Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Merriken

128 A. 277, 147 Md. 572, 41 A.L.R. 763, 1925 Md. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 26, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 128 A. 277 (Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Merriken) 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
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Merriken, 128 A. 277, 147 Md. 572, 41 A.L.R. 763, 1925 Md. LEXIS 127 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court-.

The appellee in this case was injured at about midnight July 14th, 1921, in a collision between an automobile in which 'be was being driven and a guy pole owned by the appellant located within the outlines of the state road, a public highway iu Caroline County, Maryland, at a point where the road maleéis a sharp bend or curve; and this suit was brought by him through his father and next friend to recover for those injuries. 'The case was tided in the Circuit Court for Cecil County, to which it had been removed and, the verdict and judgment being in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant appealed. The record contain© one exception, and the controlling question which it present® for our considerlaition is whether upon all the evidence in the case the appellee was as a matter of law guilty of negligence contributing to the accident complained of. In dealing with that question upon the defendant’© prayer's w'e must assume the truth of all evidence tending to support the plaintiff’s claim, together with such inferences as may naturally and legitimately be drawn therefrom. Thus dealt with these are the facts:

Ou the night of thie accident Richard H. Merriken, who was then twenty years of age, with Alvin Brown and Clarence Pense was driven by Leslie Lee from Denton, where he *575 then lived, to Oyster Shell Point to & dance. Lee was a licensed driver and the oar which he drove belonged to his father, although he drove it constantly. At a point on the State Road, neiar Williston, the road curves or bends sharply, and about thirty-seven feet north of the center of the curve in the direction of Denton, on the easterly side of the road, there was a guy pole to which the appellant’® telephone pole on the opposite side of the road was attached to lessen the strain placed on it by the curve. 'The road at that point was of tarred macadam, and the distance, measured across it between the guy pole on the east side of it and the telephone pole on the opposite side, was said to he twenty-two and onedialf feet. The guy pole Was within the travelled way of the road, with the tracks of passing vehicles within a hand’s breath of it, ,and so placed that one driving an automobile approaching. it from the south would not be able to see it at night by the lights of the machine until he had turned the •corner, and the curve or bend was so sharp that machines passing it in a northerly direction .at a speed of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour might skid .and he forced into contact with it.

On the night of the accident Lee, who lived at Hobbs in Merriken’s neighborhood, drove Merrifeen, Brown ’and Pense to Oyster Shell Pbint to. the dance referred to. They left the dance to return to Denton between eleven thirty and twelve o’clock. On their return Lee drove and occupied the left front seat, .and Brown the right front seat. Merrikem and Pense occupied the rear seats, and some time before -they reached the curve to which we have referred they both fell asleep.

Merriken was quite familiar with the road, hut prior to that night Lee, the driver, knew nothing of it at .all, although he had not communicated that fact to Merriken.

Lee testified that he approached the curve referred to at ■about fiften to twenty miles .an hour, that he ®a,w no warning post or sign .and that, when he reached it, he found i-t too abrupt to take and was .about to drive into, a field when he *576 saw the pole in such a position that he could not do that, and he then attempted 1» drive around the curve, but in that effort hi® car skidded into oontalct with the pole, smashing the-rear wheels of the automobile 'and injuring Merriken.

Many of these facts were disputed -and were contradicted by other testimony. Eor instance there was evidence that the pole was not in the travelled Way of the road, that when Lee approlaohed the curve 'he was driving at from thirty to' thirty-five miles an hour, and that at the center of the curve there wasi placed as a warning of danger a striped post referred to .as a barber pole. But as it was the exclusive function of the jury to resolve that conflict, it is unnecessary forra to refer further to» it.

At the close' of the whole case the plaintiff offered three prayers of which the second and third were granted, and the-defendant five, of which the third, fourth and- fifth were granted. All the other prayers were refused. The plaintiff’s third prayer was.the damage prayer usual iu daises of this character, .and was unobjectionable. Hi® second prayer, while inartificial in form and really inapplicable toi the facts of the case, could not possibly have injured the defendant. In substance it instructed the jury that if they found that Leie was in control of the car when the accident happiened ■and that the plaintiff had noi control over it, and that no negligence of his contributed to the accident, that Lee’s negligence could not be imputed to' him. The defendant did not contend that the doctrine of imputed negligence applied to' the facts of this ease 'and, as it appeared from the uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiff neither owned nor oontrlolled the 'automobile and was asleep» at the time of the accident, it must be conceded that it did not. Dorchester County v. Wright, 138 Md. 577. And as the prayer did no more than state a principle which could not have been denied, it is difficult to see under the facte of this case how it could have injured the defendant. The defendant objects to' it, 'however, on the ground that it stresses too emphatically the fact that Lee operated 'and controlled the car at .the time of the accident *577 and thereby obscures the fact that Aiettriken was asleep at that time, but we see no force in that objection. Operation, ownership! and control are essential elements in the doctrine of imputed negligence, and if it is to be defined at .all they cannot well be ignored, and if defendant objected to the prayer because it did not sufficiently define negligence, that objection should have been specially made in the trial court.

The real question presented by the appeal, however, is raised by the refusal of the defendant’s first and second prayers, and it is this: Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law (a) because he fell asleep, or (b) because he did not before he fell .asleep warn the driver of the ear in ’Which he was riding of the dangerous curve ?

To justify a court in chara,ctarizing conduct as negligent in law it must involve some “prominent and decisive act, in regard to> the effect and character of which no room is left for ordinary minds to differ.” Waltring v. James, 136 Md. 414. The ingredients of contributory negligence do not differ in any respect from those of primary negligence, it is> ¡after all, “like primary negligence, relative taad not absolute, and being relative it is dependent on the peculiar circumstances of each particular case. There are many acts which would not be negligent, when done under some conditions, though the same acts if done under different conditions might he higjhly negligent. And this is equally true of contributory negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
128 A. 277, 147 Md. 572, 41 A.L.R. 763, 1925 Md. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-potomac-telephone-co-v-merriken-md-1925.