
    STEWART TAXI-SERVICE COMPANY v. MINNIE M. SPENCER. BALTIMORE STEAM PACKET COMPANY v. MINNIE M. SPENCER.
    
      Connecting Carriers- — -A gency for Sale of TicTcets — Liability for Injuries — Taxicab Company as Carrier — Injury to Passenger — Street Collision — Prayers and Instructions.
    
    A steamboat company which, sold to plaintiff a continuous ticket from Xorfolk to Philadelphia, one coupon of which provided for transportation from the company’s pier in Baltimore to a railroad station, was not liable to plaintiff for the negligence of the driver of a taxicab by which she was being transferred between those two points in Baltimore, the ticket expressly providing that in selling the ticket the company acted only as agent, and was not responsible beyond its own line, and there being no evidence of partnership or agency, or that the company contracted on its own behalf for through transportation over a connecting- line.
    A railroad company, in selling a ticket over its own and a conneeling line, presumably acts as agent only for the latter, and assumes no liability for its negligence, in the absence of any evidence of a partnership arrangement, of a contract by the company selling the ticket for through transportation over the connecting line> or that the latter is the former’s agent.
    A ticket for a continuous passage is not necessarily a “through” ticket, hut may merely indicate that there are no stop-over privileges.
    A raxicab company is a common carrier.
    
      In an action against a taxicab company by one who, while riding in one of the company’s taxicabs, was injured by a collision with a private automobile at a street crossing, held that the direction of a verdict for defendant, on the ground of lack of evidence of negligence on its part, was properly refused.
    In such a case, it was proper to refuse defendant’s prayer that if, when the taxicab started to cross the intersecting street, the private automobile with which the taxicab collided was at a street a block away, it was not negligence for the driver to proceed without further attention to such automobile, this being a question for the jury.
    It was also proper, in such a case, to refuse defendant’s prayers which ignored the testimony of the taxicab driver that, after he reached the middle of the intersecting street or avenue, he saw the private car sixty-five feet away, in the middle of the further side of such street or avenue, and that he could then have stopped the car within six feet, but that he did not try to stop.
    
      Decided January 14th, 1926.
    
    Appeals from the Superior Court of Baltimore City (Fkank, J.).
    Action by Minnie M. Spencer against the Baltimore Steam Packet Company, the Stewart Taxi-Service' Obmpany and J. E. Burton. Erom a judgment against all of said defendants in the sum of $3,500, the two first named defendants separately appeal.
    Reversed as to the Baltimore Steam Packet Company and affirmed as to the Stewart Taxi-Service Company.
    The cause was argued before Bond, O. J., Pattison, ITbneb, Adkins, Oeeutt, Digges, Pabke, and Walsh, JJ.
    
      Arthur L. Jaclcson, for the Stewart Taxi-Service Company, appellant.
    
      Watson E. Sherwood, for the Baltimore Steam Packet Company, appellant.
    
      William D. Macmillan, with whom was Harold Tschudi on the brief, for the appellee.
   Adkihs, J.,

delivered the opinion, of the Court.

In this case there are two appeals in one record. The > declaration is as follows:

