Philadelphia & Baltimore Central Railroad v. Holden

49 A. 625, 93 Md. 417, 1901 Md. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 49 A. 625 (Philadelphia & Baltimore Central Railroad v. Holden) 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
Philadelphia & Baltimore Central Railroad v. Holden, 49 A. 625, 93 Md. 417, 1901 Md. LEXIS 45 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 10th July, 1899, Charles Holden was injured while crossing the track of the Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Rail Road Company. The point where the accident happened is a private crossing called Holden’s Lane. Suit was brought by 'Holden against the Rail Road Company in the Circuit Court for Cecil County to recover damages. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $2,500.

During the course of the trial the plaintiff offered to prove “by himself and several other witnesses that the whistle was not blown at New Valley, which is a public crossing 1032 feet •east of Holden’s Lane. The whistling post, however, is about 2,000 feet from that point. The admission of this testimony *419 is the ground of the first three exceptions. The other exception relates to the rulings upon the prayers.

It appears from the evidence that on the day when the plaintiff was injured he left his father’s house on the north side of the railroad about ten o’clock in the morning to go to Rowlandville. To reach his destination he was compelled to cross the track. He testifies that he was driving a gray horse in a butcher wagon, the curtains of which were painted white. The horse was gentle and accustomed to the cars. In approaching the track from the north side on Holden’s Lane, the view is clear until within forty-six feet of the track. From that point for a distance of thirty-nine feet the view is obstructed by the bank and bushes, and this condition continues until within seven feet of the track. So that, as the plaintiff said, the view of the railroad is so obstructed at that point that it is impossible to see east, the direction from which the train approached, until the horse’s feet were on the track. As the plaintiff passed over the thirty-foot space from which he said the view was unobstructed, he listened and looked in the direction from which he was expecting the train to come, if it had not already passed, but he neither heard nor saw anything, and he therefore went on very slowly, at a speed of about a mile an hour, and drove upon the track without once stopping to listen.

A number of questions were discussed, but we think it necessary to consider only the two controlling ones of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and the question presented by the first three exceptions.

In the first place we may remark that by conceding the plaintiffs first prayer the defendants admitted that there was evidence to go to the jury on the question of contributory negligence of the plaintiff, as well as of the negligence of the defendant, and therefore there was no error in rejecting the defendant’s first and second prayers, the first of which asked the Court to take the case from the jury because there was no legally sufficient evidence of defendant’s negligence; and the second of which asked the Court to instruct the jury that *420 the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, because his own negligence directly contributed to his injury. In other words having by their concession of the plaintiff’s first prayer, which then became the law of the case, admitted that there was a state of case presented proper for the consideration of the jury, it cannot be allowed to ignore the conceded prayer, and ask to have the case withdrawn from them. It was so held in the recent case of the B., C. & A. Ry. Co. v. Kirby, 9 1 Md. 316. McSherry, C. J., there said: “In conceding a prayer there is involved, of necessity, a concession that there is sufficient evidence to support the hypothesis of the prayer.” It is clear, therefore, we think that there was no error in rejecting the defendant's first and second prayers. But it was also contended that for the same reason, if for no other, there was no error in rejecting the defendant’s sixth prayer. By this prayer the Court was asked to instruct the injury that if they find that the plaintiff approached the track in the manner testified to, and that his view on his near approach to it was in any manner obstructed, that then it was the duty of the plaintiff before going on the track to stop, look and listen for the train, and that if he violated this rule by failing to stop, he was guilty of contributory negligence, and cannot recover.

The plaintiff’s first contention is that the language of this prayer is too broad, but we cannot agree with him. We think it clearly announces the established rule, which we said in Hogeland's case, 66 Md. 149 “is one which the Courts ought not to relax, as its enforcement is necessary as well for the safety of those who travel in railroad trains as for those who travel on the common highways.” In the case just cited the rule is thus expressed, “if the track in both directions is not fully in view in the immediate approach to the point of intersection of the roads, due care would require that the party wishing to cross the railroad track, should stop, look and listen before attempting to cross.” Good's case, 75 Md. 537; Price's case, 87 Md. 188; Watson's case, 91 Md. 344. The prayer we are considering declares that if the view was in any manner obstructed, it was the duty of the plaintiff to stop, &c. *421 This is equivalent to saying that if the track was not “fully in view,” that is to say if there is an obstruction of the view by a hill, a bank, trees or in any manner, due care requires the traveller on the common highway to stop and listen before attempting to cross.

It was also suggested by the plaintiff that if this prayer was correct in other respects it was error to have granted it without adding the qualification that if the engineman saw or by the exercise of due care and diligence could have seen the dangerous position of the plaintiff in time to avoid the injury, the plaintiff was not to be prevented by his own negligence from recovering. But there is no evidence in the case that would justify such modification. The evidence and the only evidence as to when and the circumstances under which the plaintiff was seen by the trainmen, is given by the engineer and brakeman. The former testified that when the engine was about six hundred feet from the crossing, he saw the plaintiff on the lane about fifty feet from the track driving very slowly towards the railroad. He was perfectly safe where he was, and the wit. ness naturally and properly thought he would stop, Harty v. R. R., 42 N. Y. 468; B. & O. v. Savington, 71 Md. 590; M. C. R. R. v. Neubur, 62 Md. 391, but in the language of the witness “he jumped right on the railroad.” It was then for the first time that the plaintiff was in a perilous position and it was then confessedly too late to rescue him. The brakeman did not see the plaintiff until just as he was struck.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A. 625, 93 Md. 417, 1901 Md. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-baltimore-central-railroad-v-holden-md-1901.