State Ex Rel. Chenoweth v. Baltimore Contracting Co.

6 A.2d 625, 177 Md. 1, 1939 Md. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 6, 1939
Docket[No. 51, April Term, 1939.]
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 6 A.2d 625 (State Ex Rel. Chenoweth v. Baltimore Contracting 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
State Ex Rel. Chenoweth v. Baltimore Contracting Co., 6 A.2d 625, 177 Md. 1, 1939 Md. LEXIS 226 (Md. 1939).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Pennsylvania Railroad Company leases from the Northern Central Railway Company a railroad coal yard at the foot of Clinton Street in Baltimore City, which it uses for the transfer of coal from its cars to ships tied up at a pier adjacent to the yard. The yard, known as No. 2, is equipped with; railroad tracks, switches, a tipple, an elevated railway over which small hopper cars carry coal from the tipple to the ships, and other equipment designed to facilitate the transfer.

The whole yard is divided into a “gravity yard” and an “empty yard.” The tracks run generally east and west. Loaded cars enter the yard from the west and are pushed into the “gravity yard” by a locomotive, and brought to a stop on a grade sloping west. Then they are released one by one and permitted to run by gravity west past the tipple, where they are switched on to a track running to the tipple, and there engage a device *5 known as a “dolly,” which pulls them east upon the tipple. There by certain clamps the cars are seized, overturned, and emptied into the hopper cars, which carry the coal west again to the loading ship. After the freight cars are unloaded they are allowed to run by gravity eastward into the “empty yard,” where they stand until a sufficient number accumulate to require their removal from the yard. The tipple is an elevated structure higher than the surface of the yard and also higher than the elevated railway, so that all cars leaving it run east or west by gravity.

There is one track running east from the tipple to the “empty yard” which, at a point known as the “clearing point,” branches off into other tracks in that yard.

To avoid blocking the “empty yard” it is necessary to take empty cars beyond that point. In moving the empty cars to the “empty yard,” one car will be permitted to drift easily down a grade on the track leading to the “empty yard” to some point west of the “clearing point,” and held there by a mechanical brake, and as other cars are emptied they will be run behind the first car, until the operative decides that the “draft” is large enough to be run into the “empty yard.” The whole process of transferring the coal is done, not by the railroad company, but by the Baltimore Contracting Company, Inc., and for that purpose the entire yard is under its control and supervision. But to insure the safe and adequate operation of its track, cars, and equipment, the railroad company at all times employs its own servants and agents, and charges them with the duty of seeing that its cars and equipment are' in safe and serviceable condition. On September 21st, 1937, it employed for that purpose two inspectors, Oliver D. Chenoweth and John E. Thompson, both of whom had been in the same employment there for many years. Their duties required them to inspect the cars, to make minor repairs, to discover defects and the absence of essential parts of the braking mechanism and other equipment of the cars, and their work naturally required them to be, at times, in, on, under, and between the cars.

*6 On the morning of that day the body of Chenoweth was found crushed under the trucks of a standing car in the “empty yard.” There were no eyewitnesses of the accident, but, assuming that the position of his body permitted the inference that his death was caused by the negligence of the Baltimore Contracting Company, Inc., the surviving widow and children of Chenoweth brought this action against that corporation to recover compensation under the provisions of Code, art. 67. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the court directed a verdict for the defendant, and from the judgment on that verdict this appeal was taken.

The record submits seventy exceptions, of which one relates to the granting of the defendant’s demurrer prayers, and the others to rulings on the admissibility of evidence.

The nature of the case requires this court to value all the evidence to determine whether it is legally sufficient to support an inference that the accident which resulted in the death of Oliver D. Chenoweth was caused by the defendant’s negligence. In that inquiry, as of course, the truth of any and all evidence and all proper and legitimate inferences deducible therefrom tending to support plaintiff’s claim is conceded.

That the purpose and significance of the evidence may be more readily understood, the conflicting theories of the parties as to their respective rights and liabilities will first be stated.

The appellant’s contention is that the position in which the decedent’s body was found permits the inference that the accident which caused his death resulted from some sudden, violent, and unexpected movement of the train of cars under which he was found, and on which he was at the time employed in the performance of his duties as a car inspector, that there was no warning of the movement, and that the decedent was under no duty to anticipate it, but that the defendant, knowing that the decedent might be at work on one of the cars of the train, was under a duty (a) to so operate the cars as to *7 avoid endangering him, or, (b) if the normal operation of the cars necessarily created a danger, to warn him thereof, and that his death was caused by a breach of that duty.

The appellee contends (1) that no inference of negligence can be drawn from the mere fact that the decedent was killed by a car under its control, (2) that there is no legally sufficient evidence of any unusual or negligent operation of the car which caused the death, but that on the contrary the uncontradicted evidence shows that it was operated in the normal and accustomed manner with which the decedent had long been familiar, (3) that in the absence of certain protective warnings and signs which the decedent for his own protection was required by the rules of the railroad company and the custom of the defendant to give, it was under no duty to anticipate his possible presence on the train, and (4) was not therefore under any duty to warn him of a usual and customary movement which was an ordinary incident of the work but which might endanger him if in fact he was on the train.

The evidence in the case is consistent with the following statement of fact:

In the course of transferring the coal from the cars to a ship, the loaded cars are brought into the “gravity yard,” and left standing on a grade sloping towards the tipple. They are released one at a time, and permitted to run by gravity beyond and west of the tipple, they are then pulled eastward up a grade to the tipple, unloaded, and then allowed to drift eastward on a track sloping from the tipple down to the “empty yard.” In a given movement, the first empty car is stopped on that slope west of the clearing point and held there by a mechanical brake, until other cars accumulate behind it, held in position by the first car. When the train or draft has a sufficient number of cars, a brakeman employed by the defendant releases the brake on the first car and permits the whole train to drift into the “empty yard,” which is level, and to stand there with the brakes re *8 leased.

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Bluebook (online)
6 A.2d 625, 177 Md. 1, 1939 Md. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-chenoweth-v-baltimore-contracting-co-md-1939.