137 A. 293 | Md. | 1927
At the conclusion of the evidence produced by the plaintiff, in the trial of this suit for injuries which he sustained when his automobile was struck by a locomotive of the defendant at a street crossing, a verdict was directed for the defendant on the theory that the plaintiff had been guilty of negligence contributing to the accident. According to the plaintiff's testimony, he was driving his car at a moderate speed as he approached the railway tracks of the defendant on Washington Street in Hagerstown, about four o'clock on Christmas morning, 1925, and before proceeding over the tracks, which crossed the street at right angles, and when he was sufficiently near them to have an unobstructed view along the railway to his right and left, being then about twenty-five feet from the tracks, he looked in both directions, and continued to look and listen as he proceeded, but neither saw nor heard the engine which injured him until it was only a few feet distant, and the front of his car had just reached the nearest rail. At that moment he heard a shout from some one on the engine, and tried to avoid a collision by turning his car to the right, but this effort was unsuccessful. The plaintiff testified that his sight and hearing were good, and that he was perfectly sober at the time of the accident, but that he did not see any headlight on the locomotive or hear any signal of its approach. After the collision he heard the engine bell ringing. There was no watchman at the crossing, although a provision of the charter of Hagerstown requires the defendant to keep one there at all times. It is also provided by the municipal charter that the bells of locomotives shall be rung while they are passing through the city. Shortly before reaching the defendant's tracks, the plaintiff had driven over another railway crossing on the same street, where the light of a watchman's lantern had given him warning of the approach of a train, for the passage of which he waited. It was proved that the defendant never kept a watchman at the Washington Street crossing between midnight and six o'clock A.M., but the plaintiff does not appear to have been *510 aware of that fact. On the contrary, he testified that he expected to see a watchman there if a train was approaching and, not seeing one at the crossing, he thought the way was safe. The evidence refers to a street light about fifteen feet distant from the crossing, but does not indicate the extent of the illumination from that source. In its essential details, the plaintiff's description of the accident was confirmed by another occupant of his automobile, who also testified that he did not see any headlight on the engine, though he looked in the direction from which it came, and did not hear its bell ringing until the instant of the collision.
The legal sufficiency of the proof of primary negligence is not questioned. The only inquiry is whether a verdict against the plaintiff should have been directed on the ground of contributory negligence. That question must be considered in the light of all the inferences favorable to the plaintiff's case which may be fairly deduced from the evidence, and with due regard to the presumption that he exercised ordinary care. Burke v.Baltimore,
Judgment reversed, with costs, and a new trial awarded.