130 Md. 603 | Md. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appeal in this case was taken from a judgment rendered in favor of the appellee in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County under an instruction of the Court by which the case was withdrawn from the consideration of the jury and a verdict directed for the defendant.
The defendant is a common carrier of passengers for hire and owns and operates an electric railway between tbe City of Washington, in the District of Columbia, and Baltimore City, in the State of Maryland.
Oscar Scott, the deceased, boarded the defendant’s car as a passenger at White House Station, 15th and H streets, Washington, for D'odge Station on the defendant’s line on July 1, 1915, about 7:20 P. M., and was killed at Spring-man’s Crossing, Maryland, by a car of tbe defendant, running from Baltimore to' Washington. The alleged breach of duty on the part of the defendant, upon which the suit is based, is specifically set out in. the first count of the declaration. After stating that the deceased was a passenger upon the defendant’s ears and that it was its duty to exercise the highest degree of care towards his safety, it alleged that “said defendant railroad company became and was negligent, in that on the day aforesaid, after said plaintiff’s intestate who had been drinking intoxicating liquor, had purchased a ticket entitling him to safe transportation from this city to a place or station in the State of Maryland called Dodge Park, and to fit, proper and adequate protection while he, said plaintiff’s intestate, was- being conveyed to his said destination, and after said plaintiff’s intestate had been placed upon one
Assuming as contended by the plaintiff that the expulsion of the deceased from the defendant’s ear in the District of Columbia was unlawful and that he was assaulted and maltreated by the defendant’s agents in charge of the oar, the important legal question presented by the appeal is this: Does the record contain any evidence legally sufficient to shoiw or tending to show any legal connection between the- negligence alleged and the- death of Scott ? Stated in another way, did the plaintiff offer any evidence legally sufficient to show that there existed the relation of cause and effect between the negligence alleged and the death of Oscar Scott ? The determination of this question depends upon an accurate statement of the material facts appearing in the record. In the
Oscar Scott was 32 years of age. He was a carpenter, and Was familiar with the defendant’s road, having been employed by the company as an inspector of ties. He lived near Dodge Station, Prince George’s County. Shortly before his death he was working at his trade and was making four dolalars per day. On the morning of July 1, 1915, he left home and went to> Washington. Mrs. Scott, his widow; testified that he did not go to- Washington that morning to work -as he was sick; that he had been home two weeks. The record contains nothing as to Scott’s whereabouts from the time he left home until he boarded the car on his return trip at about- 7:20 P. M. He took a seat- in the smoking compartment. He was sick and vomited in the car. A witness said he was “sick at the stomach.” There were four occupants -of the smoking compartment, viz., Scott, a colored man, and two white men. After1 Scott vomited, the two white men went into the passenger compartment. W. O. Kobinnett, the motorman, testified, that he saw Scott on the car; that as the -ear came along Bennings race track the conductor came out front and said to- him: “That he had a passenger back there that wouldn’t pay his fare, and that he had been drinking .and wouldn’t pay his fare, and he said, ‘stop- up there. I want to put him off;’ that was- along at Bennings; it was .along about Bennings liaee Track. So when we got to Minnesota avenue I stopped the car and waited a minute, sitting in my cab, and I heard a commotion out in the baggage room. The baggage compartment was on the front, the smoker next to that and the pass-euger compartment, behind that. 1 heard the commotion out the-re and I sat still in my cab. I heard the conductor arguing with him, trying to get him to- pay his fare, and he would not pay his fare. He said he was not going to- pay the conductor his fare. Then I stepped back in the baggage part where he was.” When the car reached Minnesota avenue the conductor attempted to put Scott off. He
: > • From Minnesota avenue, near which Scott was finally expelled from the car, to Springman’s Crossing, where he was killed, the distance is variously estimated from one and a half to two and a half miles. He appears to have walked this distance over or along the defendant’s right of way in less than an hour, as he was seen by one of the witnesses in the Casualty Hospital, Washington, at 8:30, where he died. The facts do not support the allegation of the narr., that after the deceased was ejected from the car “he was in a helpless condition and wandered aimlessly about said defendant’s company’s tracks and right of way in his effort to find and go to his home at Dodge Park.” That conclusion could be reached only upon the merest conjecture.
