Clayborne v. Mueller

284 A.2d 24, 13 Md. App. 530, 1971 Md. App. LEXIS 309
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 2, 1971
Docket290, September Term, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 284 A.2d 24 (Clayborne v. Mueller) 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
Clayborne v. Mueller, 284 A.2d 24, 13 Md. App. 530, 1971 Md. App. LEXIS 309 (Md. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A $3500.00 judgment in favor of Joseph R. Mueller, Jr., against James C. Clayborne, rendered as a result of a jury trial in the Baltimore City Court before Judge Joseph L. Carter, has led to this appeal.

The appellant raises three questions:

1. Was the appellee guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law ?
2. Did the appellee assume the risk by his actions?
3. Was the trial judge in error in instructing the jury that the matter before it did not involve a “pedestrian case?”

On Sunday night, March 29, 1970, the appellee, in the performance of his duties as a police officer, stopped a motorist for a minor traffic violation. 1 After the appellee handed a “repair order” 2 to the motorist that he had previously halted, the motorist asked the appellee a question. The appellee returned to a position variously described as being six inches to fifteen inches from the driver’s door of the halted vehicle, and a conversation ensued. The appellee’s patrol car was stopped in the rear of the motorist’s vehicle.

The appellee testified, as did a witness, that the red *533 dome light of the police vehicle was lit, its headlights were on, and the turn signal was operating. However, the appellant said he did not see these lights. While the appellee was standing beside the car door talking to the motorist, he was struck by a vehicle operated by the appellant.

The accident occurred in the 4600 block of Liberty Heights Avenue, in Baltimore City. Liberty Heights Avenue runs generally east and west and is 50 feet wide. It is divided by a center line. The lane adjacent to the center line is 10 feet wide. The curb lane is 15 feet wide.

The police officer who investigated the accident testified that allowing for parked cars at the curb, the street would accommodate two lanes of moving traffic in each direction. The events described in this case arose in the east bound side of the street.

As the appellee was engaged in the conversation with the motorist, he observed an automobile also east bound being driven approximately “six to eight inches” from the street side of the parked cars. The appellee said he did not know what to do so he endeavored to run in front of the vehicle beside which he had been standing, grabbed the fender of the car, and attempted to hurl himself onto the hood of the car. As he did, he was struck. Appellee said he first observed the appellant’s vehicle as it approached the rear of the stopped police car. The appellant testified that he was forced to drive close to the parked vehicles because another east bound vehicle had been drifting into his lane. The appellee was dressed in the customary uniform of the police department, that is, dark blue. The personal injuries that he sustained as a result of the happenings herein described ultimately gave rise to this litigation.

The jury found, as we have noted, in favor of the appellee and against the appellant. However, the jury found in favor of the appellant in the appellee’s wife’s claim against appellant, but no appeal has been taken from that finding.

*534 The appellant’s first and third arguments are so interdependent and intertwined that we shall discuss them as one.

Maryland has heretofore never passed upon the specific question here present, although in Schutz, Jr. v. Breeback, 228 Md. 179, 178 A. 2d 889 (1962), the Court of Appeals said that workmen who are required by their duties to be in the street “occupy a special status” and concluded that the question of whether or not such a worker had exercised reasonable care is for the jury to determine.

In Tanner v. Pennsylvania Truck Lines, Inc., 363 Pa. 136, 69 A. 2d 366 (1949), a traffic officer was injured while he was directing traffic from a traffic island. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said at page 368:

“* * * The acts of persons whose duties require them to be on the highway must be judged by a standard more liberal than in the case of an ordinary pedestrian who has no care other than his own safety: Justice v. Weymann, * * *, 306 Pa. at page 92, 158 A. 873; Valente v. Lindner, 340 Pa. 508, 510, 17 A. 2d 371; Copertino v. Chrobak, 346 Pa. 49, 51, 29 A. 2d 504. Appellee was engaged in the performance of his official duties, at a place where his work required him to be, and while he was so occupied had a right to assume that he would not be struck by any vehicle that was under proper control.”

Valente v. Lindner, supra, relied on by appellant in support of his position, held that a policeman standing on the running board of a moving vehicle and who was thrown from it is guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. In Valente, the deceased officer had positioned himself on the running board while he was directing the defendant motorist to a hospital. The court noted that the decedent had voluntarily assumed a position of danger and pointed out that the officer could have given directions on how to get to the hospital other than *535 by climbing upon the running board of the motor vehicle in an effort to direct the defendant thereto. We think the facts in Valente to be inapposite to those in the instant case.

In Sudbrook v. State, 153 Md. 194, 138 A. 12 (1927), the Court of Appeals denied recovery to the surviving mother of a state police officer who had been killed while in the pursuit of a speeder. The testimony showed that the deceased officer was operating his motorcycle at a very high rate of speed when it collided with the side of a truck. Eyewitnesses testified as to the high rate of speed of the officer’s motorcycle and physical evidence graphically portrayed the speed. The court said at page 201:

* * The driver of the truck being in fault did not dispense with the officer’s using ordinary care under the circumstances for his own protection. So, although the original and concurrent negligence of the truck driver were a cause of the motorcyclist’s injury, it was a comparatively remote cause and, in the chain of circumstances, the proximate cause was the fault of the motorcyclist, since his own negligence was the immediate, closing, and efficient act when and as he received the injury of which he died. The material facts of this case are not only clear and uncontroverted, but are also distinct, prominent, and decisive, and from them the only conclusion, to be drawn by all reasonable men is that the motorcyclist’s own negligence, although concurrent with that of the driver of the truck, was the proximate cause of the injury of which he died, and, therefore, the question was for the court and not for the jury.”

We do not think the factual situation upon which Sud-brook

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 A.2d 24, 13 Md. App. 530, 1971 Md. App. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clayborne-v-mueller-mdctspecapp-1971.