63 Md. 558 | Md. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this cáse an action was brought by the appellee against the Turnpike Company to recover damages for injuries to his horse and buggy. The declaration avers in substance that the defendants suffered their road, in a certain part of it, to be so out of repair as to be unsafe for travel, by reason of leaving an abrupt and high bank between the centre and metalled part, and the remainder of the road, without any safeguards to provide against the dan'ger arising therefrom, and that whilst his servant was driving his horse and buggy on the road, and using due care, the horse unavoidably fell over this high and precipitous bank, and upset the buggy, which so frightened the horse that he broke the buggy and ran away.
The case as made out by the proof shows that at the place where the accident happened, or the injury was sustained, the .metalled or macadamized part of the road was twenty-four feet in width, that for a considerable distance the side or dirt road was several feet below .the grade of the macadamized part, and the bank between the two was very abrupt and precipitous; that as his servant was driv
Their counsel have strenuously argued that the company are not responsible on account of the existence of this bank, that under their charter they are bound to construct^ grade and keep in repair and safe for travel, a hard or macadamized road of the width of twenty feet only, and, having done this, they have discharged every obligation which the incorporating statute imposes upon them in this respect; that in the grading of this twenty feet road, as the statute required it to be done, it was absolutely necessary that in places it .should be raised higher than the adjoining sides, and having been authorized by the Legislature to create such inequalities, the company cannot be held responsible for their existence. And whether under the true construction of their charter, the appellants are thus absolved from all liability on account of such an unprotected declivity or bank as that described in the testimony, is the principal question in the case. We have recently said that the charters granted to this and other like companies by the Act of 1804, ch. 51, are to be liberally construed in reference to the powers and privileges thereby conferred upon the several corporations (Balto. and Fredericktown Turnpike Co. vs. Routzahn, 61 Md., 37,) but the question as to the extent of the obligation now to be considered, has never before arisen in this Court.
There can be no doubt as to the general proposition that a turnpike company which derives a revenue from the use of its road by travellers, is directly liable to those who travel upon it for .injuries occasioned by the want of repair of the road, without -any express statutory
The provision of the charter relied on as giving this relief is the 17th section of the Act of 1804, ch. 51. The road was required to be sixty-six feet wide, and this section provides that the company shall cause it to he “ kept open to this width and shall cause twenty feet thereof, in breadth, at least, 1o be made an artificial road, which shall be bedded with wood, stone or gravel, or any other hard substance, well compacted together, a sufficient depth to secure a solid foundation to the same, and the said road shall be faced with gravel or stone pounded, or other small hard substance, in such manner as to secure a firm, and as near as the materials will reasonably admit, an even surface, and so nearly level in its progress as that it shall in no place, except over the Catoctin and South mountains, rise or fall more than will form an angle of four degrees with an horizontal line, and shall forever hereafter, during the continuance of said incorporation or incorporations, maintain and keep the same in good and perfect order and repair.”
This provision must receive a reasonable construction in reference to the work to be accomplished and the object to be attained, that is to say, the construction and keeping in repair a public highway safe tor ordinary travel throughout its entire length. The right given in other sections of the charter to erect gates and receive tolls is the foundation of the obligation to construct and keep in
It follows from what we have thus said, that the Court below committed no error in rejecting the first, seventh and eighth instructions asked for by the defendants, which assert the propositions that the only obligation resting upon them under their charter was to make and keep in repair an artificial road of the width of 'twenty feet only, and that there was no evidence of any negligence on their part entitling the plaintiff to a verdict. The legal propositions contained in the other rejected prayers of the defendants are covered by the instruction given by the Court in lieu of those asked on both sides, to the effect that if the jury find from the evidence that the plaintiff’s driver was deficient upon the occasion in question in using such •care and skill as ordinarily careful and skilful drivers are accustomed to use under similar circumstances, and that but for the want of such care and skill the accident complained of would not have occurred; or if they find that the plaintiff's mare was an unsafe and unfit animal to be driven upon a public road, and that the plaintiff knew it, ■or might have known it, and that the accident would not have occurred if the mare had been ordinarily gentle and well broken, then their verdict must be for the defendants, otherwise the plaintiff is entitled to recover such amount as the jury may find from the evidence will compensate
The defendants also took six exceptions to the rulings of the Court upon questions of evidence, and these we shall consider in their order.
1st. In the first exception the plaintiff asked Mr. McLean, the surveyor, who had made a plat of the road at the place of the accident, whether, in his opinion, from, what he saw of it, the road there was safe for travel by wagons and carriages ? The Court allowed this question to be put, and we discover no error in this ruling. The witness was not produced as an expert, nor was this a matter in which the testimony of experts was needed. Whether this bank or declivity rendered the road unsafe for travel was a matter about which men of ordinary intelligence could speak as well as experts in road-making,, and the testimony of such witnesses is often resorted to in such cases. Beatty vs. Gilmore, 16 Penn., 463 ; Taylor vs. Town of Monroe, 43 Conn., 45.
2nd. It does not appear that the question allowed to be asked the witness in the second exception was ever answered by him, or that his answer thereto was in any wav to the prejudice of the defendants. From aught that appears, it may have been favorable to them. There is, therefore, nothing to be found in this exception which will justify a reversal of the judgment. Lawson vs. Price, 45 Md., 133.
3rd. In this exception a witness was asked what was. the usual result with a horse after running away? to-which he answered, “they repeat it whenever an oppor
4th. The Act of 1801, ch. 71, was one of the antecedent statutes relating to the location and construction of these turnpikes, which seems to be referred to in the 17th section of the defendants’ charter, and we find no error in the ruling allowing it to be read in evidence to the jury.
5th. The defendants offered to prove by several witnesses that it was a common thing on other turnpikes and county roads in Baltimore County to find the central or artificial portions elevated above the sides fully as much and quite as steeply as the macadamized part of the defendants’ road was at the place in question, but the Court sustained the plaintiff’s objection to the admissibility of this evidence and refused to permit it to go to' the jury ; and in our opinion this was also a correct ruling. It was the duty of the jury to decide whether this particular road was safe for travel by evidence of its actual condition, and not hy comparing it with the condition of other roads. The fact that similar defects existed in other roads affords the defendants no excuse for their neglect of duty with respect to their own road. This same question has, in our judgment, been rightly decided by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in a number of cases. Bacon vs. The City of Boston, 3 Cush., 174; Kidder vs. Inhabitants of Dunstable, 11 Gray, 342; Hinckley vs. Inhabitants of Barnstable, 109 Mass., 126; George vs. City of Haverhill, 110 Mass., 506.
6th. A witness for the plaintiff having testified that a kicking-strap is generally used to prevent horses from kicking, was asked, on cross-examination, whether it is customary to use such straps on horses not addicted to kicking, or where kicking is not apprehended P The
The defendants also moved in arrest of judgment, and have alleged as one ground for the motion, that there is no venue laid in the declaration. Although it is true the declaration contains no formal statement of a venue, yet the record shows that it was filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, and we think the law upon this subject is correctly stated in 1 Poe’s Pl. & Pr., sec. 585, where the learned author says: “ The declaration ought properly to state the venue, which is intended to indicate the place or county in which the facts constituting the cause of action are alleged to have occurred, and in which the case is to be tried. In local actions it is an essential part of the declaration, but in other actions it is immaterial, and its omission cannot be made a ground of objection.”
Another ground taken in support of the motion is that the suit was illegally instituted in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, because the defendant corporation was and is a resident of Baltimore City. It also appears that the defendants moved the Court of Baltimore County to quash the summons issued against Ahem by that Court, and to enter a non pros, in the case, upon the ground that the
Judgment affirmed.