192 A. 356 | Md. | 1937
The collision for the consequences of which, the plaintiff, H. Leslie Carlin, sought to recover from the defendant, Cornelia T. Worthington, occurred at the intersection of the Cooksville Road with the Columbia Pike, in Montgomery County. From a judgment for the defendant the plaintiff appeals.
There were two trucks involved: the plaintiff's truck, driven by Ralph E. Cullen, the defendant's by Roy C. Brightwell. The plaintiff's truck was on its way from Baltimore to Washington on the Columbia Pike, which is a boulevard or favored highway. The defendant's truck was being driven from Glenwood to Washington on the Cooksville Road, a secondary or unfavored highway. The *507 roads intersected, and the trucks met at Olney. On the Cooksville Road, near the intersection, was a "Stop" sign, erected by the authority of Code, Art. 56, § 209, Acts 1929, ch. 224, warning motorists on the Cooksville Road of the danger in entering or crossing the Columbia Pike. There is a store on the northwest corner of the intersection, so near the roads that it obstructs the view of the other road, to persons traveling on either of the roads in the directions the participants were respectively going at the time. There was evidence that defendant's driver stopped his truck before entering the intersection, and evidence that he did not stop, and that he slowed the truck and put it in second gear. The plaintiff's driver testified that he reduced his speed approaching the intersection to twenty-five miles an hour, in obedience to a road sign so restricting the speed at that point, and that the trucks entered the intersection almost simultaneously. The defendant's driver testified that, when he entered the intersection, the plaintiff's truck was 150 or 160 feet away, and traveling just before the collision at from thirty-five to forty miles an hour, and that his (defendant's) rear wheels were "about the center of the road (when) he come up there and struck me." The evidence stated shows that it was so conflicting as to require the jury to say who was or were at fault. The defendant did not submit a demurrer prayer, so that the sufficiency of the plaintiff's evidence was admittedly one of fact for the jury.
The only question argued was the plaintiff's second prayer, refused by the trial court, which asked for an instruction defining the rule of the road with respect to favored and unfavored highways, and the duty of a a driver on an unfavored highway in regard to "Stop" signs, and he relies upon the opinion in Blinder v. Monaghan,
The rights, duties, and privileges of motorists on favored and unfavored highways is discussed at considerable length in the notes in 58 A.L.R. 1198, 81 A.L.R. 185, and 89 A.L.R. 838. Preferences in certain streets or highways must be created by statute or ordinance (5 American Jurisprudence sec. 301, p. 668), and in this state they are, by section 209, article 56 of the Code. The weight of authority seems to be that the right of a driver on a favored highway is not absolute, but is to be enjoyed with due regard to the circumstances then and there existing, particularly as to speed and distances of the respective cars from the intersection when in sight of each other. Note, 58A.L.R. 1198. A "stop" sign means stop before entering a boulevard or favored highway (Carrigan v. Ashwell,
It is not negligent for a driver on a primary or favored highway to assume that a driver on a secondary or unfavored highway, marked by a stop sign, will stop and allow him to proceed. Keir v. Trager,
It is the application by statute of the old "stop, look, and listen" rule with respect to railways, which is, as stated inPhiladelphia, W. B.R. Co. v. Hogeland,
In this case the plaintiff contends, as his only reason for a reversal, that his second prayer should have been granted, and relies upon the case of Blinder v. Monaghan,
For this omission in the plaintiff's second prayer, it should have been, as it was, refused, and the judgment appealed from will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.