Yates v. Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington Railroad

82 A. 27, 23 Del. 472, 7 Penne. 472, 1906 Del. LEXIS 10
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 3, 1906
DocketNo. 125
StatusPublished

This text of 82 A. 27 (Yates v. Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yates v. Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington Railroad, 82 A. 27, 23 Del. 472, 7 Penne. 472, 1906 Del. LEXIS 10 (Del. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Handy:

If the Court please, yesterday morning I gave [473]*473written notice to the counsel on the other side to produce certain rules of the railroad company, and I now ask for the production of those rules because I propose first to put upon the witness stand the plaintiff and to show by him that he was aware of this rule of the railroad company which prohibits a train’s passing on a parallel track a passenger train stopped at a station receiving or discharging passengers. After proving his knowledge of the rule, our contention of law, well established, will be that he had a right to infer that this rule would be obeyed and to rely upon it in coming out from a railroad train.

Mr. Gray:—We have the rules here, but I do not think this is the proper time to ask for them. He can ask for them when he has introduced the evidence under which the rules become pertinent and proper evidence in the case.

Lore, C. JY.—Suppose you put the witness on the stand, Mr-Handy, and bring him up to that point.

Mr. Handy thereupon placed the plaintiff upon the stand, who testified fully respecting the cause of the accident in which he was injured and the nature and extent of his injuries. He then examined the plaintiff as follows:

Q. Did you know at the time of this accident anything about rules of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company prohibiting one train passing another while discharging or taking on passengers at a station?

(Objected to by Mr. Gray, of counsel for defendant, as leading and suggestive.)

Mr. Handy:—I withdraw the question and ask for the production of those rules under the notice served upon counsel for defendant. My friend says he has them here, and I insist that he either produce them or refuse to produce, in which event I will proceed to prove the same by secondary evidence.

Mr. Gray:—I refuse to produce them because counsel for plaintiff has proved nothing showing the relevancy of the rules in this case, and they are not admissible at present. When my learned friend has shown the relevancy of the rules he can demand their production. I have them here waiting for him.

[474]*474Lore, C. J.:_For what purpose do you ask for the introduction of the rules, Mr. Handy?

Mr. Handy:_I have alleged in this narr that the defendant company negligently ran a freight train by a passenger train which had stopped at a station to discharge passengers. I have proved that this was a passenger train of the defendant company, that it had stopped at a station to discharge passengers and' that at that time while it was so discharging passengers a freight train passed it in violation of the rule of the company forbidding its servants doing that very thing. It is plainly relevant.

Lore, C.J.:_You aver in your declaration that there were such rules ?

Mr. Handy:—No sir; I have averred that they negligently ran this train. The rule is a matter of evidence, not a matter of pleading.

Pennewill, J.:—You mean that it is negligence for the company to move a train in violation of its own rules?

Mr. Handy:—Yes sir.

Lore, C. J.:_I understood your purpose was to show that there were such rules and that this man knew of the same and that he had a right to presume that the company would obey its own rules.

Mr. Handy:_Yes sir. The books say if there are public rules of a company, it is a presumption that passengers know them.

Lore, C. J.:—You say you propose to connect the existence of that rule with the knowledge of the plaintiff so as to affect his conduct?

Pennewill, J.:_Have you shown yet a condition of things which would constitute a violation of the rule?

Mr. Handy:_I have proved that this passenger train stopped there to discharge passengers, and I have proved that while it was stopped there a freight train passed by it.

Lore, C. J.:—We think you should produce the rules, Mr. Gray.

[475]*475Mr. Gray:—(Producing a small book) Here it is open. We have produced the rules, sir.

Mr. Handy:—It having been produced on notice, it is now in evidence, and I desire to read it to the jury.

Mr. Gray:—I claim the rule is not pertinent.

Lore, C. J.:—When you produce it and don’t object on the ground of pertinency, it is admitted.-

Pennewill, J.:—Is it not now in evidence?

Mr. Gray:—No sir; we were instructed to produce the rule.

I object to the rule being admitted in evidence or read to the jury, on the ground that it is not pertinent.

Lore, C. J.:—You ought to have made that objection before you handed in the book.

Mr. Gray:—I did make the objection and the Court overruled me and ordered me to produce, and I ask for an exception to that ruling of the Court.

Mr. Handy:—He is too late to ask for the exception now.

Pennewill, J.:—Did you object to the production of the rule because it was not pertinent?

Mr. Gray:—Yes sir.

Lore, C. J.:—Before you handed it to him?

Pennewill, J.:—I understood your objection was that counsel for plaintiff had not shown that a freight train was passing at the time?

(At the request of the Court, the stenographer here reads from the stenographic report touching the matter in controversy.)

Pennewill, J.:—Do you mean, Mr. Gray, that the plaintiff has not shown that a train was approaching the station where the passenger train was discharging passengers?

Lore, C. J.:—We overrule your objection. We think it is admissible.

(The same is marked by the stenographer “Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1.”)

[476]*476Mr. Handy:—I desire to read this rule to the jury.

(At the request of Mr. Gray, Mr. Handy agreeing, the witness retires from the room while the rule is being read to the jury.)

Mr. Handy:—Under the sub-head of “Movement of Trains,” Rule 114 of the defendant company is as follows:

“A train approaching a station where a passenger train is receiving or discharging passengers must be stopped before reaching the passenger train.”

Q. Did you or did you not know on the 24th of November 1903 of any rule of the defendant company with regard to other trains passing by a passenger train discharging passengers at a station?

(Objected to by counsel for defendant as leading and suggestive.)

Lore, C. J.:—He is merely asking if he knew of the existence of a rule. We think that is admissible.

A. All that I know was what I have heard other people say. I have never read the book of rules. I did not have it and never used it. I have only heard railroad men say.

By Mr Gray:

Q. (Interrupting witness) Don’t say what you heard other people say.

(Mr. Gray objects to the question as hearsay.)

Lore, C. J.:—We think he has, a right to answer the question ; that he has a right to state from what source he got his information as to the existence of rules.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Giles v. Diamond State Iron Co.
8 A. 368 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A. 27, 23 Del. 472, 7 Penne. 472, 1906 Del. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-philadelphia-baltimore-washington-railroad-delsuperct-1906.