39 Md. 329 | Md. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by the appellee to recover damages for injuries received while being carried as a passenger over the appellant’s railroad on the 18th of Jul}r, 1872. He purchased a'ticket from McKeesport to Cumberland, and when injured was sitting in the second
The appellant insists the jury should have been instructed that if they found the accident occurred as stated by the witnesses for the defence, then there was such want of ordinary care and prudence on the part of the plaintiff, directly contributing to the injury, as to prevent a recovery, notwithstanding the negligence of the defendant, and several prayers were presented to that effect, which wore refused. Whether such an instruction ought to have been given, is the main question in the case.
The general rule is, that negligence is a question for the jury to decide upon all the facts and circumstances of each case, but while this is the general rule, cases may and sometimes do occur where the Court is required to declare some plain act of carelessness on the plaintiff’s part, to be in law, such contributing negligence as will prevent a recovery, or, on the other hand, where there is no proof of negligence on the part of the defendant, or where such proof is so slight and inconclusive in its nature, as to demand from the Court an instruction, as to its legal insufficiency to prove negligence, in order to prevent the jury from indulging in wild speculation or irrational conjecture. Shipley's Case, 31 Md., 370. The power of the Court thus to interpose, has been uniformly asserted by the Appellate Court of this State, as well as by the Courts of England, and of our sister States, though instances calling for its exertion are comparatively rare. We have sustained its exercise in the two recent cases of The Baltimore City Passenger Railway Co. vs. Wilkinson, 30 Md., 224, and Lewis vs. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., 38 Md., 588.
He then told the jury he would leave it for them to say whether the resting of his arm on the window-sill with his elbow outside of it, was contributing negligence on the part of the plaintiff. That charge was affirmed by the Supreme Court in a short per curiam opinion, with the reservation that the language of the learned Judge seems to be too broad as a general principle, where he says that “ no car is good if the windows are not so constructed as to prevent passengers from putting thoir limbs through them ;” but in its application to a road which in some places is so narrow as to endanger projecting limbs as here, the instruction is proper.
In Holbrook vs. The Utica & Schenectady Railroad Co., 12 New York Rep., 236, decided in 1855, the Judge at the trial was requested by the defendant’s counsel to charge the jury as matter of law, that if they found that the plaintiff’s arm or elbow was outside of the window of the car when the injury was received,, it was an act of negligence, and she could not recover, but he refused to charge on that subject further than he had already done. In the Court of Appeals, the opinion was delivered by Ruggles, J., who, on that, question, says; “In this refusal to charge as requested, I was at first inclined to think there was error, but my brethren are unanimously of opinion that the Judge had already charged the jury substantially in conformity with the request, and that he was right therefore in declining to repeat what he had before stated. I yield to their judgment and concur in affirming the judgment.” From this it is clear the Court was unanimous in opinion that the law of the requested charge was correct.
Next is the case of The Pittsburg & Connellsville Railroad Co. vs. McClurg, 56 Penn. State Rep., 294, decided in 1867. The plaintiff in that case suffered his elbow to project from the window, and it was broken by coming in contact with a car standing on a switch. At the trial the Judge, following the rule in Kennard’s case, instructed the jury that a passenger on a railway car who has unconsciously suffered his elbow to slip out beyond the window-sill, is not necessarily guilty of negligence, and submitted it to them as a question of fact whether under all the circumstances of the case, the plaintiff in permitting his arm or elbow so to project, was or was not guilty of negligence. This ruling being assigned for error, the Supreme Court carefully considered the question, Their opinion was delivered by C. J. Thompson, who says, “ we must regard the remark, ‘unconsciously suffered his elbow to slip beyond the window-sill,’ to mean inattentively. In that sense it was negligently suffered to slip. Of course this was negligence in se, unless he was under no obligation to take care of himself. But no case asserts that, and every case the contrary. Out of the omission to do so springs the doctrine of contributory negligence, which defeats a plaintiff, and which is so firmly established as a principle of law, that nobody dreams of doubting it. We have then the case broadly, I think, that negligence is not to be inferred, when injury accrues from anrexposure of an elbow, or an arm, out of a car window, if it be not wilfully done. This cannot be maintained on any reasonable principle, we think. When a passenger on a railroad purchases his ticket, it entitles him to a seat in the cars. In the seat
The plain doctrine of McClurg’s Case, is that if a sane person of mature years, while a passenger in a railroad car, without any controlling or justifying necessity or cause for so doing, voluntarily or inattentively protrudes his elbow or arm from the window, and it is injured by coming in contact with any external obstacle or force, it is such a clear act of contributory negligence on his part as will prevent a recovery, and that it is the duty of the Court so to instruct the jury, as matter of law, notwithstanding the negligence of the Company in permitting the obstacle to be placed too near the track of the passing train.
