224 Md. 242 | Md. | 1961
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The successful plaintiff below was injured as he stepped from a trackless trolley onto an isolated patch of sheet ice on the street between the curb and the trolley, and fell. The owner of the trolley appeals on the ground that the case should not have gone to the jury because “the conflicting and speculative evidence” offered by the plaintiff “failed to disclose any breach of duty on the part of the Defendant to provide the Plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to alight.”
Implicit in the question presented, as the appellant poses it, is that the law is that the operator of a streetcar owes a passenger alighting from the car the duty of furnishing a reasonably safe opportunity, means and place to alight. We agree that the law imposes on the streetcar carrier the duty to guard against such dangers or perils incident to alighting, as might readily be discovered in the exercise of that high degree of care which carriers owe to their passengers. Smith v. Baltimore Transit Co., 214 Md. 560. This is not to say that the carrier is an insurer or that it is always to be held liable for injuries resulting from the condition of the street to which the passenger descends.
Essentially the dividing line between the case which must
The two lines of cases are collected in an annotation in 9 A.L.R. 2d 938. Discussion of those in which the carrier was negligent in failing to foresee and guard against that which was readily to be noticed or anticipated, begins at page 946; those in which the defect, peril or hazard was of such trifling character or so small or unlikely to have been noticed as not to have required discovery in the exercise of reasonable care are detailed on page 948, and the pages following.
Cases in which recovery by the passenger was allowed include Schwartz v. Brooklyn and Queens Transit Corp., 36 N. Y. S. 2d 70, and Cordes v. Surface Transportation Co., 40 N. Y. S. 2d 878, in both of which the facts were essentially similar to those of the case at bar. Schwartz was distinguished in the Smith case, to which we adverted, on the ground that the ice was an isolated patch and there were clear stretches of street on which the passenger could have been deposited, as in the instant case, but unlike Smith. It would appear that the same situation prevailed in Cor des, which the Smith case also distinguished. Other similar cases are Wilson v. Kansas City Public Service Company (Kan. C. Ct. App., Mo.), 238 S. W. 2d 73, and Oklahoma Ry. Co. v. Wilson (Okla.), 231 P. 2d 688.
There is no case precisely in point in Maryland but the decisions have indicated accord with the rules which have been discussed. In Topp v. United Rys. & Electric Co., 99 Md. 630, it was held that there was prima facie evidence of negligence on the part of the carrier in inviting plaintiff to alight
The evidence in the case before us was that the trolley stopped with the front exit four or five feet from the curb, that between the exit and the curb was an isolated sheet of ice six feet long and five feet wide (formed from a flow of water from around the corner). The curb, the sidewalk and the rest of the street were clear and free of ice. We think it was for the jury to determine whether the driver either saw, or in the exercise of the care required of him for his passenger about to leave the vehicle, should have seen the relatively large sheet of ice, and either driven onto it so the plaintiff could have stepped on the dry pavement, or have stopped short of it on the dry street. That the driver did not pull to the curb ordinarily and of itself would not necessarily be evidence of negligence but, under the facts here, could have permitted the drawing of the inference that he saw the ice and preferred to avoid pulling his vehicle on it. We find no error in allowing the case to go to the jury.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.