75 Md. 526 | Md. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the evening of January 21st, 1890, I. E. S. Good was hilled near the corner of Ostend street and Warner street — both public streets in the City of Baltimore.
This suit is brought in the name of the State, (for the use of his widow and child,) under Article 67, sections 1 and 2, of the Code of Public General Laws, against the appellant, upon whose railroad he was killed; and as is alleged, by the negligence of its operatives. The double tracks of the main stem of the Baltimore and Ohio. Railroad Company run in the centre of Ostend street by permission of a city ordinance. It-crosses Warner street; and near that crossing, and a few feet from Warner
The appellee admits that it was error to admit this question and answer, and the voluntary and unresponsive statement in the first exception, at the time they were propounded and answered; but he contends that the erro.r Avas not a reversible one because subsequently Stevens Avas called by the appellant, and the jury had the benefit of his denial of any such statements, and therefore the exception should not be maintained. Reliance for this contention is placed upon Wyeth vs. Walzl, 43 Md., 430, which case, counsel for appellee insists, decides the identical question in his favor. In this he is mistaken. There is a marked distinction in the two cases. In the case at bar plaintiff is relying upon the declaration of
If these declarations of the switchman Stevens (which he denies) were admissible to show that the switch worked hard, they might tend to prove that there was a possibility that the accident occurred, as is supposed by the plaintiff; but it would not establish the fact; for “in matters of proof we are not justified in inferring from mere possibilities the existence of facts.” Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co. vs. State, use of Savington, 71 Md., 599. “A wild speculation as to how and from what cause the accident occurred can not be allowed to stand for proof, or be made the basis of a verdict in favor of the party upon whom the burden of proof lies. ” Balti
Without doing so, however, the defendant offered several witnesses in defence, and among them the conductor Malone, who was the only witness that saw the accident and knew how it occurred. And the appellee’s counsel frankly states that he relies largely on Malone’s evidence to sustain his suit. Without Malone’s evidence the case would be exactly covered by Northern Central Railway Co. vs. State, use of Burns, 54 Md., 113; State, use of Miller vs. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co., 58 Md., 221; State, use of Barnard vs. Phil., Wilm. & Baltimore R. R. Co., 60 Md., 555, and Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co. vs. State, use of Allison, 62 Md., 479.
We will now consider whether Malone’s testimony helps the plaintiff’s case and gives him better standing-before the Court and jury. He was the conductor of the train at the time of the accident, and says he was standing on the rear end of the caboose, the signal lights of which were both burning. He had a white light in his hand. ciThe hrakeman was between the tender and caboose. After he got west of the switches,
In Thompson on Negligence, 1179, the rule is thus laid down: “Where the facts are undisputed, or where but
Judgment reversed.