36, 148 Md. 169, 41 A.L.R. 398, 1925 Md. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 129 A. 36 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. Yingling) 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. Yingling, 129 A. 36, 148 Md. 169, 41 A.L.R. 398, 1925 Md. LEXIS 17 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Parke, ff.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The accident in this ease occurred where the public highway, known as the Beaver Dam Road, is crossed at grade near 'Cockeysville by three tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, running north and south, and at right angles with the highway. The approach to the crossing from the cast is slightly down grade, while the crossing is level, and the highway has' a down grade west of the 'tracks. As you approach the railroad crossing from the east, the view of the railroad to the north or right is unobstructed, hut the situation is different on the left or south, which is in the direction of Baltimore;. The view to the south is obstructed first by a frame dwelling facing the highway and then by a large globular shaped 'tree, with compact and dense foliage, whose limbs are close to the surface of a slight embankment along the railway. The trunk of the tree is off the appellant’s right of way and about twenty-four feet from the nearest rail of *172 the tracks. The house, the tree, with its low hanging branches, and some bushes, shut ou't the view to- the south completely until the line of sight cleared the western -outlines of the tree.

The appellee testified that he could not obtain a view of the track to the south from his truck until he was at a point in the roadway ten feet- from the east rail of the northbound track, wbicb would put tibe front of tbe truck wheels five feet away from this rail. It does not appear that the appellee, made any actual measurements, and other witnesses estimated this distance to be fifteen or eighteen feet. A photograph taken at fifteen feet escapes 'the obstruction of the view, but at sixteen feet tbe view is shut out. As the lens of the camera is not as high from the ground as the eyes of the truok driver, it is quite probable that the- true distance is not quite fifteen feet, because of the rounded contour of the tree, although the engineer estimated the distance of the truck from the crossing, when he- first saw it coming from behind the tree, as fifteen feet.

fit was a dangerous crossing, and for many years an electrie crossing bell or gong had signaled a warning for the approaching train. This bell was of the standard type, twelve inches in diameter, and was at the top of an upright metal piece from seven to eight feet high, which was located on the west side of the tracks and near the south line of the highway, and forty feet from the east rail of the north-bound track. In addition to tbe- bell, the appellant bad for some years provided two watchmen, who had a watchman’s box along tbe side of tbe crossing bell. At -tbe approach of a train tbe bell would sound, and the watchman, during the period of his duty, would' step out in the highway with his warning sign. H-e would not be in the roadway unless a train was approaching. The watchmen were on duty at the crossing only during the day time, and, until June- 25tih, 1921, one began at six o’clock in tbe morning, and a watchman was kept -on duty -continuously until tbe same hour in tbe afternoon. Tbe appellant, with the closing of the schools, *173 relieved one of the watchmen, who was on duty from two to six o’clock, and kept the other watchman, whose new' hours were from half-past seven in the morning to half-past three in the afternoon. This change took place on June 25th, 1921, and was in operation on the day of the accident. The testimony was that the effect of this change was to have the watchman on duty during those hours when the train movement was heaviest. The change increased by four hours the period during which the hell was the sole method of warning. The hell started to ring for a north-hound train when it was thirty-five hundred feet from the crossing, and did not stop ringing until the rear end of the train had cleared the crossing.

The accident happened on July 14th, 1921, at about quarter of five in the afternoon. The express train, known as the Chicago Limited, made up of engine, tender and four coaches, was traveling on schedule time, at about thirty-eight miles an hour, and had reached a point about seventy or eighty feet from the crossing, when the engineer saw the appellee drive from behind the tree towards the Beaver Dam crossing. The engineer applied the brakes, but, of course, the train could not be stopped in time, and the right front comer of the pilot bumper struck the truck at the front wheel. The air brake on the engine was. released because the collision had broken off some of the air pipes on the engine, hat the brake on the cars was not affected, and the train was stopped, hut not so quickly. The pilot was torn loose from the engine, letting the cowcatcher drop on the track. The appellee was injured, and he was picked up- unconscious, seventy-live or eighty feet north of the crossing.

As the regulations of the appellant did not require it, the whistle was not blown for the crossing, but the trainmen testified that the engine hell was rung, although neither the appellee nor any other witnesses heard it. There is no question, however, that the crossing hell was in good working order, and rang the alarm for the approaching train. The appellee testified that he did not hear the ringing of the bell; *174 and attributed bis failure to the noise made by the movement of his heavy truck, with side hoards, over the rough surface of the road.

The appellee, 'Charles E. Yingling, forty-seven years of age, was bom in the neighborhood of the crossing and had been familiar with it for thirty years; having traveled over it frequently. He was employed by the Beaver Dam Quarry Company as a motor truck driver, and had been running a •truck, back and forth, over this crossing nearly every day for almost four years before the accident. On some days he used the crossing two or three times daily. He knew that the crossing bell was there, and for what purpose, and knew, it worked. All of the material circumstances have been stated except the appellee’s own description of the accident, which will now be given.

The plaintiff was driving a five-ton Packard truck westward along the Beaver Dam Eoad on July 14th, 1921. He stopped at the entrance of York Eoad, which was three hundred feet east of the crossing, and then started forward. He took the emergency off his truck, and let it drift down the slight grade to th'e crossing. He described the accident in this way: “I was just looking out, looking and listening for the bell, and I was looking for the watchman, and I just pulled my emergency brake up1 every once in a while, just going-slow, almost creeping along. I was not going over three miles an hour. I will testify to that on a stack of Bibles as big as this building, and I was holding my emergency, just going slow as I could. I looked for the watchman and seen no watchman. I thought everything was all right; there was no watchman there, no watchman out. I thought to myself, well, he is in the box. I just took the reverse brake off — the emergency brake off, and just kept on drifting. That is the last I knowed. I never knowed no more until I woke up in the hospital.”

To the question what was he looking for, this; answer and testimony was given: “A. Looking for the watchman and listening for the bell. You could not look south of the *175 Beaver Dam Road down the railroad track, on account of tho house and the tree.

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 36, 148 Md. 169, 41 A.L.R. 398, 1925 Md. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-yingling-md-1925.