Schier v. Wehner

82 A. 976, 116 Md. 553, 1911 Md. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 A. 976 (Schier v. Wehner) 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
Schier v. Wehner, 82 A. 976, 116 Md. 553, 1911 Md. LEXIS 110 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit instituted by Esther Wehner, an infant, by her father and next friend, John J. Wehner, to recover damages for injuries received on October 31, 1910, from bein'? run over by a wagon belonging to the defendants Oscar B. Seiner and Cari E. Schier, partners in the milk business, conducting their occupation under the name of the “Hygcia Dairy,” while the wagon was being driven by an employee of the firm named Carl Schmidt. The record contains but two bills of exceptions, of which the first was reserved to the rulings of the trial Court on the prayers, and the second was to the action of the Court in permitting, at the time when the first bill of exceptions was signed, certain physical measurements of the driver, Carl Schmidt, to be incorporated in the record. The appellant conceded that this second bill does not raise any ruling which could be regarded as reversible error, and this admission makes consideration of this bill unnecessary.

At the trial the only evidence offered, was that adduced on behalf of the plaintiff. At its conclusion the plaintiff presented two prayers, of which the first was directed to the right of the plaintiff to recover, and the second laid down the rule for the measure of damages. The defendant likewise offered two prayers, by the first of which the Court was asked to instruct the jury that there was no evidence *555 in the case legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover, and the second was the usual prayer on contributory negligence.

Tlie trial Court granted both of the plaintiff’s prayers, and refused both of the defendant’s.

Since the first prayer offered by the defendants amounted to a demurrer to the evidence, it is necessary to consider the testimony offered, to determine the correctness of the ruling of the Court upon the first prayers of the plaintiff and defendants respectively, hearing in mind that the essential element requisite for a recovery is some act of negligence either of commission or omission on the part of the defendants or their servant.

On the morning of the day named the infant plaintiff, who was a child just past her fifth birthday, was sent by her mother to a grocery store on the opposite side of Streeper street from her home to get some soap. Having obtained the soap, the little girl started to return. At the same time the dairy wagon of the defendants, driven by their servant Scffimidt, was moving north on Streeper street just above Orleans street, or somewhere between 35 and 60 feet distant from where the child was about to cross. Streeper street at this point is about 25 feet in width and paved with vitrified brick. The next that was seen of the child she was lying face down with her waist line distant about three feet from the curb, on the side of the street nearest her home, and the wagon had passed on to a point some 14 or 15 feet beyond where the child was lying.

Hone of the witnesses who testified saw the child actually run over by the wagon of the defendants, and, therefore, none of them is able to say precisely how the accident did take place. While, of course, it is not an absolute essential to establish negligence that there should have been an eye witness to the accident, United Railways v. Cloman, 107 Md. 688, it is necessary that there he some evidence indicative of negligence in the circumstances surrounding an occurrence, either antecedent to or coincident with the happening *556 of the accident. Thus in the case of the United Railways v. Carneal, 110 Md. 211, where a child of three rears was struck by an electric car, there was positive evidence adduced by the plaintiff to the effect that the motorman of the car was looking at the building’s on the side of the street, and ran his car past, without seeing one would-be passenger; and in the case of the City Passenger Railways v. McDonnell, 43 Md. 534, where a child of two years was run over by a horse car, there was evidence that the attention of the driver was occupied by a young lady in the doorway of a house on the opposite side of the street from that from which the child approached; and in the case of McMahon v. N. C. Railway. 39 Md. 438, in which a child between five and six years of age was run over, it affirmatively appeared that a string of freight cars which had been stationary for some five hours was started -without a signal of warning of any kind. In each of these cases there -was positive evidence of negligence independent of the accident itself.

Let us compare the facts in the cases cited with the ease under consideration. The witness Mamie Blessing testified to seeing the wagon coming up the street, and that the horse was trotting, but she last saw the wagon just after it had passed' Orleans street distant some sixty feet from the point of the accident, and turning to her work did not see it again until after the child had been run over. The witness Grover testified that as he turned into Streeper street from Orleans, he saw the wagon coming up Streeper street, and that as he turned the corner the wagon was about in the middle of Orleans street, that “the driver was not driving fast nor was he driving slow,” that “he was not walking,” but according to the further testimony of the witness he had had time to walk up Streeper Street from Orleans to the store where the plaintiff had bought the soap and enter t-he store before the plaintiff had left the store to return to her home. From this evidence it is impossible to conclude that the driver of the wagon was proceeding at any improper *557 rate of speed, and neither of these witnesses, nor any of the other witnesses in the case, give any evidence tending to show that the driver was not giving proper attention to his team as he drove np the street, or that he was not in a position to see, or did not see persons on or crossing the street, and whether they were in a position of danger so as to impose upon him the duty of stopping. What does appear from the evidence, and all that -appears is that while the servant of the defendant was proceeding up the street, the plaintiff started to cross; that she had crossed over at least twenty feet of the space between curb and curb, and passed in front of the approaching team, hut whether she was struck and knocked down by the horse, or whether becoming frightened she endeavored to spring forward, slipped and fell underneath the vehicle, or how the accident in fact occurred, there is no evidence whatever. It has been frequently said in this State, that the hare fact that an injury has happened, of itself and apart from all surrounding circumstances, can not authorize an inference that it was caused by negligence. To assume that, is to assume the very fact required to he proven; Joyce v. Flanigan, 111 Md. 499; or as was said in the case of B. & O. R. R. v. Black, 107 Md. 666: “All that is certain is that the plaintiff was injured in some way, and the plaintiff asks that the jury he allowed and in the absence of all explanatory evidence to infer that some act of a negligent character for which the defendant is responsible cause the injury sustained. Ho ease has gone to that extent, and no known principle can he cited to sustain such a position.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A. 976, 116 Md. 553, 1911 Md. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schier-v-wehner-md-1911.