Judges: Boyd, Burke, Thomas, Patttson, Brner, Stockbridge, Adkins
Filed Date: 12/9/1919
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Suit was brought by Alexander R. Carr, an infant, by his mother and next friend, against the United Railways and Electric Company of Baltimore, a body corporate, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. At the conclusion of the plaintiff's case the Court granted three prayers: First, that there was no evidence legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover; second, that there was no evidence of any negligence of the defendant, its agents and servants, which was the direct and proximate cause of the injury; and thirdly, that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which directly contributed to the cause of the injury sued for. Neither of the prayers refers to the pleadings, and in the absence of such reference the correctness of the instructions must be determined entirely by a consideration of the evidence. This is firmly settled in our practice. In obedience to these instructions the jury found their verdict for the defendant, and from the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff has brought this appeal.
The following facts appearing in the evidence adduced in support of the plaintiff's case are all that need be stated to enable us to dispose of the legal questions raised upon the record. The defendant owns and operates an electric railway which runs through Baltimore City to Bay Shore Park, in Baltimore County. On June 3, 1916, the plaintiff, who was then about fifteen years of age, attended a Sunday School picnic at Penwood Park, in Baltimore County. This park was located some little distance from the line of the defendant's road, and there was a roadway leading from the defendant's tracks to the park. At the intersection of this road with the defendant's right of way, which it crosses at grade, *Page 309 there is a platform provided for passengers to alight from or enter the cars, but it does not appear to be a regular stopping place. Approximately one-half of a mile eastward from the Penwood Park crossing the defendant's road crosses Jones' Creek over an open bridge owned by the defendant. There is no railing or other protection on this bridge, and no boards or ways provided for pedestrians to walk across it. It is a drawbridge. At the west end of the bridge there is a stopping place at grade similar to that at the Penwood Park crossing. Between that crossing and the bridge the track is of "T" rail construction, and there is a curve in the track beginning a short distance from the Penwood crossing. From the stopping place at the west end of the bridge there is a path which leads through the woods to the light house and from there to Penwood Park.
The plaintiff used the defendant's road in going to the picnic. He got off at the Penwood crossing and went to the park. He and three companions afterwards went over to the bridge and walked across the ties to the east side where they rented a boat. After having returned the boat, he and his companions walked back across the bridge on their return to the picnic grounds. One of the defendant's cars going west approached and stopped at the draw. The plaintiff asked the conductor, who was standing on the back platform of the car, to let him ride across the bridge and was told by the conductor to "jump on." Thereupon the plaintiff got on the outer left-hand side of the rear platform and held on to the bar in front of him. The safety gate on that side was closed. The car went slowly across the bridge, but did not stop at the end of the bridge where the plaintiff intended to alight. What took place at that point is thus described by the plaintiff: "As the front part of the car got on land the conductor gave two bells and it started ahead, and I was scared to jump on account of the fact there was some pebbles down there and there was a hole about that big (indicating), and another car came around at the same time and I was scared of getting hit by the other car, so I just kept on riding." From that *Page 310 point to the Penwood crossing the car ran with great rapidity, the plaintiff clinging to the bar in full view of the conductor. The plaintiff thought the car was running at the rate of forty miles an hour. It slackened its speed at the curve mentioned, but when it had gotten around the curve the conductor gave two bells and the car increased its speed. The plaintiff testified that: "When it had speeded up the jar was so great that it broke my hold and threw me right off and my head went up in the air and that is all I know." Several witnesses testified as to the rapid speed of the car at the time the plaintiff was injured. One said it was going as fast as he had ever seen a car go. The plaintiff was thrown in the air and fell in between the car tracks. The car did not stop. The plaintiff was seriously and permanently injured.
Assuming, as we must do in passing upon the prayers, the truth of the facts to which we have referred, we are of opinion that the Court below fell into an error in withdrawing the case from the jury. The conductor, upon the request of the plaintiff, gave him permission to get on the car for the purpose of riding across the bridge. There was an implied understanding that he would get off at the end of the bridge, but at that point the conductor speeded up the car, and because of that fact and the other conditions referred to by the plaintiff he was unable to alight in safety. The speed of the car was rapidly increased, and his hold upon the bar was broken by the jarring or jerking of the car. There can be no question that in the distance between the bridge and the Penwood road crossing, where the plaintiff fell, the plaintiff was by reason of the rapid movement of the car in a dangerous and perilous position. His peril was open and obvious to the conductor, who stood beside him during the entire distance. A boy in that situation is apt to be overcome by fear and lose his presence of mind and his power to protect himself. The conductor must have been aware of his peril, and could easily have saved him either by stopping the car or opening the safety gates and admitting him to the rear platform but he not only did nothing to save him, but manifested no interest in him either before or after he was injured. *Page 311
Under the facts herein stated it was the duty of the conductor to have used ordinary care for the safety of the plaintiff after he became aware of his dangerous situation. In the note toPeterson v. South and Western Railroad, 8 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1240, it is said that "the uniform holding of all the courts on the subject is, that where a person, without invitation from or compensation to the railroad company, goes upon its cars for a purpose wholly his own and. in which it has neither interest nor concern, with its bare permission or acquiescence, he is a mere licensee to whom the company owes no duty except to use ordinary care for his preservation after discovering his peril, and to refrain from inflicting wilful or wanton injury." This rule was applied in Rosenkovitz v. United Railways Co.,
Judgment reversed, with costs and a new trial awarded. *Page 312