86 Md. 349 | Md. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is is an action to recover damages for a personal injury. The facts so far as they need be recited to present the questions of law which are brought up by the second and third bills of exception are few and simple and will be stated in a moment. The ruling complained of in the first bill of exceptions has reference to a question of practice and though arising earliest on the record will be considered and disposed of last because it does not pertain to the merits oí the controversy.
The appellant is a corporation owning and operating a street railway in the city of Baltimore. The motive power used to propel its cars is electricity, which is applied by the overhead trolley system. On the day that the injury complained of happened, the appellee boarded one of the company’s cars, taking a seat on the inside, but afterwards, owing probably to the crowded condition of the car, going to and standing on the rear platform. Shortly thereafter the trolley wire broke some few inches from a brass sleeve which spliced together the ends of the separate wires that, when united, formed the continuous trolley wire. That part of the broken wire which was above the car and which stretched in the direction that the car was going, was carried on the trolley-pole as the car proceeded ; and as the car moved forward the wire charged with the electric current was paid out over the trolley-wheel, and the severed end fell upon the roof of the car and thence over its rear edge and came in contact with the appellee, who was thrown by the shock, or who, receiving a shock therefrom, jumped to the ground and was injured. The period of time intervening between the breaking of the wire and the injury to. the appellee was only a few seconds. The record fails to show that the car could have been stopped in a shorter space of time than it was, or that the employees in charge of it could have done anything which they omitted to do to. avoid the injury. There was evidence adduced by the appellant tending to prove that the wire broke from a latent
The declaration contains a single count. It avers that a certain wire, the property of the defendant, and which it was its duty to keep in repair, was, through the carelessness and negligence of the company and its servants, out of repair,, and in consequence broke and fell upon the plaintiff, who at that time was using due care and caution.
Under this declaration and upon this proof each of the parties presented two prayers for instructions to the jury. 'The Court of Common Pie,as granted the plaintiff’s second prayer, modified his first and as modified granted it; rejected the defendant’s second, modified its first and as modified granted it. To this action of the Court the third bill •of exceptions was taken.
The plaintiff’s first prayer needs no discussion. The •objection made to it in the Court below was that it left to the jury a question of law in not defining the degree of care required of the defendant. No point is suggested in the brief against this prayer, and we think the one raised below is not tenable. It defined the degree of care and diligence
The plaintiff’s second prayer should not have been granted. There was a special exception interposed to it in the trial Court upon the ground that there was no evidence to support one of its hypotheses. This objection ought to have been sustained. The prayer instructed the jury that if they should find from the evidence that the plaintiff whilst a passenger on the defendant’s car and whilst using due care was injured by contact with a broken trolley wire, and that the broken wire was dragged upon the back platform and against the plaintiff by the momentum of the car, then their verdict would have to be for the plaintiff, "unless they shall further find that the defendant’s employees could not by the exercise of reasonable care have prevented the trolley wire from being dragged zip on the platform.” Now, there is not a particle of evidence in the record to support the hypothesis we have put in italics, and it was consequently error to have submitted such an hypothesis to the jury. We may remark, in passing, that the theory of the prayer is directly at variance with the declaration. It does not, it is true, refer to the pleadings and would not therefore on the ground of variance be open to criticism, but it shifts the right to recover from the one alleged in the narr. to a totally different ground. If the cause of the injury was, as charged in the declaration, the bad condition or disrepair of the wire, and this bad condition or disrepair was really due to the negligence of the defendant, and injury ensued as a consequence, then the cause of action declared on was proved, and it made and could make no possible difference whether the employees in charge of the car could or could not have prevented the wire from being dragged upon the platform after it had in conseqzience of prior negligence, broken and fallen on the car. Even if the employees could not by the utmost care have
The substantial error of law into which the learned Judge below inadvertently fell was in refusing to grant the defendant’s second prayer. By that prayer the defendant sought an instruction to the effect that if the jury should find that the accident to the plaintiff was caused “solelybya hidden or latent defect, not apparent to the eye in the trolley wire,” and which “ the defendant could not have discovered or detected by any reasonable examination,” and that if the company employed proper and suitable contractors to erect the wire and overhead construction at the place of the accident and if the contractors used suitable and proper material and a proper and skillful method of overhead construction, “ then the defendant has performed its duty to the passenger in this regard and the verdict must be for the defendant, even though the jury further find that the plaintiff without fault on his part, did receive injuries by reason of the breaking and falling of said trolley wire.”
