6 A.2d 246 | Md. | 1939
The plaintiff, Robert W. Long, appellee, charges the defendants, Abraham Askin and Samuel Askin, partners trading as Askin Brothers Company, defendants, appellants, with the negligent driving of their automobile at the intersection of Greenway and Thirty-ninth Street in Baltimore, whereby the plaintiff, at the time driving a light delivery truck belonging to himself and his brother, was injured. From a judgment for the plaintiff, the defendants appeal. The charge is that the plaintiff's injuries were caused by the defendants' automobile being driven by their employee in a "negligent, reckless and careless manner and at a high and unlawful rate of speed." Their reliance is on speed in excess of that allowed by law, and that the violation of that statute was the proximate cause of the accident, while the defendants contend that the proximate cause was the failure of the plaintiff, as required by the statute, to yield the right of way to defendants' driver.
The accident occurred on January 7th, 1938, between one and two o'clock in the afternoon, the weather clear, *547 the street dry. The plaintiff was going eastward on Thirty-ninth Street toward Greenway. The defendants' car, driven by Richard Hawkins, was going north on Greenway. Under the law, Act of 1929, ch. 224 (Code [Supp. 1935], art. 56, sec. 209), the defendants' car had the right of way, there being no signal lights or boulevard stop signs at the intersection. It was "agreed that there are slow signs there, both ways." Both cars were going straight through the intersection. Both streets are eighty feet wide; the distance between curbs on Thirty-ninth Street being twenty-four feet, on Greenway thirty feet. As soon as the plaintiff reached the building line, the drivers could see each other's car at a distance of 200 feet to the plaintiff's right and the defendants' left, at which time the plaintiff would be about forty feet from the intersection, and the defendant about 150 feet, according to the map in the record. If the houses at the intersection sit back from the building line, the distance of visibility would be increased, but as we are not informed as to the location of the improvements, we must take the building line as determining the situation in that respect.
The plaintiff's reliance is upon the cases of Taxicab Companyv. Ottenritter,
It must be admitted that, under the cases cited, the question, though by statute made one of law, usually resolves itself into one of fact.
What are the facts, according to the record?
The only witness testifying to the collision on behalf of the plaintiff is the plaintiff himself, and it is his testimony on which he relies. He testified: "I was coming over Thirty-ninth Street and I was going to my lunch, going home, and when I got to the intersection of Greenway I looked at my right and I saw this car approaching around 200 to 225 feet down Greenway, and I had plenty of time to go on and I started across the intersection, and when I got half through I heard the screech of brakes and he hit into me; if he had gone straight he would have missed me, but he swung in the back of the truck and he struck me." This is not consistent with his statement that when the cars collided the front of his truck was five feet past the east curb on Greenway, and the photograph in evidence by the plaintiff shows the contact on the plaintiff's truck to have been on the right rear part of the machine, so that if his statement be true his truck should have been hit in the middle. He approached Greenway at "about twenty miles an hour."
"Q. Where were you when you first saw this automobile? A. I was just entering from the other side to go through the intersection to the other side. Q. Where was the other automobile when you first saw it? A. I guess 120 or 125 — when I first got there he was about 200 feet"; where he first saw it it was 200 feet away. *549 "Q. Had you reached the intersection or just where were you? A. At that time I was going over my intersection because I slowed the truck down. Q. How far was he away from you at that time? A. I guess 120 feet. Q. You said when you first saw him he was 200 feet away? A. Yes, sir, when I went to make the intersection he was coming towards me. * * * Q. How far was he away? A. About 120 feet when I was going over the intersection. * * * Q. Where was this car when you first saw it 200 feet away? A. He was 120 feet — he was coming at such a rate of speed. * * * Q. Where was your car with respect to Thirty-ninth and Greenway when you first saw the other car 200 feet way? A. I was right here at this building line (the space from building line to curb is twenty-five feet)."
He said that when he entered the intersection he had slowed down to fifteen miles an hour, which he testified was the speed at which he crossed the intersection.
On cross-examination the plaintiff said: "I could not judge the speed of the other car — could not estimate it." What he evidently resorts to is to build up a case of defendants' negligence by his statements of distances, which will not stand close analysis. One cannot tell whether he first saw the defendants' car at 200 feet or 120 feet, or was unaware of its nearness until he heard the screeching of its brakes. From the time the front of the truck left the west curb on Greenway until the rear of it cleared the curb on the east side he would travel not over fifty feet, which would take, at fifteen miles an hour, two and one-third seconds. In the same time the defendants' truck would have had to travel 120 feet at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour, or 200 feet at about sixty miles an hour. The plaintiff does not testify as to the speed of the defendants' car, but he tried to leave the impression that it was traveling at a much greater speed than permitted by law, and that such violation was the proximate cause of the collision. It does not "follow that every violation of the rule of the road by the vehicle approaching from the right results in depriving *550
it of the right of way." Hendler Creamery Co. v. Friedman,
While the plaintiff "could not judge the speed of the other car," there was positive and uncontradicted evidence as to its speed. Defendants' driver, Richard Hawkins, said he was going at the time twenty to twenty-five miles an hour; "* * * had not gone over thirty miles all the way up." Edgar Deskins testified that he followed Hawkins two blocks up Greenway at a distance of 100 to 150 feet and that at no time did he (Deskins) go over twenty-five miles an hour, and "* * * I was about — just about 250 feet when I seen a big blur like start out from the west side which turned out to be the truck driven by Mr. Long."
Hawkins' story of the collision is: "I was going north on Greenway, so when I got to Thirty-ninth and Greenway I looked to my right and I saw nothing coming, and I look to my left, and I saw a truck approaching me about — I had about ten feet to stop when I saw the truck and I could not stop in ten feet. Q. As you arrived at the corner where was the other truck? A. We were both right there about the same time. I judge the truck was going faster than I was. The truck came from my left. I put on my brake. The other car made no effort to stop; he swerved to his left like that (indicating) and I hit him on the right (rear) fender. At this time he was going about twenty or twenty-five. * * * Q. Did you or not stop at the point of impact? A. I stopped still."
Small dents on the right rear fender and on the body in the rear of the fender show clearly that if Hawkins had come to a stop in a foot less there would not have been a collision. The damage to the defendants' car was to the left front fender and the left end of the bumper, accounted for by a police officer, arriving at the scene shortly after the accident, who found skid marks ending at the intersection and "wavering down Greenway," fourteen or fifteen paces, indicating also that, while *551 Hawkins was more than ten feet away when he became aware of the Long truck in the intersection, he did not see it until the danger of collision was imminent.
On this evidence this court is of the opinion that the case is one of concurrent negligence, disentitling each party to recover from the other as a matter of law. Warner v. Markoe,
On the other hand, the plaintiff's evidence was so inconclusive, contradictory, and uncertain as to not be accepted as the basis of a legal conclusion. Slacum v. Jolley,
Judgment reversed with costs, without a new trial. *553