Chiswell v. Nichols

112 A. 363, 137 Md. 291, 1920 Md. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 3, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 112 A. 363 (Chiswell v. Nichols) 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
Chiswell v. Nichols, 112 A. 363, 137 Md. 291, 1920 Md. LEXIS 125 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Eugenia Ohiswell, the appellant, sued Charles E. Nichols, the appellee, to recover damages for personal injury sustained by her in an automobile collision caused by the alleged neg *294 ligence of the appellee. The judgiment being for .the appellee, she has appealed to this Court.

At the conclusion of the evidence taken in the trial of the case below, a number of prayers were offered by the plaintiff', as well as by the defendant, but only the defendant’s second and third prayers, directing! a verdict for him, were granted; one because of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, and the other for a want of legally sufficient evidence entitling the plaintiff to recover. The ruling of the court upon the prayers is the only exception in the record.

The record discloses that the plaintiff, a resident of Licks-ville, Frederick County, Maryland, upon the invitation of Stanley J. Wood, a merchant of Licksville, on the 4th day of December, 1919, rode with him in an automobile, owned and driven by him, to the town- of Frederick. On their return home, in the afternoon of that day, after passing through Buckeystown, and while proceeding southward on the concrete road to Licksville, they collided with the defendant’s car at or near the intersection of that road by the Adamstown road.

The plaintiff at the time of the accident was seated on the front seat of the automobile, a Ford touring cax*, hr the light of the driver, Mr. Wood. There was in the car a quantity of oysters and merchandise, weighing four or five hundred pounds.

The defendant, with Mrs. Eugene Wachter, had, on the day of the accident, ridden in a Page automobile, owned and driven by the defendant, from their homes- in Buckeystown to Adamstown, and at the time of the accident were returning from Adamstown to Buckeystown. The Adamstown road, over which they traveled in returning to Buckeystown, approached the Buckeystown road from the west, and was from one and onedialf feet to three feet'lower than the Buckeystown road. The ascent from the former to the latter started a short distance west of the Buckeystown road.

Immediately before the accident the plaintiff was upon the Buckeystown road moving south thereon towai’ds its inter *295 section with tbe Adamstown road, while the defendant was on the Adamstown road going east to said point of intersection, and the collision occurred at or near said intersection.

The evidence discloses that there was nothing to obstruct the view of either, at any point within a quarter to a half mile of the intersection, from seeing the other as he or she approached that point, more than a post or rail fence upon the side of thei road. It is further shown from the evidence that upon the east side of the Buckeystown road, opposite the center of the Adamstown road, was a milk station or stand.

Stanley J. Wood, the owner and driver of the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding, in giving an account of the accident, said it was “about half past three in the afternoon,” the sun was shining “in my eyes, shone on the windshield,. and I could not see anything on the side to amount to anything. I was looking straight ahead; on thei side the glare of the windshield kept mo from seeing anything coming from that side. I was just going along, didn’t know I had come to that road (Adamstown road). * * * When I came to my senses, I was standing up on the pike.” “When did you see the Nichols car with reference to the accident?” Ana “I never seen it until the very moment it struck me. When the collision came I just seen something black come before me and everything was dull, I didn’t know nothing.” The witness testified that he frequently travelled the road from Licks-ville to Buckeystown road, and knew about where it came into the Buckeystown road. He further testified that, at the ame of the accident, he was going between twenty and twenty-five miles an hour. He had no speedometer, but was not going over twenty-five miles an hour. The Nichols ear, he said, struck his car between the front and rear1 doors and “drove it across the pike over against the milk stand and smashed it down.” Upon cross-examination, he testified there was nothing between the Buckeystown road and the Adamstown road to prevent him from seeing anyone travel-ling on the last named road, but on the day of the accident *296 he could not see because the sun was shining in his eyes. He said, “it was difficult driving; it did not occur to me I was there at that road.”

The plaintiff testified that, at the time of the1 accident, the oar in which she was driving was going between twenty and twenty-five miles an hour. When asked to tell the jury what, if anything, she knew about the accident, she said: “We passed Mr. De Garmendia’s car directly outside of Buckeystown, and we seemed to be riding about four or five minutes, when all at once I came to on the pike there, and I couldn’t imagine what had happened; we were going at a good steady rate.” “Did you see the Nichols car collide with the Wood car?” Ans. “No,” “Tell the jury wha.t you were doing as you were going along; the road.” Ans. “As we passed Mr. De Garmendia’s car, Mr. Wood said, ‘that is Mr. D'e Garmendia. I know him by his hat.’ I said, ‘Yes, I know him by his number’; and we drove along then quietly, nothing more was said.” “Obuld you see the Adamstown road?” Ans, “Yes, sir; I could see it fairly well, but not very well because of the sunlight.” “Was the sun shining on the shield?” Ans. “Yes, sir; seemed to be shining in front of the car there.” She did not see the Nichols car, though there Was no obstruction “along there at the intersection of the road,” more than the post and rail fence. She was seated on the right side of the car, the side from which the Nichols car approached. There were no> curtains upon that side of the car. She knew where the Adamstown road came into the Buckeystown road. 'She had often passed up and down that road. She was then asked, “Did you look in the direction of the Adamstown road going down?” And she answered: “I had been glancing to the right some.” “You didn’t look particularly at the Adamstown road?” “No. I saw where the road came out by the fence just before we got to the Adamstown road.” She did not see Mr. Nichols’ car at any time before the accident. Mr. Wood’s car, at the time of the accident was in the middle of the road. She was asked: “Were you giving especial attention to the Adamstown road *297 to see if anything was coming down there?” Ana. “No, I was looking casually about now and then as best I could.” “The sun was in your eyes ?” Ans, “Yes, sir.”

Oarlos De Garnaendia, a farmer near Tuscarora, Maryland, testified that- he was returning home from, Frederick, on December 4th, 1919, and when he had reached a point just beyond Buckeystown, about three o’clock in the afternoon, Mr. Wood passed him. The witness’ wife was with him in the car, sitting to his right on the front, seat, and Glenn Washington, a colored man, an employe© of witness, was sitting on the rear seat. In speaking of the Adamstown road, he said “it came into the Buckeystown road almost at right angles.” The acute angle, however, is on the south side of the Adamstown road.

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 363, 137 Md. 291, 1920 Md. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chiswell-v-nichols-md-1920.