Washington & Rockville Railway Co. v. Sullivan

110 A. 478, 136 Md. 202, 1920 Md. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 110 A. 478 (Washington & Rockville Railway Co. v. Sullivan) 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 & Rockville Railway Co. v. Sullivan, 110 A. 478, 136 Md. 202, 1920 Md. LEXIS 50 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Briscoe, T.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff brought those suits in the Circuit Cburt for Montgomery County on the 31st day of May, 1918, against the defendant companies to recover damages for personal injuries received b-y her, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants.

The cases were removed to the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County for trial and, upon motion in that Court, they were consolidated and upon trial, before a jury, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00).

From a judgment entered on this verdict, the defendants have brought this appeal.

The questions for o-ur consideration are presented by eight exceptions taken and reserved by the defendants in the course of the trial, on rulings of the Court upon the evidence, the *205 prayers and to the overruling of certain motions submitted" by the appellants at the conclusion of the case.

The first, second and third exceptions relate to the rulings of the Court on the admissibility of evidence to establish the relationship, and joint liability of the two companies foi the injuries received by the plaintiff as alleged by the declarations, in the case.

It was admitted, in the course of the trial, that the accident occurred upon the line of the Washington and Rock-ville Railway Company of Montgomery County, and the evidence objected to was admitted for the purpose of showing that the relationship! existing between the defendant companies was such as to establish the joint liability of the Washington Railway and Electric Company, the other defendant in the casa

The question of the liability of these companies Was passed upon by this Court, in the recent case of Pugh v. Washington Railway and Electric Company, in 134 Md. 196, under a similar state of facts;, and for the reasons stated in that case, there was no error in the rulings of the Court on the first, second and third exceptions in this case.

The fourth and fifth exceptions relate to the Court’s rulings on the prayers.

The plaintiff presented one prayer which was granted» The defendants offered eighteen prayers and of these, the first, second, third and fourth prayers were rejected. The plaintiff conceded and the Court granted the defendants’ fifth to the eighteenth prayers, inclusive.

The plaintiff’s first prayer was the usual damage prayer, presented in similar negligence cases, and was a proper prayer, under the facts of the case.

The defendants’ first, second, third and fourth prayers were in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and as the questions of negligence and contributory negligence were clearly questions for the jury, under the evidence in the ease, these prayers were properly refused.

*206 The facts set o-ut in the record, and on which the rulings of the Court below are based, briefly stated, are these: The appellants operate an electric railway from the District of Columbia to Rockville, Maryland. The plaintiff resides near Friendship Heights, Maryland, and on the 26th of October, 1917, wasi a passenger on one of the defendants? ears from the District of Columbia to her* home at Friendship- Heights, Maryland. The appellants have two- car tracks at Friendship Heights, one called the northbound track, running toward Rockville; and the other called the southbound track, running toward Georgetown, D. C.

The plaintiff testified that, when the car stopped at Friendship Heights, she got off on the east side of the northbound track and as she lived on the west side of the tracks, it was necessary for her to cross both tracks in order to reach ''her home'; that before crossing she stopped and looked north, tap 'the southbound track and saw no car coming, she pro-needed to cross the southbound track, when and where she was struck. She also testified in substance that it was about 6 o’clock in the evening, and that the car that struck her had no lights on it, and the fender of the car was up. The street lights were all lighted.

The plaintiff testified in part as follows: That at the time of the accident she had on this occasion a very particular .reason for being careful, and I thought of that reason and warned myself to be careful. I looked down — by “down” I mean toward Washington, and I saw the Rockville car and' an automobile lighted coming. Then I looked up the track. I had a perfectly clear vision of the track, and I saw distinctly an automobile coming lighted, and no car; I saw nothing that showed that there was any car on the track. So I started, to cross, and when I got in betwen the tracks I realized that the car had stopped just a few feet this way where the ground is very raised in the middle of the track. My ankle is more or less- weak, and I hesitated just a second *207 whether I should walk back a little bit to ike south, towards Georgetown, and cross there.

And just while I hesitated for a second — the Rockville car makes a very loud noise, and it clanged and made a whistle and blew, and that made me take immediate action. I again looked up the track and I saw the automobile coming very close, but I did not see any car, and I started across the track, and I was not more than maybe a couple of steps probably across when the automobile passed, and just as it passed, simultaneously, just the same minute, just as it went by me, I saw this car, and I said, “My God, a car without a light.” I screamed then and I saw that I could not get out of the way; I-was just too big to do any wild jumping. ’So 1 dropped my packages and just threw, tried to throw my coat over my head, and then it hit me. I thought I was knocked into eternity. There was just one thought that I had when I was hit, a kind of wonder — I thought it would strike me in my feet, but instead of that it hit me in my body, and I wondered where the fender was. I thought the fender would knock me down, but it hit me clean right in the body, 1 don’t know where, but knocked me in the air. I don’t know, but I think I was partially unconscious or entirely so when I hit the ground, for I had all sorts of wild visions. I thought I was dead. I thought certainly I was dead, and then I was. brought back to partial consciousness by another blow that hit me right hard some place. I don’t remember much after that. I was thrown on the Rockville track, and after that, I don’t recall much.

The witness, Mamie Scott, testified that she saw the accident; that it was about 6 o’clock in the evening, that the street lights were lighted, and it was right dark, and that you would have to have a light to see plainly; that the car that struck the plaintiff did not have any lights on it, nor headlight, nor any light on the inside of the car, and that she did not hear any signal, no bell or whistle, as the car approached the station. • '■ ' V

*208 James Sullivan, a son of the plaintiff, testified that he saw the accident and was only a short distance from his mother, when she was struck by the car, there was no light on this car, but a light on the Rockville car coming from Georgetown and there were no signals by the car that struck his mother.

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Bluebook (online)
110 A. 478, 136 Md. 202, 1920 Md. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-rockville-railway-co-v-sullivan-md-1920.