“Minnie M. Spencer, plaintiff, "by Harold T'schndi and William D. Macmillan, her attorneys, sues the Baltimore Steam Packet Company, a body corporate, the Stewart Taxi Service Company, a body corporate, and J. P. Bnrton.
“Por that at the time of the happening of the accident hereinafter referred to the Baltimore Steam Packet Company, one of the defendants herein, was a common carrier for hire of passengers and as such owned and operated a transportation line; that on or about December 24, 1928, the plaintiff purchased from the said Baltimore Steam Packet Company a ticket for one continuous passage from Norfolk, Virginia, to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and that on that date the plaintiff became a passenger on said transportation line owned and operated by the said Baltimore Steam Packet Company whereupon it became the duty of this defendant to exercise the utmost care and diligence to avoid injury to the plaintiff herein during the said passage from Norfolk to Philadelphia; that when the plaintiff arrived at the wharf in Baltimore, to wit, on the morning of December 25th, 1923, this defendant, the Baltimore Steam Packet Company, carried out its aforesaid undertaking to provide transportation of the plaintiff from Norfolk to Philadelphia, and the plaintiff thereupon became a passenger in a taxicab owned by the Stewart Taxi Service Company, a hody corporate, also one of the defendants herein, which defendant, was then and is now engaged in the business of carrying- persons, for hire, by mean’s of taxicabs; that while the plaintiff herein was a passenger in said taxicab provided by the Baltimore Steam Packet Company and owned by the Stewart Taxi Service Company, and operated by their agent, it became the duty of these defendants to exercise the utmost care and diligence to avoid injury to the plaintiff herein while ■she was thus a passenger in said taxicab, which taxicab was to carry this plaintiff from the wharf at Baltimore to Union Station, and all of which was in accordance with the undertaking of the Baltimore Steam Packet Company in providing transportation of the plaintiff from Norfolk to Philadelphia; that while the plaintiff was riding in said taxicab as a passenger, as aforesaid, en route to Union Station, a collision occurred between this taxicab and an automobile operated by J. F. Burton, also one of the defendants herein, which collision occurred at the corner of St. Paul Street and Mount Royal Avenue, a public highway of the State of Maryland, by reason of the-wrongful and negligent acts on the part of the defendants herein, their agents and servants in the premises,, in that the driver of said taxicab and the said J. F.. Burton negligently, carelessly and unskillfully managed, operated and controlled the taxicab and automobile which they were driving, respectively, and that as a result of said collision the taxicab in which the-plaintiff was riding was overturned and the plaintiff was violently thrown about the said cab as a result of which she sustained very serious and permanent injuries about her head, body and limbs and was. caused to suffer'and will continue to suffer great physical pain and mental anguish, all of which occurred' through the negligence of the defendants herein, their'agents and servants in the premises, in the operation, of said vehicles and without any negligence whatsoever on the part of the plaintiff thereunto contributing. “And the plaintiff claims Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00).”

The Baltimore Steam Packet Company, appellant in No;. 97, demurred .to 'the declaration, and the demurrer having: been overruled, pleaded the general issue plea. The Stewart Taxi-Service Company, appellant in No-. 96, also' pleaded' the general issue plea. The jury rendered a verdict against" the said appellants and against another defendant, J. E., Burton. From the judgment on that verdict separate appeals were taken by the appellants. Burton did not appeal.. The single bill of exception is to the ruling of the trial court., on the prayers.

Iii the view we take of this case it will be unnecessary to pass on the Steam Packet Company’s demurrer.

The evidence showed the purchase by appellee at the Steam Packet Company’s office in Norfolk of a “continuous” ticket from Norfolk to Philadelphia in three coupons, as follows:

“PLAINTIFF’S EXHIBIT NO. 1.
Issued By Baltimoke Steam Packet Co. (Old Bay Line).
Non-Transferable Ticket Sold Subject to Tariff Regulations When Officially Stamped good foe
ONE CONTINUOUS PASSAGE
to destination shown hereon, which must he reached not later than midnight of date punched in margin.
In selling this ticket and checking baggage hereon, this company acts only as agent and is not responsible beyond its own line.
R. L. Jones,
General Passenger Agent.
Baltimobe, Md.
Pennsylvania R. R. (Via Short Line)
If One-Half Punch Here
BALTIMORE TO PHILADELPHIA, PA. (Destination)
Form P-102 Via BSPOo. Tr P
Punch Here I

On the face of said exhibit there had been punched “Dec. •26, 1923,” and on the back of said Exhibit No. 1 the following was stamped:

Consolidated Dec. 24-23 Ticket Office Norfolk, Va. 9
PLAINTIFFS EXHIBIT NO. 2.
If One-Half * Punch Here
Transfer-Baltimore One Passenger and Ordinary From Baltimore Steam Packet Baggage Co.’s Pier
TO Pennsylvania Railroad Station
Form P-102 Not Good If Detached
Destination
8221Í Philadelphia, Pa. Issued by Baltimore Steam Packet Co. ViaBSPOo. Tr P Punch Here

