The opinion of the Court was delivered by
There are four exceptions, but the second was not argued; and the appellant’s counsel stated at the hearing that the fourth was the serious one.
Both cars were moving in the same direction; both were going north from Charleston. The car struck was a Eord, and the car striking was a Cadillac; the Ford, angling from right to left, stopped on the left side of the road to get gasoline and repair a puncture, and while in that position, the passengers of it at work upon it, the Cadillac came up from its rear and hit the right side of the Ford. Plainly, if the Cadillac had followed the law of the road, which it now invokes, it would not have hit the Ford while the Ford stood on the left side of the road; if the Ford was to the left of the center, when it ought to have been to the right of the center, so was the Cadillac. More than this, the statute, as we have suggested, requires a machine proceeding, for instance, •towards the north to keep to the right of the center of the road for a purpose, to wit:
“So as not to obstruct the passage of any other * * * carriage * * * on the other side of the center thereof.”
That is to say, so as not to obstruct another auto on the other, and for it the right-hand side of the road, going south in the opposite direction. The halt which the Foard made did not, therefore, impair the right of the Cadillac, for the *475 Cadillac was not moving south on that side of the road which would have been the right-hand side for it.
The judgment below is affirmed.
