Capital Raceway Promotions, Inc. v. Smith

322 A.2d 238, 22 Md. App. 224, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 344
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 22, 1974
Docket941, September Term, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 322 A.2d 238 (Capital Raceway Promotions, Inc. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Raceway Promotions, Inc. v. Smith, 322 A.2d 238, 22 Md. App. 224, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 344 (Md. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Lowe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A defect inherent in the nature of man is that perversity of spirit which attracts us to spectacles of danger in which our fellow men risk death for our amusement. Although the events in the coliseums of ancient Rome were somewhat different from those held in their modern counterparts, spectators were perhaps subject to similar risks for there must have been occasions when a lion escaped the arena to prowl among the patrons or a gladiator lost control of his weapon to the detriment of a front row observer.

On April 24, 1971 a “funny car,” designed to reach speeds in excess of two hundred miles an hour in a quarter of a mile, left the track at Capital Raceway and rolled over an anchor-type fence mashing it down upon spectators in the stands. Ironically the vehicle was travelling backward at a relatively slow speed. Among those injured (some were seriously hurt, while others were more fortunate) were the appellees (and cross-appellants) Emma Smith and her son Harold Jr., Beverly Smith, Albert Alvino and William Ledbetter.

The appellees had come to witness one of those spectacles of speed which had made famous such names as Don Schumacher and Dale Creasey, cross-appellees, who respectively owned the body and chassis of a “funny car,” known as the “Ram Charger,” which was to be driven by cross-appellee Terrence Allen Marshall. That evening’s race against the “Chi-Town Hustler” (“the heaviest race in the country”) was to be held on a track leased to and controlled by Capital Raceway Promotions, Inc., appellant. The fuel used was nitromethane with the help of which the “Seventy-One Stardust Barracuda machine .. . cranks up at 1500 to 1700 horsepower and turns at top speed of 215 miles an hour.”

The appellees were seated in the “pit area,” about one hundred and fifty feet behind the starting line. This area is *227 considered desirable seating for those interested more in the preparations for a race than in its conclusion. The stands are separated from the roadway by a rather narrow walking space between the first row and a chain link fence on metal posts at the edge of the track or roadway.

Spectators are attracted to this area not only by the preparation in the “pit” by mechanics and waiting racers but also by a preliminary exhibition. The one piece body of the “funny car,” which has no doors or hood, is raised on a hinge attached to the chassis to expose motor and interior. The driver dons his fire suit (which resembles a space suit), helmet and goggles. He then enters the car and is strapped in as he is towed to the “staging area.”

At the staging area the vehicle is started with an “ .. . electric aircraft starter that hooks from the outside on the snout of the blower.” The body is then lowered and latched in place.

The next procedure and its consequences that night are best described in a statement made by the driver:

“ ‘We do two burn-outs, a wet one and a dry one. The purpose of the wet one is to get glue, we call it bleach, on the tires. They pour liquid butyl rubber under the rear tires. And I put the car in overdrive and I spin the tires through the glue and across the starting line from the staging area maybe one hundred to two hundred feet to lay down a sticky surface for traction down the track to get it ready, you know, for when I make my pass.
“ ‘. . . So, I made my wet run, then backed the car to a place just in back of the starting line, but in front of the bleach area, and I did my dry burn-out. You do dry burn-outs to dry the tires so when you launch on your run you are sure the tires won’t spin and to make sure it will hook up, launch straight.
“ ‘Now, the second burn-out is done in low gear, or what we call direct drive. I only did two, one wet and one dry. Then after the second burn-out across the starting line again I backed the car to about *228 twenty feet back of the starting line and stopped, that is right, come to a complete stop.
“ ‘Now, this transmission also has a direct reverse, and because it has straight cut gears in it sometimes when you stop and the gears aren’t aligned you can’t shift. So, I wasn’t aligned when stopped at that point, and I had to move the car slightly to align the gears. It has an automatic triple disc [power] glide clutch, and the only way you can move the car is to increase the rpms. So, I brought the motor slightly up to a point where the car started to move back slowly. This kind of transmission is kind of delicate, you understand, and quite expensive. So, I never shift unless I am at a dead stop. I guess that time I moved car about one foot backwards, not really under power, just coasting.
“ ‘Well, neutral and reverse are so close it is hard to tell which you are in momentarily, but I attempted to stop the car and the brake pedal went right to the floor. The car was still moving, barely moving, and it just continued rolling backward.
“ ‘My next thought was just to jam it into forward gear. I kept pulling on the lever but it just wouldn’t go in. At this time the car probably went another forty or fifty feet backwards. I don’t [believe] the car was under power. I was in neutral or reverse, I don’t really know which one. I guess I was going about five miles an hour at that point, not fast. I never had this kind of experience before in my career. Once you are strapped in you can’t turn around to see behind you, there is no way. I thought I was going to back into the tow truck, you know. My concern was the brand new body we had just put on the car. The whole thing is fiberglass, one piece, costs about $4,000. The paint job is seven or eight hundred dollars alone.
“ T thought of turning off the ignition, but that wouldn’t have stopped me from rolling backward. *229 There is no manual brake, I was just strapped in the car helpless. Well, I didn’t know where to steer. I couldn’t see. I had looked at the track beforehand from the starting line to the finish and it looked pretty good. I was satisfied with it. My only concern, other than that, was the lighting, and the track lights were pretty decent. I have seen worse and better, but they were sufficient for two hundred miles an hour speeds. I never paid much attention to the staging area.
“ ‘So, the car kept rolling backward for a considerable distance. I didn’t know what was behind me, other than maybe other race cars or tow trucks. I was aware of that. And I felt this jerk and the rear of the car lifted up in the air as it rolled up on the fence. The wheely bars 1 caught in the fence and stopped me but then I shut the motor off, and that is when I heard people under the car, kids, screaming, people, I don’t know who. Seemed like everybody just tore the body off the car while I was still sitting there, for souvenirs, I guess. Then I got out. I wasn’t hurt at all. And I crawled off and got my gear off and started to help them, Dale and Don, move the chassis off the fence. I didn’t see any of the injured people. I know there was some kids involved.’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
322 A.2d 238, 22 Md. App. 224, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-raceway-promotions-inc-v-smith-mdctspecapp-1974.