On the bade of said Exhibit No. 2 the following was stamped:

Consolidated Dec.. 24-23 Ticket Office Norfolk, Va. 9
PLAINTIFF’S EXHIBIT NO. 3.
If One-Half * Punch Here
Baltimore Steam Packet Co. Station Stamped on Back To Baltimore
.Form P-102 Not Good If Detached.
Destination
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
{Issued by Baltimore Steam Packet Co. Via BSPCo. Tr P_ Punch Here

On the back of said Exhibit No. 3 the following was stamped:

Consolidated Dec. 24-23 Ticket Office Norfolk, Va. 9

The evidence further shows:

That on arriving at the Steam Packet Company’s wharf in Baltimore the porter carried the hags of appellee and several of her friends down the steps to a platform “and the man that calls out and gets you a cab' be asked us where we were going1 and we told him we were going to the Pennsylvania Station and he said, Must a: minute and 1 will get you a cab,’ and he got ns a cab and we got in and be took the ticket off” (the ticket referred to being the coupon marked Plaintiff’s Exhibit Xo. 2, Exhibit 3 having been previously detached on the boat); that the man who approached her and got the cab1 for her was in uniform like the driver of the cab; that the cab was a Stewart cab.

The declaration alleges that the Stewart Taxi-Service Company is a body corporate; that it was engaged in the business of carrying passengers for hire by means of taxicabs, and that the cab in which plaintiff was riding was owned by the company and was operated by the agent of the company; and the evidence shows that the cabs regularly met the boat and transferred passengers to Union Station, having a regular employee at the wharf who acts as master; that the coupons collected by the drivers or starter are turned in at the office of the taxi-service company. There is not a particle of evidence that there was a contract between the Steam Packet Company and the appellee whereby said last-mentioned company assumed any obligation to her for her safe passage beyond its own line; on the contrary, the ticket itself expressly provides “that in selling this ticket and checking1 baggage hereon, this company acts only as agent and is not responsible beyond its own line.” The words at the bottom of Exhibit Xo. 2, the transfer coupon, “Via B. S. P. Co. Tr. P.” loses any special significance because the same words are at the bottom of each of the coupons or sections and apparently indicate that the route at its beginning is by way of the Steam Packet Company.

Nor is there any evidence of any partnership' arrangement or a “single system,” referred to in Pugh v. Washington Ry. & Elec. Co., 134 Md. 196, and in 5 R. C. L. 155, sec. 780; or of a contract by the company on its own behalf for through transportation over a connecting line,” referred to in Mills v. B., C. & A. Rwy. Co., 111 Md. 260, and in 10 C. J. 820; nor that the taxicab company was an agent of the Steam Packet Company. It is to be noted that a ticket for continuous passage is not necessarily a “through” ticket, but may merely indicate that there are no stop over privileges. In the absence of any such contract or proof of agency or partnership', the law in this state is that a railroad company, in selling a ticket over its own and connecting roads, presxxmably acts as agent for the connecting roads, and assumes no liability for negligence of the connecting roads. Mills v. B., C. & A. Ry. Co., supra, and Pugh v. Washington Ry. & Elec. Co., supra. Especially is this true where liability is expressly negatived.

That the taxicab company was a common carrier was decided in Goldsworthy v. Public Service Commission, 141 Md. 674.

It follows that there wa's error in refusing the Steam Packet 'Company’s fifth prayer, which asked for a directed verdict in its favor on the ground “that the ticket with coupons attached which plaintiff purchased of the defendant * * * prim(l facie constitutes an agreement between plaintiff and the defendant; whereby this defendant in selling said ticket acted only as agent and was not responsible to plaintiff beyond its own line, and there is m> evidence that the Stewart Taxi-Service 'Company, which owned and operated the taxicab in which plaintiff was riding at the time the accident occurred, was the agent, servant or employee of this defendant.” It will be unnecessary to consider the other rejected prayers of said company.

