Smith v. Blue Ridge Transportation Co.

191 A. 66, 172 Md. 42, 1937 Md. LEXIS 210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 17, 1937
Docket[No. 10, January Term, 1937.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 191 A. 66 (Smith v. Blue Ridge Transportation Co.) 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
Smith v. Blue Ridge Transportation Co., 191 A. 66, 172 Md. 42, 1937 Md. LEXIS 210 (Md. 1937).

Opinions

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, a passenger on the bus line of the defendant, a common carrier, from a judgment on a verdict directed for the carrier, in a suit for damages for personal injury sustained by a fall while leaving the bus at the end of the journey.

The plaintiff testified that on or about the 28th day of April, in the year 1933, he purchased a ticket entitling him to transportation in the defendant's motor bus from Frederick, Maryland, to Baltimore City; that he entered the bus at Frederick, passing to a seat which extended entirely across the rear of the bus, and taking a position in the left-hand corner of the bus looking forward, as did four passengers occupying seats with him in the rear; that the width of the aisle between the permanent seats, through which the rear seat passengers passed, was slightly less than fourteen inches; that, when he entered the bus, none of the temporary seats were in use, and there was no obstruction in the aisle.

The uncontradicted testimony shows that the temporary or aisle seats consist of comparatively small horizontal sitting surfaces, with backs to be unfolded from the seats, and raised behind them, and that the auxiliaries are bolted to the side of the permanent seats. When not in use, the backs are folded down on the seats, and the whole then folded up from the side against the edge of the larger or permanent seats, and held in that position by a coil spring, under tension. According to the testimony of A.F. McDonald, the operating manager of the defendant, the spring, surrounding a rod running *Page 45 through its center, is compressed back into a casting when the seat is put in service, and sits over a button on the casting which holds it in position. A pin on the end of a coupling is designed to keep the spring in line; and when the aisle seats are pulled down, the backs raised from them stand in the way of folding up at the sides, and thus keep the seats in position for use.

It is shown that passengers taking the bus after the plaintiff were accommodated with aisle seats, and those seats, including one immediately in front of the rear seat on the right side, looking forward, were turned down by the chauffeur for this purpose.

When the bus reached its terminal in Baltimore, the forward passengers, including those occupying the aisle seats, proceeded to the front exit, thereby apparently clearing the aisle of the temporary seats. These were followed by three of the passengers who had occupied the rear cross-wise seat with the plaintiff.

According to the plaintiff, when the crowded condition of the bus was relieved, he made several steps to the right, in order to reach the center aisle. He then took a step forward with his left foot, and, just as he did so, the rear aisle seat, attached to the rear permanent seat on his right, dropped from its then folded position and tripped him as he brought his right foot forward; whereby he fell in a squatting position, with the seat wedged between his legs, resulting in serious injury. It is further testified by the plaintiff that the seat was, at the time of the accident, loosely hanging at an angle, and that, when he pushed it with his knee, it did not spring back in normal folded position. With respect to the cause of the fall, testimony on behalf of the plaintiff went no further, except that at the time of the accident he was "looking forward and above the level of the seat."

Oliver E. Murphy, on behalf of the defendant, testified that on the occasion of the accident he drove the bus from Frederick to Baltimore, and that it had come through from Pittsburgh; that, as a part of his duty, he inspected it before leaving Hagerstown, and found no defects in any *Page 46 part of the equipment; and that the bus reached Baltimore on schedule time. He further testified that the auxiliary seat, then exhibited in the trial court, which was shown to be the identical seat alleged to have been the cause of the accident, had been in use several years before the date of the accident, and that no complaint about its functioning had ever arisen. The witness added that when he inspected the bus at Hagerstown all the auxiliary seats were in working order; "he pulled them down and let them go back to see whether the spring which holds them up was working right"; the next day he drove the bus, it being the first time it was used after its arrival in Baltimore. He inspected it again, before leaving Baltimore, found no defects in any of the seats, and then made his return trip with it. It was lighted as usual when it reached the terminal, and while the passengers were disembarking.

The operating manager of the defendant company testified that as manager he had charge of all maintenance and equipment; that there was a coach card in each bus, which was marked by the driver to indicate any defects found by him. The method of supplemental inspection, he stated, was to make the same when a bus had registered 1,500 additional miles, more or less. His records showed, as to the bus particularly involved, that it had been inspected on April 19th, 1933, and on May 3rd, 1933, and that both inspections showed the condition of all of the seats of the bus as being in safe mechanical order. So far as the witness knew, no complaint from passengers, as to any defect in the operation of auxiliary seats, had been called to his attention during the period since 1929, when the bus in question was put in operation.

During the course of the trial, the plaintiff attempted to testify as to his earning capacity, based upon wages which he received nearly a year before the accident, as a field cost accountant; he being at the time of the accident unemployed. Objection to a question along this line of inquiry was sustained by the trial court, and this forms the basis of the first exception in this appeal. *Page 47

At the conclusion of the evidence, both that of the plaintiff and defendant, the defendant offered a demurrer prayer for a directed verdict, which was granted, and the plaintiff offered four prayers, all of which were rejected.

The ruling of the trial court on these prayers is presented by the plaintiff's second exception.

Dealing with the above-mentioned exceptions in their inverse order, it may be stated as a general principle of law that defective action in any part of the transportation equipment of a carrier, injuring a passenger, is prima facie presumed to be due to neglect of the care required of the carrier. "Under such circumstances, the carrier must show that the accident happened in spite of the exercise by him and his servants, of the greatest degree of care and diligence, practicable under the circumstances. In other words, although the burden of proof is on the plaintiff to show that the injury was occasioned by the negligence of the defendant, yet he discharges this burden and makes out a prima facie case, by showing that the accident happened through the failure of some of the means used by the carrier in making the transit." Balto. O.R. Co. v. State, useof Mahone, 63 Md. 135, 136; Balto. O.R. Co. v. State, use ofHauer, 60 Md. 449; Balto. O.R. Co. v. Worthington,21 Md. 275; Balto. O.R. Co. v. State, use of Coughlan, 24 Md. 84;Steinberg v. Pullman Co., 156 Md. 329, 144 A. 363.

In Western Maryland R. Co. v. Shivers, 101 Md. 391,61 A. 618

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Bluebook (online)
191 A. 66, 172 Md. 42, 1937 Md. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-blue-ridge-transportation-co-md-1937.