About the same time the Supreme Court of Indiana decided precisely in the same way, in a case involving the same question. Indianapolis & Cincinnati Railroad Co. vs Rutherford, 29 Ind., 82, and following these is a decision to the same effect by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. vs. Sickings, 5 Bush, 1. These decisions are approved by Judge Rediteld in his note to McClurg’s Case, in 2 American Railway Cases, 552, where he says, “ we can entertain no possible question that these later cases are entirely sound, and that Kennard’s Case was decided upon mistaken
Opposed to these authorities, there are besides Kennard’s Case, the two cases of Spencer vs. Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien R. R. Co., 17 Wisc., 487, and Chicago & Alton R. R. Co. vs. Pondrom, 51 Illinois, 333. The former is directly in point, and presents the opposing views very forcibly. In the latter the decision, as we understand it, was actually rested upon a principle of law established in that State, that where there has been contributing negligence, the negligence of both parties must be compared, and if the plaintiff is guilty of negligence, which is slight as compared with that of the defendant, he may recover. Such a principle has never been sanctioned in this State, but the exact contrary is the settled rule here, (Geis’ Case, 31 Md., 366), and the Illinois Court admit the doctrine is not supported by the weight of authority elsewhere. They refer however to Kennard’s Case, and to McClurg’s Case, and think the former the better considered of the two, based on sounder reasons, more in harmony with the analogies of the law, and entitled to more weight. With great respect for the judgments of that learned tribunal, we entertain, and have expressed a different opinion ; we think the latter is better reasoned, as well as supported by the decided preponderance of authority, and have no hesitation in accepting it, with the other cases to the same effect, as containing a correct exposition of the law on this subject.
In our review and citations from the decisions upon this question, (which have been more extended than usual, or perhaps than is necessary), we have noticed those only which are exactly, or nearly identical with the case before
It follows there was error in the refusal to grant several of the defendant’s'prayers, and especially the third, seventh and eighth, as well as in the first instruction given by the Court on its own motion. Upon the assumption the jury would find the facts therein hypothetically stated, these prayers of the defendant, though apparently more numerous ’than the exigencies of the case required, embody each a correct legal proposition. It must be observed, however, that while it is admitted the plaintiff’s arm was out of the window at the time of the accident, there is a conflict of testimony as to how it came to be thus exposed, whether as stated by the plaintiff', or by the witnesses for the defence. This question of tact, it is the undoubted province of the jury to determine, and upon the weight of evidence in this respect, it is not our province to express any opinion. The jury therefore having the unquestionable right to give credit to the testimoriy of the plaintiff, and reject that for the defence, there was no error in rejecting the defendant’s first and second prayers. The ninth and tenth prayers need not be critically examined. If they were intended to assert the same proposition contained in the third, seventh and eighth, they were wholly unnecessary; and if their purpose was to announce any legal proposition different from that which we have in this opinion declared, and adopted, then there was no error in rejecting them. We find no error in the rejection of the eleventh prayer. All the law to which the Company was entitled upon the theory of the case which this prayer contemplates, is contained in their sixth prayer, which was granted. Their fourth
The plaintiff’s first prayer states the law as announced in Stokes vs. Saltonstall, 13 Pet., 181; Stockton vs. Frey, 4 Gill, 406, and Worthington’s Case, 21 Md., 275, about which there can, in this State at least, be no doubt, viz: that the occurrence of an accident and injury to a passenger is prima facie evidence of negligence in the carrier, and throws upon him the onus of rebutting the presumption by proving there was no negligence on his part. But in those eases there was no proof, and no question of contributory negligence in the plaintiff. The Courts in those cases were not dealing with a case like this, in which the right of recovery is affected by, and dependent upon the presence or absence of such negligence. In this case it was error to instruct the jury that the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon proof of the injury, unless the Company showed such injury did not result from their negligence, without noticing or instructing them as to the effect of contributory negligence on his part. No doubt the Court intended the last clause of its first instruction as a modification of this prayer, but as the two stand, and upon the assumption there was no error in that given by the
The only remaining question in the case, is that presented by the first exception. The plaintiff when under cross-examination as a witness, was asked, “did you or not, on the morning after the accident, have a conversation with David Welsh in front of the Yough House, in which you said, you must have been lying with your arm out of the window, and something struck it, and that was all you knew?” to which witness replied, “he did not know Welsh, and had no such conversation.” He was then asked “if he had on the morning after the accident in Connellsville any conversation with any one, in which he said that he must have been lying with his arm out of the window, and something struck it, and that was all he knew?” to which he replied “he had no such conversation with any one.” The defendant then for the purpose of impeaching the plaintiff as a witness, offered a part of the testimony of Welsh, which had been taken and returned under a foreign commission, in which he says in answer to an interrogatory whether he had any conversation with the plaintiff about his injury, and if so, state what that conversation was? “I had a conversation with the plaintiff about his injury; he was brought to my house, and I asked him how he got his arm hurt; he said he must have been lying with his arm out of the window, and something struck it, and that was all he knew, until he came to himself.” Objection was made to the offer of this testimony for the purpose of impeaching the plaintiff as a witness, which the Court sustained, but admitted the testimony as a declaration of the plaintiff as to the manner in which the injury occurred. To this ruling the defendant excepted.
A majority of the Court are of opinion, there was a sufficient foundation laid for the introduction of impeaching testimony, and that the defendant had the right to
Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.