Prom now on we need consider only the appeal of the Taxi-Service Company. ' Plaintiff further testified that after getting in the cab at the wharf it “traveled real fast, what I call usually fast”; that the chauffeur “never stopped before reaching Mt. Eoyal Avenue”; that on reaching said avenue “he was skimming1 along pretty fast, as 1 call it, and as he got kind of to the corner a ear was corning to the left and he barely slowed up for this car to shoot by and then he stepped oil the accelerator and the car started ahead and we were hit.” Q. That was when yon went into Mt. Eoyal Avenue A. If I remember right, the other ear was just past and he was barely this side of the middle of the street and he shot on across and he was about in the middle of the street, hut not quite.

One of the companions of appellee testified: “We started from the boat very fast * * *, and we kept a straight line to Union Station. I believe there is a little incline going down somewheres there, and we went very fast, seemingly so, and a few doors this side of Mt. Eoyal Avenue he kind of slackened, but did not stop, for a car coining from the left, and seemingly the man was giving it gas, because it shot across, started across, Mt. Eoyal Avenue. We did not get across Mt. Eoyal Avenue, because the man coming from the right of course hit us, or we came together in some way.” Another occupant of the cab confirmed the previous witnesses as to the speed of the cab. “When the taxicab reached Mt. Eoyal Avenue the driver slowed up a little bit to let car on left go by and as it went by he stepped on the gas again and shot across the street.”

A witness, Eichard Gwinn, formerly city register, was in his hath room fronting on the south side of Mt. Eoyal Avenue about sixty or seventy-five feet east of St. Paul Street and saw the car driven by Burton an instant before the collision, when it was about seventy-five feet east of St. Paul Street. This witness felt so outraged at the terrific: speed at which the Burton car wa's running1 that as a public duty he came forward as a voluntary witness in this case.

The driver of the cab in which appellee was riding testified that he was driving within the speed law, “around fifteen or eighteen miles, an hour”; that a‘t the intersection of St. Paul Street and Mt. Royal Avenue “a car coming to my left, eastbound, on Mt. Royal Avenue caused me to stop, or practically stop* not stop, but slowed up enough to drop' a gear to start off again”; that he looked to his right and saw the Burton car at Calvert Street and started across, and had plenty of time to go across the street if the Burton car had heen coming at reasonable speed; that when he got about the centre of the street he heard the tires of that oar dragging and he looked up and the car was on top of him and in another second he was hit and turned over; that he was at the building line on the south side of Mt. Royal Avenue, when he saw the other car at Calvert Street; that it is hard to judge the speed of a car at that distance, “but naturally for the car to have hit me before it got across the street it must have exceeded a few speed laws”; that it is harder to judge the speed of a1 oar coming towárds one than from the side; that he did not continue to look to his right “for the simple reason I had plenty of time if the car was going at the right rate of speed, I had plenty of time to get across there”; that when he was half way across the street he was running in second gear at five to eight miles an hour; that at that rate he could have stopped his ear within the distance of six feet; that his brakes were good; that he did not put on his brakes, as “I was not going to stop in the middle of the street, and get struck right in the front of your car, you might say. I tried to get ahead and get out of the way, * * * stepped on the gas to go ahead; * * * those cars are very slow to get away; I made but little progress in doing* it.” Q. You could have brought it to a stop in the middle of Mt. Royal Avenue? A. Yes, I could 'have brought my car to a stop-. Q. And if you had done that what would have happened? A. He would have hit me right where I was sitting, and we would all be killed right there. Q. You only went the distance from the front side to the back side when you were struck? A. That is about all it was. He further testified that after he saw the Burton car at Calvert Street he did not look again until he wa's about the centre of Mt. Royal Avenue, when he heard the sound of the brakes and the Burton car was about sixty-live feet away on tbe north side of the avenue, about midway between the middle of the street and the north side; that there were no other automobiles passing at that time, and he saw no people there.

