Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington R. v. Hand

61 A. 285, 101 Md. 233, 1905 Md. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 61 A. 285 (Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington R. v. Hand) 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 & Washington R. v. Hand, 61 A. 285, 101 Md. 233, 1905 Md. LEXIS 91 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There is one bill of exceptions in the record now before us, and the only questions presented by it for review are the rulings made by the trial Court on the prayers for instructions to the jury. The suit was brought by- the appellee, Sophia B. Hand, against the appellant, The Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad Company, to recover damages for a personal injury sustained by the appellee. The facts which need be stated and about which there is no controversy can be briefly set forth; but there is one particular that will be noticed presently in which there is a contest as to a presumption arising from them. On June the twenty-sixth, nineteen hundred and three, the appellee and her husband purchased from the appellant company’s ticket agent at Havre de Grace round- *235 trip tickets to Baltimore and return. They went to Baltimore and on the afternoon of the same day they took a train on the appellant’s road in the last-named city to go back to their home. They reached Havre de Grace shortly after five o’clock, p. m. When the train stopped at the station the appellee and her husband arose from the seat which they occupied and proceeded towards the front door of the car to alight therefrom. There were several persons in advance of them, and the appellee followed closely behind her husband. Whilst the persons in advance of the appellee’s husband were descending the car steps, he passed over to the rear platform of the car immediately in front of the one in which he and his wife had been riding, and descended the steps of that car so as to get on the station platform before the appellee alighted, and so as thereby to be able to assist her in alighting. Before she stepped down from the car platform the train lunged forward some five or six feet and then suddenly stopped, whereby the appellee was thrown from the car platform, down the car steps on to the station platform and, according to the testimony, was considerably hurt and injured.

Upon this state of facts the appellee asked eight instructions and the appellant requested the Court to give three. Ail of the prayers of the appellee, except the eighth, were granted; whilst the first and second of the appellant were also granted. The case then went to the jury and a verdict was returned for the appellee and upon the verdict a judgment was subsequently entered. From that judgment this appeal has been taken.

We need not set out the first, second, third and fourth instructions given at the instance of the appellee, because they are almost literal transcripts of those which were granted in the case of Anderson v. P., W. & B. R. R. Co., 72 Md. 519. As they were held in that case to be free from objection it is unnecessary to discuss them again. The fifth instruction, however, is obviously erroneous. By it the jury were told that they “were not entitled to presume that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence, but that fact, if relied upon by the defendant, *236 must be proved by the defendant by preponderating testimony, and if the jury find that if their minds are in a state of equipoise as to whether she was guilty of negligence or not, then in such event they cannot find that she was guilty of negligence.” In the Anderson case there was an instruction to the effect that in order to defeat a recovery on the ground of contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part, the defendant must satisfy the jury by preponderating evidence of two facts; first, that the plaintiff was negligent; and secondly, that such negligence directly contributed to the injury. The same instruction was given in the case at bar. It is manifest that the fifth instruction is a radical expansion of the principle asserted in the Anderson case. Under the principle there asserted the defendant could rely upon the plaintiff’s own evidence, or the evidence adduced by the plaintiff’s witnesses, to prove contributing negligence; and from that source alone might satisfy the jury of the existence of the two requisite facts above indicated. But under the fifth instruction given in the pending case, contributing negligence, to be available, “must hepioved by the defendant,” even though the plaintiff had conclusively established the fact that it did exist and did directly occasion the injury constituting the cause of action. The instruction introduces a new doctrine in the law of negligence. Heretofore, certainly in this jurisdiction, and we imagine in every other where negligence is not apportioned, if the plaintiff in making out a case distinctly and clearly showed that his own negligence directly contributed to the ■ happening of the injury which befell him, the defendant was under no obligation to adduce any evidence at all, but might satisfy the Court or jury from the plaintiff’s own showing that contributing negligence barred a recovery. If the-instruction we are now reviewing is sound, this can no longer be done; for even though the plaintiff may by establishing his own contributing negligence, prove himself out of Court the defendant will still be responsible unless it can adduce evidence to establish what has already been proved, viz: contributing negligence; because under this instruction contributing negligence to be available as a defense *237 ‘must be proved by the defendant.” Contributing negligence will defeat a plaintiff’s action. It can, therefore, make no possible difference whether that negligence is proved by the plaintiff or by the defendant. It is its existence, and not the party by whom its existence is proved, that is material. It is the thing itself that defeats the action, and not the mere accideitt that it happens to be proved by the one or the other of the opposite parties. It is just as complete a bar to the action when its presence is revealed in the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, as it is when disclosed in the testimony adduced by the defendant. Inasmuch, then, as the negligence of the plaintiff directly contributing to the happening of the injury sustained, bars a recovery, it would seem a priori to follow, that it is absolutely of no consequence by which party to the suit that negligence is proved. Consequently, it was error to instruct the jury that to be a defense such negligence mtistbQ proved by the defendant.

The error just indicated is not cured by any other instruction. If the fifth instruction, which embodies the above-mentioned error, were in conflict with other instructions that fact wrould of itself, constitute a ground for reversing the judgment. B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Blocher, 27 Md. 277. If there is no such conflict there is no modification or correction of the error. It is true the sixth instruction after setting forth certain facts hypothetically defined the right of the plaintiff to recover, “unless the jury believe from the evidence that she was guilty of want of ordinary care, and that such want of ordinary care was a direct cause of her injury.” But this in no way changed the principle laid down in the fifth instruction. The two are in accord.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 285, 101 Md. 233, 1905 Md. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-baltimore-washington-r-v-hand-md-1905.