Veenstra v. United Railways & Electric Co.

129 A. 678, 148 Md. 512, 1925 Md. LEXIS 61
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 11, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 129 A. 678 (Veenstra 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
Veenstra v. United Railways & Electric Co., 129 A. 678, 148 Md. 512, 1925 Md. LEXIS 61 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Urneb, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff, while in a drunken stuper, was ejected from the defendant’s oar1, on which he was traveling as a passenger, and was soon afterwards injured by another car on the same railway. The question is whether the circumstances proved were such as to admit of a rational inference that the employees of the defendant, in their removal and disposition of the plaintiff, failed to exercise the care for his safety which his condition required. At the close of the evidence for the plaintiff, the ease was withdrawn from the jury, and the exception to that action is the principal one presented by the appeal.

It was about ten o’clock at night when the plaintiff boarded at Highlandtown the defendant’s car bound for Sparrows Point. Although he had been drinking freely and was intoxicated, he appears to have entered the car unassisted. He sat down on a longitudinal seat close to the rear entrance. It is inferable from the evidence that his fare was collected. While his memory of the incident was very uncertain, he testified that he mentioned Sparrows Point to the conductor *514 as his destination. He was removed from the car when it reached Dhindalk Junction about half past ten. Several passengers who boarded the car at an intermediate station were called as witnesses for the plaintiff and describes his conduct on the car and the circumstances of his removal.

The first witness testified that “when he got on the car he saw the plaintiff, * * * sitting on the end of the long seat on the left-hand side of the ear, in the rear; that the plaintiff was sitting there mumbling to himself, and was in a very-helpless condition, * * *. The foundry was the next stop and we went by that. That was a free zone and it was that time' that the conductor started to take up the fares from Dundalk to 'Sparrows Point, * * * he was about halfway through the car when the car came to a stop at Dundalk Junction * * *. The conductor came back and took hold of this fellow and says, ‘'Gome on — here’s where yon get off’; and drug him to' the door; and when he got there; as if it had been pre-arranged, the motorman was Waiting there to help the conductor; and after they got him off the car and let go of him, he fell down. Then they took hold of him again and took him to' the shed, and the conductor stayed there till the motorman got on the car, and then the conductor ran, got on the car and the car pulled out.”

The witness further stated that the plaintiff was sleeping when approached by the conductor; that he was not asked for any fare, that he was unable to walk, or to rise from the ground when he fell- after being taken off the car, that it was a dark night and there were no lights in the- place to which he was removed, and that he made an effort to' return to' the car after the conductor left him in the waiting shed. A written narrative of the occurrence, given by the witness on the fallowing day, and produced by the defendant in the course of his cross-examination, included statements that the conductor “asked this man where he wanted to get off. The man said, ‘St. Helena’ (a station which the oar was just leaving). The conductor gave the motorman one bell. The car did not stop but continued on. The conductor then weut *515 to the motorman and said something to him. When the car reached Dundalk Junction it came to a stop. The conductor then came back and took hold of the man, who was asleep, and dragged him to the door. The man woke up and conductor said ‘This is where you get off.’ The motorman was on ground. They took man off. lie was very drunk. He could not stand alone. Several men on car made some re*marks to conductor about why didn’t he take the man somewhere so he could be taken care of. The crew then carried man in the waiting station and sat him down. Both then jumped on ear and started away. The man got up and started towards car. This is last I saw of him. It was very dark at junction as no lights were lit.”

The testimony of the plaintiff, after indicating the quantity of intoxicating liquor he had consumed before he started home on the defendant’s ear, was in part as follows: “I remember I went in a street car. After I came in the street car, I paid my fare or some one else paid it — there was no trouble about the fare that I know of. I had a seat and after a while the conductor comes back and picks me up, and I thought the man wanted a fare', and I tried to get the fare out of my pocket. Then I heard some one shout, ‘I will pay that man’s fare.’ I don’t know what it was about, and I know I wanted to' pay my fare. I know that I was drunk aud helpless in mind and body. * * * I know I bad my fare, and I know they threw me off, but 1 don’t know where I was. I know I went on the ground, and I tried to get up when I saw a light' — I tried to get bade to the light, and then I went down. Q. Could you get up ? A. No-, sir. * * * Q. Where did you want to go ? A. I wanted to go to Sparrows Point. Q. Do> you remember telling any one that ? A. I do remember I was asked where I wanted to go and I said to Sparroys Point. Q. To whom did you say that ? A. To the conductor when I come on the car. Q. And that is the last yon can remember until what time? A. After I fell down then, I don’t know any more until I came to in the hospital, and they told me that I had my foot off. * * *.” On cross- *516 examination the plaintiff was asked: “Don’t you remember getting on the street car? A. I thought I was getting on the street car, and I don’t know that there was anything wrong with me. 'The next day when I came to, I thought and tried to think what went on then. I thought when I came on the car, I was all right; and I know that, when I had been on the car I kept getting worse and worse. * * * Q. Do you remember after you got off the car? A. Yes, sir. Q. What kind of a place were you in ? A. I have no idea. * * * I saw lights and I wanted to, get back, to the lights. * * * I know that, after three or four steps, I went down. Q. What lights are you talking about that you saw?' A. Lights from the street car. * * * I wanted to, get back. I take a couple of steps and drop again, and I don’t know any more afterwards.”

A passenger on a car of the defendant, bound for Sparrows Point, next succeeding the one from which the plaintiff was ejected, the difference in the time of arrival, of the two cars at Dundalk Junction being about fifteen minutes, testified that'when the car in which he was liding had nearly reached the junction, “the motorman gave a sharp, blast of his whistle and the car came to a sudden stop1, probably in a little over the length of itself; that he saw a man (the plaintiff), lying under the street car between two dead rails; that the motorman and conductor carried the plaintiff around to the back of the car and laid him on the cinder platform at the station; that the plaintiff was bleeding and he seemed unconscious and his leg was crushed; that it was dark at the point where this accident happened and the only light there was was that from the lights in the street car. * * * Q. How far away from that station was it that this man was injured ? A. Really where the car run over him — that rail, I would judge was about fifteen feet or possibly a little further from that station. * * *” On cross-examination he testified that “he thinks the front wheels of the car were all that ran over him,, and that the motorman made a quick stop of the car and that he was not running.very fast.”

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 678, 148 Md. 512, 1925 Md. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veenstra-v-united-railways-electric-co-md-1925.