Washington, Baltimore & Annapolis Electric Railroad v. Fitch

152 Md. 137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 21, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 152 Md. 137 (Washington, Baltimore & Annapolis Electric Railroad v. Fitch) 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
Washington, Baltimore & Annapolis Electric Railroad v. Fitch, 152 Md. 137 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Marguerite Fitch, the appellee, was on January 12th, 1925, a passenger on a train operated by the appellant, which left Annapolis for Baltimore at Y.20 A. M. When the train reached its Baltimore terminal, Miss Fitch, in attempting to leave the car .in which she had been riding, slipped on the steps leading to the station platform, fell, and was injured. She attributed the accident to the icy, slippery [139]*139condition of the car steps, and asserted that her injuries were directly caused by the negligence of the appellant in allowing the steps to be in that condition, and called upon it to compensate her for them, and upon its refusal to c!o so, she brought this suit. The ease was in due course tried before the court and a jury, and the verdict and judgment being for the plaintiff, the defendant appealed.

At the close of the testimony in the case the plaintiff offered three prayers, of which the court granted the second and third, and the defendant seven, of which the court granted the third, fourth and sixth, and refused all the other prayers of both plaintiff and defendant, and overruled special exceptions filed by the defendant to the plaintiff’s second prayer; and those rulings are the subject of the first and only exception presented by the appeal. The real question in the case is raised by the appellant’s two and a half and fifth prayers, which were refused, and by which appellant sought to have the court instruct the jury that there was in the case no evidence legally sufficient to show that plaintiff’s injuries were due to defendant’s negligence; and in dealing with those prayers it becomes necessary to review the evidence! relating to that question.

The specific negligence charged is that appellant failed to use that degree of care which as a common carrier of passengers for hire it was bound to use in keeping the steps, which appellee was obliged to use in leaving its car, in a safe condition, but that in default of that duty it permitted snow and ice to accumulate thereon so as to render them unsafe, in consequence whereof the plaintiff was injured. The evidence material to that question is in substance this:

Miss Fitch testified that when she attempted to leave the car at Baltimore the steps were “slippery,” but she did not testify to their condition when she entered it at Annapolis. She said that there was no falling weather that day so far as she recalled, but that it had snowed the day before, and was cold.

Edwin Engel ke, who also boarded the train at Annapolis, [140]*140testified that when Miss Fitch attempted to leave the car at Baltimore, there was ice and snow on the steps which she was required to use in leaving the car. He further said that there was no “falling weather,” but that there had been snow a couple of days before, and that it was very slippery.

Miss Helena Hyde, who was also a passenger on the same train, testified that when it reached Baltimore she saw ice on the steps which she used to leave it, and she too said that there was no falling weather at the time. This was all the testimony offered for the plaintiff in connection with the question before us, and it may be noted that no one of these witnesses attempted to describe the condition of the car steps when it left Annapolis.

For the defendant, John T. Basil, conductor on the car in which plaintiff was a passenger, testified that before it left Annapolis the steps were cleaned off, and that it was a good job, but that at that time it was “drizzling and freezing.”

John L. Colbourne, the motorman who operated the car, said that the weather was a “drizzle rain and freezing”; that between Annapolis and Academy Junction passengers entered on both the right and left side, and from that point to Annapolis they entered on the right side exclusively; that there was snow and slush on the ground, and that passengers “tracked” the snow in the cars; that before it left Annapolis the ice and snow was cleaned from the steps and sand thrown on them, that the train was made up of a front motor car and a trailer, and that there were fifty or fifty-five passengers on the front motor ear on that trip, and thirty-five or forty on^the trailer; that at times when the ice is “very bad,” it is sometimes cut off before the passengers leave the train at the terminals.

John Urban testified that it was he who cleaned off the steps of the car before it started on its trip from Annapolis to Baltimore, that he cleaned two sets of steps on each side of it, that before he “put the car out on the road he shoveled [141]*141off the steps, took the ice scraper and scraped off all ice accumulated under the snow,” and that after he “got that off” he pnt on rock sand and salt to cut that ice.

Reduced to its lowest terms, this evidence supporting plaintiff’s claim tends to show these, facts: that when appellant’s car, in which the appellee was riding at the time she was injured, left Annapolis, there was snow on the ground, that the weather was cold, hut that it was not raining or snowing, that before being sent out from the Annapolis terminal all steps used to enter or leave it were cleaned of ice and snow, that between Annapolis and Baltimore it stopped at various stations, and that persons entering at such stations “tracked” snow in the car, and that when it reached Baltimore ice and snow had accumulated on the steps and they were slippery, and as a consequence of that condition that the appellee, using them to leave the car at the Baltimore terminal, slipped, fell and was injured, and that when under such conditions the steps become very slippery and unsafe, the company at times cuts off the ice and snow from the steps before the passengers are discharged at the terminals, but that iv did not do so on the occasion in question.

Appellant contends that these facts are not sufficient in law to permit the inference that appellee’s injuries were occasioned by any negligence on its part, and that therefore its fifth and two and one-half prayers should have been granted. But in view of the decision in Hanway v. Balto. & O. R. Co., 126 Md. 535, we cannot accept that conclusion. It is unquestionably the general rule, supported at least by the weight of authority, that to require a railroad, operating its. trains through a storm, to keep its platforms and approaches to its cars free at all times from ice and snow, would impose upon it an unreasonable and impracticable burden, which would seriously interfere with the adequate and efficient discharge of its duties as a common carrier, and the force and justice of that rule have been recognized in this state. Hanway v. Balto. & O. R. Co., supra; Trader v. Balto. C. & A. R. Co., [142]*142106 Md. 635. But while that is true, it is also true that where the carrier has a reasonable opportunity to discover and correct unsafe conditions caused by the deposit of ice and snow on the steps, platforms, and other approaches to its cars, and fails to do so, it is negligent. Hanway v. Balto. & O. R. Co., supra.

These general principles appear to be conceded, but the dispute -between the parties is in their application to the facts of this case, and that question turns mainly upon the legal effect of the testimony of appellant’s witnesses that when the train left Annapolis the steps were clean and safe. Appellant assumes that because no witness contradicted that evidence that it is undisputed and must be taken as true.

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Related

Hanway v. B. O.R.R. Co.
95 A. 160 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1915)
Baltimore, Chesapeake& Atlantic Railway Co. v. Trader
68 A. 12 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1907)
Palmer v. . Pennsylvania Co.
18 N.E. 859 (New York Court of Appeals, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
152 Md. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-baltimore-annapolis-electric-railroad-v-fitch-md-1927.