Buckey v. White

111 A. 777, 137 Md. 124, 1920 Md. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 111 A. 777 (Buckey v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckey v. White, 111 A. 777, 137 Md. 124, 1920 Md. LEXIS 107 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Offutt, J .,

delivered the opinion of the court.

George P. Buckey, one of the appellants at the time of the accident out- of which this case grew, conducted a hardware store at Union Bridge in Frederick County, where he resided with his family. His son, Earl Buckey, the other appellant, who was then about twenty-two or three years of age, lived with him and assisted him in his hardware business. Some time before, the father had bought an automobile runabout which was used in connection with his hardware business and appears to have been also used from time to time for the convenience of his family. He allowed his son Earl Buckey the privilege of using this car whenever he wished and, on the evening of July 14th, 1916, the son started to drive it from liis home to Braddock Heights, where he e-xpeetecl to attend a dance. On the way he called for and was joined by three friends, who were with him at the time of the accident. The sole purpose for which he was using the car on this trip- was *126 his own. pleasure and his business with it, to quote his testimony was “just pleasure, going up to the mountain to dance’ or amuse ourselves in any other way,” and was not in any way connected with the business at Union Bridge. In going to Braddock Heights he travelled along Maryland Avenue. A short distance from Braddock Heights this avenue connects with a road leading from it to the southern entrance of the Hotel Braddock. The testimony regarding the character of the road is conflicting. It is a lateral road, running at an angle to Maryland Avenue, with which it connects, but which it does not cross, and there is testimony in the case tending to show that it had been laid out, graded and used by the public as a thoroughfare for a number of years and especially by persons having occasion to go to or from the Hotel Braddock. As Buckey approached the point at which this lateral road joins Maryland Avenue, the appellee’s car, containing eight persons and driven by his son, Bruce. Gr. White, approached Maryland Avenue along this lateral road. When the appellee’s car was within a short distance óf Maryland Avenue, which he was approaching, his attention was called to the lights of Buekey’s car’, which was then approaching him from his left about three hundred and fifty feet away. It was then between eight and nine o’clock in the evening and, while it was not entirely dark, it was dark enough to require lights on the automobile. The testimony concerning the circumstances under which the accident occurred is conflicting, but that of the plaintiff tends to show that as the appellee’s car approached Maryland Avenue, its head lights were turned on, and that, as soon as he was aware of the approach of the appellants’ car, the driver of the appellee’s car sounded his horn and slowly drove into Maryland Avenue, and started to turn in a northerly direction towards Frederick. When he reached Maryland Avenue he saw that the appellants’ car, which was approaching from his left, was on the wrong side of the road, and that if he, continuing on his course, drove on the right-hand side of the road to which he *127 was entitled, his car would collide head on with the .Buckey car, and lie thereupon brought his car to a stop nearly across the road. The appellants’ ear, traveling at a speed variously estimated by the appellee’s witnesses at from twenty-five to thirty-five miles an hour, continued to approach on the appellee’s side of the road and struck the left side of his ear. It was further testified that the appellee was prevented from completely crossing over to the right-hand side of Maryland Avenue by the position of the appellants’ car on that side of the road. As a result of the collision the appellee’s car was damaged and this suit was brought to recover for the loss thereby sustained.

The verdict of the jury was in favor of the plaintiff and from the judgment thereon this: appeal was taken.

The declaration filed in the ease appears to- be in the usual form and, as no objection was urged to it in this Court, it is sufficient to say that the demurrer to it was properly overruled.

The record contains but one exception, and that involves the correctness of the court’s ruling on the prayers. The plaintiff offered two prayers, of which one was granted, and the defendants five, of which the first, second and third were granted. The appellants’ fourth prayer was but a paraphrase of their first prayer and there was no error in its refusal. By their fifth p-rayer the court was asked to direct a verdict for the defendants on the theory that the undisputed evidence showed that the negligence of the driver of the plaintiff’s car directly contributed to the happening of the accident. This prayer was properly refused. The-re was evidence tending to show that at the time of the accident the ear driven by Earl Buckey was on the wrong side of the road and traveling over a thoroughfare upon which there were at the- time many other1 automobiles and pedestrians, at what, under all the circumstances, might well have been considered an excessive: rate of speed, and that the driver of the appellee’s car was unable to avoid the collision because of the position of the appellants’ *128 car on the wrong side of the road. Under such circumstances the existence of contributory negligence could only have been determined by a consideration of all the facts and circumstances surrounding the accident and, as was said by Judge Briscoe, speaking] for this Court in Waltring v. James, 136 Md. 406, “when the nature of the act relied on to show contributory negligence can only be determined by all the circumstances attending the transaction it is within the province of the jury to characterize it.”

By the plaintiff’s second prayer, which was granted, the jury were instructed in substance that “all vehicles shall have the right of way over other vehicles approaching at intersecting roads from the left-, and shall give the right of way to those approaching from .the right,” and that if at the time of the accident Earl Buckey while driving an automobile approached the plaintiff’s car from the left at intersecting roads and failed to glive it the right of way, and that the accident was caused by such failure and that the plaintiff and his son who was then and there driving his car acted with due care and caution immediately preceding the accident, their verdict should be for the plaintiff. Objection was made to this prayer on two grounds. One, that it “wholly ignores the fact that if the plaintiff by the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care could have avoided the injury complained of that then he is not entitled to recover.” Inasmuch as the prayer did require the jury to find that at the time of the accident the plaintiff and the driver of his car “acted with due care and caution” before they could find their verdict for the plaintiff, the force of this objection is not apparent.

The second ground of objection is that the prayer is misleading because it instructs the jury as to the law of the road relating to the respective rights of vehicles approaching each other at intersecting roads. The reason assigned for this objection was that there was no evidence in the case of any intersecting roads and that therefore the prayer was misleading.

*129

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 777, 137 Md. 124, 1920 Md. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckey-v-white-md-1920.