A carrier of passengers is not an insurer of their safety. This is the settled law. Such a carrier is only bound to employ the utmost care and diligence which human foresight can use. Was. Turpk. Co. v. Case, 80 Md. 45; State, use of Coughlan, v. B. & O. R. R. Co., 24 Md. 102. This is the limit and the measure of the duty which he owes to the passenger. His failure or omission to discharge that duty is an act of negligence and if injury results from that negligence an action will lie. It is apparent, then, that all actions of the kind we are now dealing with, to be maintained, must be founded on negligence of the defendant, both asserted and proved. If there be no negligence, though there be an injury, no action will lie. Negligence is essentially relative. In the abstract it is a nullity—it does not and it cannot in the nature of things, exist. It is
The measure of duty which a carrier owes to a passenger is, as we have said, the utmost care and diligence which human foresight can use. If human foresight, with the aid of the most advanced scientific methods yet discovered, is powerless to detect latent defects that are searched for in the appliances used by the carrier ; and if proper skill be employed in the construction of those appliances and if the appliances themselves are appropriate, and still an injury
There was error also in refusing to grant the first prayer of the defendant as offered. The declaration did not count on negligence in the operation of the trolley wire and car ; nor did it allege-that an injury had resulted from the negligence of the servants in charge of the car, as negligence in the operation of the car involves ; but it proceeded exclusively on the ground that the wire was, through carelessness and negligence, out of repair, and in consequence broke and breaking inflicted the injury complained of. The defendant clearly had the right to have the jury confined to the issue made by the pleadings, and its first prayer as presented did this; but the modification of that prayer amplified and enlarged the issue. In this there was obvious error.
The second exception brings up a ruling as to the admissibility of evidence. A witness, not an expert, was asked what was the condition of the plaintiff on September the twelfth—one month and eight days after the date of the accident. And the witness replied that he “ looked very bad, he was lame, and he could scarcely go up stairs,” &c. The question and answer were excepted to. The witness was not asked an opinion—she was simply required to describe the plaintiff’s physical condition, and this she was competent to do because it was merely the description of a fact which she had seen. Its weight and value was for the jury. We see no error in the ruling.
The first exception brings up a new question of practice. By sec. 6, Art. 15 of the Constitution, a trial by jury of all issues of fact is guaranteed to every litigant when the sum in controversy exceeds five dollars, though it is competent, under sec. 8, Art. 4, for the parties to a proceeding to waive that right and to submit the cause to the Court for determination without the aid of a jury. It was found in actual practice that these provisions resulted in congesting the
There was no election by the plaintiff other than the concluding words which we have quoted from the declaration. These words were in fact a part of the declaration. A withdrawal of the declaration under leave of Court would have withdrawn the election for a trial by a jury, notwithstanding the rule forbids a withdrawal of an election without the consent of both parties. It was the obvious intent of the rule that an election for a trial by a jury should be a separate and distinct act, evidenced by a writing different from the pleadings, so that no change in the latter could affect or interfere with the former. Clearly the correct practice under the rule is the one j ust indicated. There is an additional reason. By the same rule it is made the duty of the several clerks as soon as it is ascertained that a cause will not be tried by a jury to transfer the same to a separate trial docket entitled “ non jury cases,” and the trial shall take place before the Judge at Large. Now, it was manifestly not the design of the rule that the clerks of the several Courts should examine all the pleadings to ascertain whether somewhere amongst them there might be found.a claim for a trial by jury; and to obviate the necessity for such an examination the rule plainly provides that the election shall be filed in writing, not later (if filed by the plaintiff) than fifteen days after the filing of the declaration. The two things, viz., the election in writing and the declaration are treated by the rule as distinct and independent; and it is clearly error to combine them in one paper. A declaration is simply the statement of the plaintiff’s cause of action, and it has nothing to do with the mode of trial. The election is a mere designation of the mode of trial and has nothing to do with the thing to be tried. Strictly the declaration should con
For the errors we have pointed out the judgment must be reversed and as the truth of the evidence adduced by the defendant is a matter wholly for the jury or the Court sitting as a jury to pass upon, a new trial will be awarded.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded with costs above and below.