James E. Burton testified that he was going west on Mt. Royal Avenue about the middle of the right-hand side of the street and as he got to the comer the taxicab' was coming north ou St. Paul Street “and I looked to the right. Of course, the tracks were clear at the bridge and nothing to block them off, and coming up north all of a sudden something flashed right in front of me and 1 struck the taxicab right at the back door of the cab; he turned my car around facing north * * *; he dragged my car right around and his car turned to the side. and turned over”; that he was traveling around eighteen to twenty-five miles an hour; that he would say the way the taxicab was coming by it was going-fast ; that there were no other cars there at that time.

There is a' stipulation in the record that the distance from St. Panl Street to Calvert Street from curb to curb is three hundred feet, and that Mt. Royal at St. Paul is one hundred feet wide.

The Stewart Taxi-Service Company offered fourteen prayers, of which the ninth, tenth, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth were granted and the others were refused.

We find no error in the refusal of the rejected prayers.

The first three asked for a directed verdict in favor of the company, on the grounds respectively that there was no legally sufficient evidence to support a verdict; want of evidence of negligence on the part of said defendant constituting the direct and proximate cause of the accident; and uneontradieted evidence that the accident was caused solely by the negligence of Burton without any contributory negligence on the part of the said company or its chauffeur.

The sixth presented the proposition that if the driver of the taxicab slowed down to let an east-hound car on Mt. Royal Avenue pass, and then looked to his right and saw the Burton automobile at Calvert Street, then it was not negligence for the chauffeur to proceed without further attention to said car, and the verdict must he for this defendant.

The eighth contained practically the same proposition, with the addition that under such circumstances Burton did not have the right of way over the taxicab within the meaning of the rules of the road of this state.

The eleventh asked for an instruction that if the jury should find that, when the taxicab stalled to cross Mt. Royal Avenue at St. Paul Street, the automobile driven by Burton was proceeding westerly and was at that time at Calvert Street, then there was no evidence of any negligence on the part of the company’s chauffeur, and the verdict must be for this defendant.

To support its theory that the driver of the taxicab was justified in crossing Mt. Royal Avenue without further attention to the car which at the time of entering said avenue he saw at Calvert Street, one block away, this appellant cites a number of cases. But practically all of them are cases between parties respectively responsible for the colliding car’s and not where a passenger in one of -them is injured. Besides they hold with practical unanimity that the question of negligence was for the jury, and do not hold even under their facts that it should be decided as a matter of law, as the court was asked to do in this case.

Besides all of the said prayers ignore the testimony in regal’d to what happened after the taxicab1 reached the middle of the avenue and actually saw the Burton car approaching sixty-five feet away, when the driver of the car says he could have stopped within six feet, and when Burton’s car was in the middle of the northern half of said avenue.

Any one who has driven a cai” must be conscious of the difficulty of making instantaneously a correct decision in such an emergency, and it is a question about which reasonable men would differ. But that makes it a question for the jury and not one to be decided as a matter of law.

The fourth, fifth and seventh prayer's contain the propositions in varying forms that on the uncontradioted facts, or if the jury find certain facts, the Taxi-Service Company was transporting the plaintiff as the agent and servant of the Steam Packet Company and therefore there can be no verdict against the Taxi-Service Company, unless there is also a verdict against the Steam Packet Company.

What we have said in the earlier part of the opinion disposes of the contention.

The 'plaintiff’s only granted prayer was the ordinary measure of damages prayer in such cases and it is stipulated in the record that the testimony of physicians as to the extent and nature of the injuries is omitted with the understanding that neither appellant disputes the nature and extent of appellee’s injuries.

■Judgment reversed without a, new trial as to the Baltimore Steam Pacleet Company; and judgment affirmed, as to the Stewart Taxi-Service Company; half of Ihe costs to be paid by the Stewart Taxi-Service Company and half by appellee.  