75 Md. 320 | Md. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellees shipped five hundred bushels of wheat hy the appellant’s railroad, to Georgetown. At Antietam Station, on the Shenandoah Valley Railroad, a Shenandoah Valley car, No. 118, was loaded and was taken to Shenandoah Junction, where it was delivered to the appellant’s agents on the 29th of May, 1889, and was taken hy them to Washington Junction, and placed-on a sidetrack. Washington Junction being a distributing point for Washington City,.cars consigned to Washington remained there until ordered to be brought in. Appellees were notified of the wheat being at Washington Junction, and they .were aware of the. custom of the railroad to keep Washington freight at Washington Junction till orders were given to bring it in. Whilst this wheat remained at Washington Junction a flood came which submerged the appellant’s tracks at that point, and the wheat was substantially destroyed, for it did not bring enough when sold by the road to pay the freight on it. The appellees had refused to receive it and the appellant had to sell it. This suit was instituted to recover damages for the loss of the wheat occasioned, as the plaintiffs claimed, by the negligence of the appellant’s agents.
No question is raised, on the ground of delay in transportation, in this Court; that was settled by a ruling of the Circuit Court to which there was no exception, and is conseqently not involved in this appeal. The sole question in the case is whether there was any evidence in the case legally sufficient to go to the jury to charge the appellant’s agents with negligence respecting the wheat whilst it was in their care and custody at Washington Junction, through which it was ruined by the flood.
On cross-examination this witness further stated, that to get the cars out it would have been necessary to cross the culvert five times; “that when the train returned about 7.30 he was in the office telegraphing; not telegraphing to any place in particular; that he noticed a short time after the train returned, that the river was rising rapidly; and then noticing that the cars on the siding might be in danger from the rising flood, he asked the conductor and the engineer of the Frederick train to go down and bring the cars up on high ground; but they declined to do so, alleging there was danger in crossing the culvert, which was then under water, and for fear the water would extinguish the fire in the engine. ”
On the cross-examination of the conductor, who was offered as a witness for appellant, and testified that when he was asked by the agent to get the cars out, he thoirght it too unsafe for the attempt to be made to cross the culvert, for it was then under water and would put out the fire in the engine; he testified that some time after the return of the train to Washington Junction he walked about halfway to the culvert, and noticed the side track next to the river undermined, and the water was striking against the bed of the railroad imder the end of the ties, and was not up to rails at culvert; and Virtue, the engineer, on cross-
How long after the Frederick train had come back it was that the station agent asked the conductor and engineer to get the cars out does not appear. The agent says “shortly after,” and the conductor says “a short time.” These are indefinite expressions, and may mean a longer or a shorter time according to the subject-matter with reference to which they are used, or according to the particular ideas, of the person using them. As to what the conductor meant we have some means of deciding. He says in another part of his testimony, it was “between eight and nine o’clock in the morning, and not long after the train had come back.” This witness had stated' that at 6.45 he had started with his train for Washington, and having gone two or three miles on his way, finding the water on the track too deep to be safe to jiroceed had backed train to the Jimction across the culvert, but did not notice the condition of things at the culvert at that time. When the train got back to the Junction the agent testifies that it was about half-past seven o’clock. The conductor says that it was between 8 and 9 o’clock when he was asked to take cars out. Putting it midway between these hours, there was a space of two hours between the return of the train to the Junction and the request to get the cars out. Now the agent knew the water was rising. He knew it was doing so alarmingly, and that this train had been compelled to come back because the tracks beyond the culvert were dangerously submerged. The culvert was not yet submerged, however, for the conductor looked “some time after,” — another indefinite expression — and saw that at the culvert it was not up to the track, but was at the bottom of the ties. A jury might with such evidence before them think that
What we have said disposes of the question whether the appellant’s prayers, based on the contention that there was no legally sufficient evidence, to take the case to the jury, were correct. The Court rejected those propositions, and in doing so, we think it was right. It only remains to consider if there was any infirmity in the instructions actually granted at the instance of the appellees and of the Court’s own motion. Uounsel
Finding no error, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.