81 Md. 371 | Md. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought in the Circuit Court for Frederick County, in the name of the State, as plaintiff, for the use of the widow and children of John W. Chambers, who was killed by what is alleged to have been the wrongful act, neglect or default of the defendant corporation. There was a verdict for the plaintiff and judgment thereon, from which the defendant has appealed. The accident happened at a station on the main line of the defendant’s road in Frederick County, known as East -Brunswick. There are in the town of Brunswick two stations on said road; one is known as East Brunswick, and the other as West Brunswick. At about the hour of noon, on the 21st day of April, 1894, the deceased, John W. Chambers, being at the
The first exception found in the record of this appeal arises upon the refusal of the Court below to strike out the testimony of Mrs. Chambers, the widow, as to the earnings of her husband ; she having testified that she had not seen or held any communication with him, for a period of from two to three years prior to his death. We do not think, however, that the admission of this testimony furnishes any ground for reversal, as the objection to it was not timely, and the testimony of Lizzie Sykes and of S. B. Barr, both of whom testified to the same effect, was admitted without objection. Hayes v. Wells, 34 Md. 512 ; Leffler v. Allard, 18 Md. 545; Cole v. Harrington, 7 H. & J. 146. The second and third exceptions relate to conversations which took place between the decedent and certain witnesses, in which he expressed his intention of going to Washington. Such
The plaintiff was entitled to this testimony, as having an important bearing upon the right of the decedent to be upon the defendant’s property, and pass over a customary way to the ticket office of the defendant, for the purpose of purchasing a ticket over its road to Washington. In this view, it becomes very immaterial how the decedent got from West Brunswick station to East Brunswick station, if when he got there he was rightfully on defendant’s premises, and took the same course and traversed the same path usually taken by passengers and employees of the defendant from where No. 16 delivered its passengers to the ticket office, where passengers obtained their tickets for passage on the express train of the company to the city of Washington. The chief question in this case, as stated in the appellant’s brief, is, “ was Chambers, at the time of his death, a passenger of the appellant and thereby entitled to all the safeguards the law'throws around one in that position; or, on
We think the plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of the rule in evidence before the jury. Doubtless no such rule would have been adopted by the defendant, even for its own protection, if experience had not demonstrated its absolute necessity. If the rule was only intended for, the protection of the property of the defendant, it seems to us to be a most salutary precaution to have been followed for the preservation of the lives of the passengers of the defendant, or of those seeking to become passengers. This Court said, in Hauer’s case, 60 Md. 449, that, “ passengers are justified in assuming that the company has, in the exercise of due care, so regulated its trains that the road would be free from interruption or obstruction when trains stop at a depot or station to receive or discharge passengers.” It thus significantly appears that the doctrine just announced and Rule 441 are closely analogous.
The fifth exception is taken to the refusal of the Court below upon the objection of the plaintiff to permit inquiry to be made as to whether or not the decedent saved anything out of his earnings. The question was properly excluded, and we think, wholly irrelevant. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant offered five prayers, all of which the Court rejected. It will not be necessary for us at this time to give attention to the propositions of law contained in these prayers, as the same questions are again presented at the conclusion of the case, and will then receive consideration. The Court granted the plaintiff’s
To the granting of the said prayers of the plaintiff and the rejection of said prayers of the defendant, the defendant objected. We will first consider the plaintiff’s exceptions to first, fourth, fifth and seventh prayers, which have been specially excepted to on the ground just stated. In considering these prayers and the exceptions to them as being without evidence to support them, the relation which decedent held to the defendant at the time of his death, and immediately prior thereto, comes prominently into view. In passing upon the second and third exceptions we had occasion to examine the relevancy of certain conversation offered to show the decedent’s intention when he left West Brunswick to go on the train No. 16 to East Brunswick. It is not necessary to a proper determination of the mutual rights of the parties to this record, that we should be governed by the technical definitions of who are passengers and who are not. The question must be decided upon a just ascertainment of all the circumstances surrounding the occurrence. It is not exclusively passengers who have rights against railroad companies when upon their property. But each case must be dealt with as the evidential facts and circumstances determine its character. Now, in this case we think the jury was justified in finding.from the evidence that Chambers left West Brunswick station on the day of his death, with the intention of taking an express train at East Brunswick station for Washington. It is wholly im
The plaintiffs’ fifth prayer is objected to as being misleading. It instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that Chambers had on the morning of April 21st, 1894, used intoxicating drink, and was slightly intoxicated when he got aboard train No. 16 at West Brunswick, but that he was not drunk at the time of the accident, then such
It necessarily follows from what we have already said respecting the right of Chambers to cross from train No. 16 to the ticket office and station at East Brunswick, that we affirm the ruling of the Court on the ninth prayer of the plaintiff. In granting the plaintiffs’ first, fourth, fifth, sixth, .seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth prayers, and the defendant’s third, fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth and eleventh prayers, the law of the case hás been correctly given to the jury for their guidance. From the views which we have expressed •concerning the prayers of the appellee, little more need be .said of the propositions of law submitted by the appellant. Nothing was said in the argument before this Court as to the demurrer to the declaration, and we have treated it as having been abandoned. But the appellant’s sixth prayer • contained a proposition which we think is not sustained,
Judgment affirmed with costs.