State Ex Rel. Trenary v. United Railways & Electric Co.

122 A. 20, 143 Md. 112, 1923 Md. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 16, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 122 A. 20 (State Ex Rel. Trenary v. United Railways & Electric 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. Trenary v. United Railways & Electric Co., 122 A. 20, 143 Md. 112, 1923 Md. LEXIS 88 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the twenty-first day of May, 1921, Samuel M. Trenary became a passenger on an automobile omnibus running from Baltimore to Frederick. When the automobile reached a point between Hilton Street and Beechwood Avenue on the Frederick Road, where a driveway from the property of Mr. Oscar Coblentz crosses the tracks of the United Railways and Electric Company, and connects with the travelled part of the Frederick Road, it stopped, in accordance with a notice previously given the driver, to take on two passengers, Miss Coblentz and Miss Hood, who were going to Frederick, and *115 the driver asked Mr. Trenary to. get out of the automobile and take another seat, in order that the two ladies might sit together. He complied with the request, and took a position between the automobile and the railway tracks., but so near the tracks that an east bound car of the appellee, running over these tracks, struck him, and so badly injured him that he died on June 31st, 1921. Thereafter, on July 29th of the same year, this suit was. brought for the use of Evelyn G. Trenary, his widow, and Suzanna J. Trenary, his infant daughter, on the theory that his injuries, and consequent death, were occasioned by the negligence of the appellee. The case was tried in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City, and, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, that court directed a verdict for the defendant, on these grounds, namely, (1) that there was. no legally sufficient evidence to show that the accident was caused by any negligent act of the defendant, (2) that the uneontradicted evidence showed that the negligence of the deceased directly contributed to the happening of the accident which resulted in his death, and (3) that his own negligence was the direct cause of his injuries. Judgment was in due course entered upon the verdict rendered in obedience to that direction, and from that judgment the present appeal was taken.

The record contains but- one exception, which relates to the court’s rulings on the prayers, which submitted the propositions to which we have referred, which formed the basis of the court’s action. Since those propositions rest upon the theory that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to show that the accident complained of was due to any negligence of the defendant, but that it does show conclusively that it wa.s caused by the negligence of the deceased, it is necessary, in disposing of the questions thus submitted, to refer to. all material facts bearing upon the accident.

The Frederick Road was originally the Baltimore and Fredericktown Turnpike Road, and by several grants from the turnpike company, the defendant acquired the right “to *116 lay open ‘T’ rail track construction” on that part of it on which the accident occurred. In the exercise of the rights thus obtained, the defendant located and constructed a double “T” rail trade on the northern part of the Frederick Road at that point. That part of the road lying to the south of the tracks has been improved by the State Roads Commission, which acquired the interest of the turnpike company in the turnpike in 1914, subject to the rights of the defendant therein, and is used as a State road for pedestrian, vehicular and general travel. At the place where the automobile stopped, the general direction of the road is east and west. North of it, and abutting on the defendant’s right of way, is the property of Mr. Ooblentz. Access from Mr. Ooblentz’s residence to that part of the Frederick Road used for general traffic is furnished by a macadamized driveway, which crosses the tracks of the defendant, and which was constructed by it. The surface of that driveway is nearly level with the top of the railsi, and slopes from the southernmost rail to its junction with the main road south of the tracks, at which point it is about twenty-five feet wide.

The automobile in which Mr. Trenary was a passenger reached that driveway between twenty and thirty minutes after eight o’clock in the morning, and there, in response to a request of Mrs. Ooblentz, it stopped to receive the two passengers (Miss Ooblentz and Miss Hood, who were staying at her home), at a distance variously estimated at from five to seven feet from the south rail of the east bound track. As the automobile came to a stop Mrs. Oscar Ooblentz, Miss Naomi Ooblentz and Miss Hood approached it from the Ooblentz property. As they approached, Mr. Trenary, at the request of the chauffeur, who- was sitting in.the rear of the automobile, vacated his seat in order to make room for Miss Ooblentz and Miss Hood, and went out of the rear door of the automobile. The chauffeur had in the meantime left the machine to get the baggage of his prospective passengers, and after he had deposited it in the car he turned to help *117 them into the machine. As the three ladies approached the ear tracks, two cars were approaching the crossing over the defendant’s tracks, one going east and the other going west. The west hound ear was so near that they waited for it to pass. At that timo the east hound car, which Mrs. Coblentz saw, was about 300 feet away. They crossed the track and, as Mrs. Coblentz took a position betwen the car trades and the automobile, she noticed that the east bound car was about ninety or ninety-two feet away. At that time there were grouped between the automobile and the car tracks five persons, Mrs. Coblentz, Miss Coblentz, Miss Hood, the chauffeur, and Mr. Trenary. What their respective positions were the record fails to definitely disclose, although it does show that the two ladies were in the act of entering the automobile, the chauffeur was assisting them, Mrs. Coblentz was standing near the track, and somewhere to the east of her and near the track was Mr. Trenary.

The chauffeur had helped Miss Coblentz into the automobile and was in the act of helping Miss Hood in, when the east hound car grazed Mrs. Coblentz and struck Mr. Trenary, indicting upon him the injuries which resulted in his death.

Miss Coblentz was not aware of the approach of the east bound car until after’ it struck Trenary, the chauffeur had no recollection of having seen it until after1 the accident, Mrs. Coblentz saw it when it was about ninety feet away but, at the instant it passed, her attention was drawn to what was going' on in the automobile and she failed to realize the danger of her position until after it had passed. Of the nine eye witnesses of the accident, one testified that on a former occasion he had said that he had a faint recollection of having heard a hell, another was not asked whether he heard a hell, while the other seven testified that they heard no bell or other warning given of the approach of the car, although all of them appear to have been near enough to have heard such warnings had they been given, seven being either in or near the automobile, one in the east hound car, and one about ninety yards away when the accident occurred.

*118 The speed of the car was variously described by the several witnesses who observed its approach as “fast,” “pretty fast,” “a right fair speed,” “fifteen miles an hour,” one of them referred to its passing him as a “whiz by,” and another said he had never seen a ear run so fast in his life.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 A. 20, 143 Md. 112, 1923 Md. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-trenary-v-united-railways-electric-co-md-1923.