The law does not indulge in metaphysical speculation and refinements upon the question of causation. In B. & P. R. R. Co. v. Reaney, 42 Md. 117, Judge Alvey said: “In the application of the maxim, in jure non remota causa sed próxima spectaiur, there is always more or less difficulty, and attempts are frequently made to introduce refinements that would not consist with principles of rational justice. The law is a practical science, and courts do not indulge refine
It is certainly true, that where two or more independent causes, concur in producing an effect, and it can not be determined which was the efficient and controlling cause, or whether, without the concurrence of both, the event would have happened at all, and a particular parly is responsible for only the consequence of one of such causes, in such a ease, a recovery can not be had, because it can not be judicially determined that the damage would have been done without such concurrence. Marble v. Worcester, 4 Gray, 395. But it is equally true, that no wrongdoer ought to be allowed to apportion or qualify his own wrong; and that, as a loss has actually happened whilst his own wrongful act was in force and operation, he ought not to be permitted to set up as a defense, that there was a more immediate cause of the loss, if that cause was put into operation by his own wrongful act. To. entitle such party to exemption, he- must show not only that the same loss might have happened, but that it must have happened if the act complained of had not been done. Davis v. Garrett, Bing. 716.” In City Passenger Rwy. Co. v. Kemp, 61 Md. 74, the sanie distinguished Judge said, in discussing the question of proximate cause: “It is not simply because the relation of cause and effect may be somewhat involved in obscurity, and therefore difficult to trace., that the principle obtains, that only the natural and proximate results of a wrongful act are to be regarded. It is only where there may be a more direct and immediate sufficient canse of the effect complained of, that the more remote cause will not ho charged with the effect. If a given result can be directly traced to a particular cause, as the natural and proximate effect, wiry should not such effect be regarded by the law,
“In a succession of dependent events an interval may always be seen by an acute mind betweeen a cause and its effect, though it may he so imperceptible as to be overlooked by a common mind. Thus, if a building be set on fire by negligence, and an adjoining building be destroyed without any negligence of the occupants of the first, no one would doubt
Applying the accepted doctrine announced in the cases to which we have referred to the facts of this case, we hold that the death of Oscar Scott was not the natural and probable consequence of the alleged wrongful act of the defendant in expelling him from its .cars. All the facts and circumstances of the case show that he was able to take care of himself; that he was physically able to do so, and knew exactly what he wanted and the strength he displayed in resisting expulsion and the short time he consumed in walking over or along the tracks of the company to Springmams Crossing on his way home indicate that he was not helpless or irresponsible.
No one was produced at the trial who saw the deceased from the time he was put off the car and started back towards Minnesota avenue, until he was killed at Springman’s Crossing. It was said in B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Allison, 62 Md. 479 : “A right of way of a railroad company is the exclusive property of such company, upon which no unauthorized person has the right to be, and any one who travels upon such right of way, as a footway, and not for any business with the railroad, is a wrongdoer* and a trespasser; and the mere acquiescence of the railroad company in such user does not give
Inasmuch, therefore, as the presence of the deceased upon the road of the appellant at that point was. a, trespass, it would seem to be necessary to show some negligence; amounting to the omission of a general and imperative duty toward him notwithstanding, which ought, to subject the appellant to liability in the action brought. This the appellant utterly failed to do.
It is said in 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law 382: “.In the application of the principle that the law looks at the proximate and not. at the remote, cause of an injury, lies the great difficulty in the law of contributory negligence. No general rule for determining when causes, are proximate, and when remote, has yet been formulated. But the principles that
We, therefore, hold that the proximate cause of the death of Oscar Scott was his own want of care in being upon the defendant’s tracks under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence. The appellant relies upon the cases of Warren v. Railway, 213 Pa. St. 15; McCoy v. Millville Trac. Co., 83 N. J. L. 508; Atchison T. & S. Railway v. Perry, 67 Kan. 515; Eidson v. So. Railway, 23 So. 369; Guy v. Railway, 30 Hun. 399; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Ellis, Admr., 97 Ky. 330. But those eases can have no controlling effect in this, because the facts wholly fail to bring this case within the principles announced therein. Those cases dealt with the obligations of the railway towards passengers who were, from drunkenness; or other causes, helpless and unable to care for themselves.
For the reasons stated the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.