State Ex Rel. Emerson v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

190 A. 231, 171 Md. 584, 1937 Md. LEXIS 197
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 12, 1937
Docket[No. 67, October Term, 1936.]
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 190 A. 231 (State Ex Rel. Emerson v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) 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. Emerson v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 190 A. 231, 171 Md. 584, 1937 Md. LEXIS 197 (Md. 1937).

Opinion

*588 Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The action brought in the appeal at bar is for the use of the mother of Pearl V. Emerson, a young girl of sixteen years, who, while riding as a passenger for hire in a motor bus of Howard R. Poe, was killed by the collision of the bus and a through express train of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, a public carrier, at a highway railway crossing in Rockville. The defendants are the owner of the motor bus and the railway corporation. The case against both defendants was submitted to the jury, which rendered a verdict against the owner and one in favor of the corporation. The appeal is taken by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff asserts there is error in the adverse rulings on the testimony and the prayers; and the railroad company, one of the defendants, maintains the case should have been taken from the jury on its two refused prayers, on the theory that no primary negligence was shown on the part of the corporation. At the outset, it may be said that there was sufficient negligence shown on the part of the driver to charge the owner of the motor bus with legal responsibility for the accident. Furthermore, the young woman killed was a passenger for hire, who was without fault, and the negligence of the driver was not imputable to her. Philadelphia W. & B. R. Co. v. Hogeland, 66 Md. 149, 7 A. 105; Balto., C. & R. Co. v. Turner, 152 Md. 216, 228, 136 A. 609.

Under a local statute of Frederick County, where the case was tried, the exceptions reserved by both sides are for review on appeal, but not necessarily so when there is a reversal without a new trial. Code Pub. Loc. Laws (Flack) art. 11, secs. 84-86. Ehrhart v. Board of Education, 169 Md. 668, 182 A. 424. So, the chief questions are whether the testimony tended to show primary negligence on the part of the carrier, and, if so, was that question properly submitted to the jury by the granted prayers. There are also some subsidiary rulings on the testimony for consideration.

Howard R. Poe is a carrier for hire in the operation *589 of motor busses for the transportation of school children over the public highways of the state. While so engaged, his agent, on April 11th, 1935, drove a motor bus from Williamsport, Washington County, along a public highway, which crossed at grade in the municipality of Rock-ville, Montgomery County, the double railway tracks of the Baltimore & O'hio Railroad Company, a steam railway company engaged! in the transportation of passengers and freight for reward. The long bus was filled with twenty-seven high school children in the care of their teacher. They were on their way to College Park, and reached, in the late afternoon, the south side of the railway crossing at Rockville, and drove northward to their destination, where they were to see a chemistry show and attend a lecture. The bus left Williamsport at 4:45 p. m. and arrived at College Park at 7:15 p. m.

After the close of the program at College Park, the bus and its passengers returned by the route they had come. The driver was on the left front single seat operating the bus. An aisle ran down the center the length of the bus with seven seats for two passengers on either sid!e. The seats were occupied by two of the pupils on every seat, except one on which the teacher sat, with two of her pupils, back of the driver. Pearl Emerson was on the last seat, next to the window, on the left side. The fifth window on the left of the bus was partly open, as probably was another. The entrance to the bus was by a door, with a glass window, on the right side opposite the driver’s seat. There was a window on the left, opposite to the driver’s seat, and back of this window and the door on the right were a line of windows on each side of the bus.

The party left College Park about half past ten o’clock at night. It rained intermittently and as the bus approached the railway crossing it was drizzling enough to require the wiper of the windshield to be used. The driver had wiped off the moisture which had condensed on the windshield in the interior of the bus, and, except for the space in front of the driver which was kept clear by the *590 automatic wiper on the outside and by the driver on the inside, the rest of the windshield and the closed windows were covered with rain or moisture which obscured the vision.

The headlights of the bus were burning. After leaving College Park, the bus had been operated at a moderate speed, and the driver, who observed that he was approaching the railway crossing at Rockville, reduced! the speed to ten or twelve miles an hour. He did not stop, but drove the bus at this speed south on the railway crossing. The driver increased the speed while on the crossing, and the bus had gone over the first or north and westbound track and had partly cleared the second or south and eastbound track, when a fast through train, which was running east on the south track, on time, and at the rate of fifty-eight or fifty-nine miles an hour, struck, on the crossing, the bus on its right side, about three feet from its rear. Eight Children on the right rear seats of the bus, and six on the left rear side, were killed. Pearl V. Emerson was among them.

The accident occurred at about half past eleven o’clock. The teacher was awake and so were some of the students. They had traveled far and it was late. There was no singing, nor loud noise, nor was any one talking to the driver, and every one was seated. So, the passengers were doing nothing to divert the attention of the driver in the operation of the bus.

The driver knew of the railway crossing. The first notice he 'had of its proximity was given by the state highway commission, which had caused! to be erected its standard railway crossing sign on the west side of the highway, so as to confront the traveler on the right lane of travel with a timely warning. From this point, as the bus continued to move southward towards the railway crossing, there were no buildings on the right or west of the highway to obstruct the view of the railway tracks to the west of the crossing, except a shed for waiting passengers and a tool shed. The passenger shed was 189 feet,, and the tool shed 775, west of the western edge of *591 the macadam of the highway. Both sheds were about fourteen feet from the northernmost rail of the tracks, and were built parallel with the railway. The passenger shed fronted twenty-six feet on the railway tracks, and was nine feet wide and ten or eleven feet high. The tool shed faced 28.5 feet on the tracks and was ten feet four inches wide.

On the driver’s right as he went south there was, along the west side of the highway, a bank whose crest along the highway was from four to five feet, until near the railway right of way it sloped abruptly to a level strip about fourteen feet wide, which extended westward along the northern rail of the westbound track. The general slope of the ground west of the highway was toward the railway, the surface was higher north of the passenger shed than at the roadside. The railway tracks west of the crossing extended 1,150 feet in a straight line, and then went towards the north on a curve into a railway cut.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A. 231, 171 Md. 584, 1937 Md. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-emerson-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-md-1937.