United Railways & Electric Co. v. Sherwood Bros.

157 A. 280, 161 Md. 304, 1931 Md. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1931
Docket[No. 21, October Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 157 A. 280 (United Railways & Electric Co. v. Sherwood Bros.) 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
United Railways & Electric Co. v. Sherwood Bros., 157 A. 280, 161 Md. 304, 1931 Md. LEXIS 34 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of plaintiff on a verdict for damages to a gasoline truck resulting from a collision between the truck and a car of the defendant. The accident happened in the claytime, at a private crossing in the country on the York Eoad in Baltimore County, at the private entrance into the Towson Nurseries, south of Towson.

According to his testimony, the driver of the truck was familiar with this crossing and considered it dangerous. He was going north up the York Eoad, and when about fifty to seventy-five feet south of the entrance he looked around to see whether a car was coming and he did not see any; all the street car tracks at that time were on the right side of the York Eoad going north, and the roadway for vehicles on the left side, “so that you had to cross both car tracks to get into the Towson Nurseries.” When he looked back at the place mentioned, he could see as far as the crest of the hill, about three ordinary squares, or nine hundred feet. “When I seen it wasn’t any car coming I started on down, and the truck that I had had an awful long wheel base, and in order to make this turn * * * I would have to make a dive to the left side of the road, and there was right smart traffic on the road that morning; when I say I liad to go to the left side of *306 the road in order to do that I mean I would have to pull out to the left side of York Road to make the turn into the driveway, and I didn’t do that because there was a lot of south bound traffic. So I took the most of the left of the road as I dared to do, and as I gets down almost to make the turn, I stopped. I figured I might make the turn and I might not, and when I stopped, the other fellow coming south stopped, and when all of the traffic had practically stopped, I starts on in, and I looked around to see whether or not the car was coming and I starts over the track. There was no car coming either way at that time. Well, after I got in I couldn’t make the turn. The front wheels got to the last track on the east side, the north bound track. * * * It is an awful narrow driveway, and I stopped still, and I looked around in the back, and two or three machines were behind me, and the man that stopped before I turned in was still standing1 there, and I beckoned for the man behind me to come down, and two or three machines came by, and the man coming south on the York Road beckoned for me to go on in, and when he did, I opened my brake — just throwed it back a foot or two to throw my wheels around, and I started in over the track. After my front wheels got over the track and in the Towson Nurseries driveway I looked up like this (indicating) and I see the car, and when I seen the car that is all I can remember. It was mighty close then. I’ll say from five to ten feet, I’d say, it looked to me, right on top of me. After I had first started in over the tracks my truck was not at any time back off of those tracks altogether, in other words, part of my truck was always on part of those tracks.”

Plaintiff’s counsel then asked: “Q. They weren’t on the northbound tracks, but they were on the southbound tracks ? A. I never got off of the northbound tracks. Q. Your front was still on the northbound track ? A. Yes.”

The witness then proceeded: “And then after I backed back this foot or two to be able to swing my wheel and started up again, after I had turned my wheel and started up this second time the front of the truck was right across the one northbound track, the rail, I mean, the one on the *307 west side, the front of the truck was across the west rail of the northbound track. When I was struck the front wheels were in the Towson Nurseries driveway.” The witness was struck by a car of the defendant on the northbound track. He testified that as you come over the crest of the hill southwardly (he evidently meant northwardly) you run steadily downgrade past Terracedale Road, which is a private entrance south of the private crossing on which the accident occurred. That Hillsdale Road is a public road just north of the private entrance to the nurseries, and this public road also leads to the nurseries. “The road I was trying to take into the Towson Nurseries is just a narrow crossing and a private road that runs into the nurseries grounds.” This witness further testified that he looked twice for approaching cars, onee at the distance of fifty to seventy-five feet from the crossing, and again just before he got on any of the tracks, before he started to go over. “At that time I told you I changed gears, I looked to see if the car was coming. * * * The next time I looked up for the street car was when I was across the tracks. I mean across the northbound track, and then I saw the car about five or ten feet away from me.” He was moving at about five miles an hour. The rails were T-rails and constructed for rapid travel. The uucoutradicted testimony is that the car was moving at about twenty-five miles an hour.

Edward Cranston, another witness for the plaintiff, testified that he had just come out and was standing in front of a house along the driveway about fifty feet east from the tracks. When he first saw the truck the whole truck was on both tracks, headed into the nurseries. “At that time I could see to my left down York Road about one hundred and fifty feet. (He afterwards explained that distance was estimated from the house, and that the distance from the crossing was about a hundred feet.) There was nothing coming-north on the street car tracks within my line of vision at that time. I walked off the porch and I seen the truck crossing the car tracks, hut he couldn’t make the turn; and I was standing and watching him; he had to hack up a couple feet *308 to make his turn, and just as he backed up a couple feet to make his turn, and just as he backed up and started off again, just as he started off, I seen the street car coming from behind the house that was in my view; then the street car was one hundred and fifty feet away (as explained above one hundred feet from the crossing), when I saw the street car one hundred and fifty feet (one hundred feet from the crossing), the front wheels of the truck were about the center of the northbound track. * * * Then the street car kept coming, making no effort to stop, and hit the truck right behind the cab, pushed it eight or ten feet, and then it turned over.” The witness afterwards explained that he did not mean to say that he could see whether or not the motoxanan was making an effort. “What I really mean to say is, as far as I could observe, there wasn’t any chaxige in the speed of the car. I never saw the motorman. I only saw the street car momentarily, before the collision occurred.”

The motorman testified that as he came down the grade he did not turn the power on, he was coasting and going just the average speed, twenty-five miles an hour. “That is T-rail there, raised rails on cross ties, with stone ballast.” That the private driveway where the accident happened is about seventy-five or eighty feet nox’th of Terracedale; that the length of his car is forty-two feet; that when he first saw the truck the car was south of Terracedale, about three hundred feet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 A. 280, 161 Md. 304, 1931 Md. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-railways-electric-co-v-sherwood-bros-md-1931.