87 Md. 153 | Md. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action to recover damages for injuries to the plaintiff alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant Railroad Company on the evening of December 28th, 1891, at Wilmington, Del. The suit was commenced in the Circuit Court of Cecil County on the 5th December, 1894. On the 14th of January following, the declaration was filed. The case appears to have been continued by consent from term to term until the 25th March, 1897, when the plaintiff filed a suggestion and affidavit for removal, and the record was thereupon sent to the Circuit Court for Kent County. On the 20th of April following the defendant filed a suggestion for removal, and the record was accordingly sent to the Circuit Court for Harford County and was filed there on the 26th April, 1897, and the trial was commenced in that Court on the 8th June of the same year, and on the 1 ith of the same month the learned Judge below instructed the jury that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover. On the 23rd June judgment on the verdict was entered, and the same day the defendant appealed.
The sole question involved in this appeal is whether the jury were properly instructed to find a verdict for the defendant. We think the learned Judge below was quite right in taking the case from the jury.
The general principles which must govern the decision of this case are well settled in this State, and it is unnecessary, therefore, to look for authorities in other States, however interesting and instructive they may be. A number of those cited by the appellant, notably those reported in 89th, 107th and 175th Pa. State Rep., are cases which relate to
But inasmuch as the legal sufficiency of the evidence is questioned it will be necessary to examine it. Only two witnesses testify in regard to the facts of the accident, the plaintiff and the witness Woerner, who testified in his behalf. It appears that the injury complained of was received at Wilmington, in Delaware, while the plaintiff was in the act of crossing the tracks of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company at the foot of Second street in that city. He was at the time of the injury and had been for some years employed by it as a night laborer at its round-house. According to his own testimony on the 28th. December, 1891, he left his home in Wilmington about quarter before six o’clock in the evening for his work, passed along Second street in the same way he had always done during all the time he had worked for the company, and when he came near to the end of that street, which terminates at the railway of the defendant, there being no crossing there, he stopped and looked up and down the railroad to the right and left, but did not see or hear anything. He then walked towards the railroad and crossed the first three side tracks, and when he passed out from behind some freight cars on one of the side tracks, he again looked up and down the railroad, but neither saw nor heard anything. He then walked across the first main or southbound track, and was in the act of stepping on the northbound track when he saw a train approaching him on that track and going towards Philadelphia. When he first saw this train it was nearly upon him, or as he says about a car’s length distant from him, and running at a speed, ac
The remaining testimony relating to the facts of the accident is that of Anthon Woerner, a fellow workman of the plaintiff, who, according to his testimony, must have reached the end of Second 'street about the time the plaintiff started to cross the tracks. He was late in getting to his work—the hour he was required to be there being six o’clock. He also was in the habit of crossing at the foot of Second street, and on this occasion he said he ran and tried to get over before the north-bound train came up, because he had heard the six o’clock whistle, but there was a car there and it was impossible for him to cross. He heard the whistle of the north-bound train before he got
It is settled law that in all such pases as this that the violation of a municipal ordinance regulating the speed of trains within certain limits is not per se such negligence as will afford a right of action. The person injured "must have been in a position to entitle him to the protection that the ordinance was designed to afford, and he must show how and under what circumstances the duty arose to him personally, and how it was violated by the negligence of the defendant to his injury.” Stebbing's case, supra. It is quite immaterial to the case of the plaintiff that the defendant company was guilty of violating the ordinance “ unless it be
Now what are the facts of this case ? As we have seen the plaintiff on a dark evening in December attempted to cross the defendant’s tracks at a place where the moment he stepped upon them he became in contemplation of law a trespasser. He says there were three rows of cars standing on the side tracks, and he went behind those cars, and stood there and looked up and down to see if he could see a train, and seeing nothing he walked across the two rails of the south-bound track, and just as he put his foot on the northbound tack he saw the train for Baltimore about a car’s length distant from him; he stepped back into the space between the two tracks and was then between the two trains—both going by him at the same time. He was then in a most dangerous position, but he was there by his own fault. It is apparent from the proximity of the trains to the plaintiff as he put his foot upon the rails of the north-bound track, that if he had made proper use of his senses he must have seen or heard the trains. He says he looked and did not see, but it is impossible for him not to have seen or heard one train or the other—for they were there, and if he did not see or hear them it is his misfortune. “If he did not see or hear the approaching train, it must have been because he did not use his senses.” Bacon's case. It seems to us the conduct of the plaintiff was reckless. His knowledge of the locality should have persuaded him, and would
In the view we have taken the remaining exceptions,, based upon the refusal to admit the testimony of the witness Moreland, become unimportant, for our conclusion is. based upon the conceded fact that the defendant was guilty of negligence in running its train at a greater speed than, allowed by the ordinance—and, as we understand it, the rejected testimony was offered to show that there was suck a violation of the ordinance.
Judgment affirmed with costs.