Clemons v. E. & O. BULLOCK, INC.

244 A.2d 240, 250 Md. 586
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 25, 1968
Docket[No. 292, September Term, 1967.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 244 A.2d 240 (Clemons v. E. & O. BULLOCK, INC.) 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
Clemons v. E. & O. BULLOCK, INC., 244 A.2d 240, 250 Md. 586 (Md. 1968).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit arises as the result of a collision at the intersection of University Boulevard and Adelphi Road near the University of Maryland in Prince George’s County. The automobile owned by Oliver Walter Clemons, Sr. (Clemons, Sr.), and operated by Oliver Walter Clemons, Jr. (Clentons, Jr.), was proceeding west on University Boulevard. It was occupied by Clemons, Jr.; Clemons, Sr.; Mrs. Clemons, Sr.; Eileen Shirley Clemons; the fiancee of Clemons, Jr., Mary Lorraine Heubschman; and a friend Sally Ann Matthews. It turned left at Adelphi Road. A collision ensued between it and a dump truck operated by James Queen (Queen) and owned by E- & O. Bullock, Inc. (Bullock). The dump truck was proceeding east. William Queen, son of Queen, was a passenger in the dump truck. Mrs. Clemons, Sr. and Miss Heubschman were killed. The dump truck was hauling material for Contee Sand and Gravel Co., Inc. (Contee).

*589 Suits were brought by Clemons, Sr.; Clemons, Jr.; and Eileen Shirley Clemons against Bullock, Contee and Queen. Third party claims were brought by Queen and Bullock against Clemons, Jr. in the Clemons, Sr. and Eileen Shirley Clemons cases. Special pleas were filed in those cases reciting that joint tort feasor releases had been consummated by which claims of Clemons, Sr. and Eileen Shirley Clemons against Clemons, Jr. had been settled, reserving rights of those parties against other persons.

Queen brought suit against Clemons, Sr. and Clemons, Jr. for the medical expenses and loss of services of his son, William Queen, a passenger in the dump truck, and on his own behalf and to the use of Glens Falls Insurance Company for his own injuries. Suit was also brought against Clemons, Jr. and Clemons, Sr. for the personal injuries of William Queen.

A directed verdict was entered in favor of Contee in all cases. A verdict in favor of the defendants Bullock and Queen was returned by the jury in the cases of Clemons, Sr. and Clemons, Jr. A verdict in favor of the defendants Clemons, Sr. and Clemons, Jr. was returned by the jury in the suits brought by Queen.

The jury returned a verdict of $500 in favor of William Queen against the defendants Clemons, Sr. and Clemons, Jr. The jury returned a verdict of $3000 in favor of Eileen Shirley Clemons against the defendants Bullock and Queen. In that case the jury also returned a verdict in favor of the third party defendant Clemons, Jr. in the third party claims of Bullock and Queen.

Appeals were filed on behalf of Clemons, Sr. and Eileen Shirley Clemons as intervening plaintiffs in their case against Bullock, Contee and Queen. A cross-appeal was filed in that case on behalf of Bullock and Queen as defendants and third party plaintiffs to the appeal of Eileen Shirley Clemons as intervening plaintiff. Clemons, Jr. appealed in his case against Bullock, Contee and Queen. Queen appealed in his case against the Clemons’. Clemons, Sr: and Clemons, Jr. appealed in the case of William Queen against them. Bullock and Queen as defendants and third party plaintiffs appealed in the case of Eileen Shirley Clemons against them.

*590 University Boulevard is a divided highway at this intersection. There is a traffic signal.

Clemons, Jr. testified that he made the turn on a green light, tie saw a car in the right hand lane of the eastbound lane. It came to a full stop. Therefore, Clemons, Jr. shifted gears and proceeded south on Adelphi Road. He did not see the dump truck.

Clemons, Sr. said the traffic signal at Adelphi Road was green. He saw the traffic light on University Boulevard go from green to amber. It was amber when it disappeared from his line of vision.

Glen W. Howard, a disinterested witness, was operating a car immediately behind the Clemons car. He had followed the Clemons automobile for a mile or mile and a half. When Clemons went through the light at the intersection it was green. He saw it turn to amber. He stated that the Queen dump truck came through a red light to strike the Clemons vehicle.

Queen claimed that he had been in the right hand or slow lane of University Boulevard, that vehicles were turning from that lane into Adelphi Road, that he changed to the fast lane, looked at the light, found it to be green,- and when he was going through “like a flash this car was right in front of me.” He said when he last observed the light it was green and that he was not quite a truck’s length from it when he observed it. He placed his speed at about thirty miles an hour.

A State Roads Commission employee testified that the traffic lights at this intersection are green for both westbound and eastbound traffic on University Boulevard at the same time, A similar situation prevails with reference to yellow and red. The yellow or amber light on that day was five seconds in duration. The green and amber do not show at the same time. There is a solid amber light with no overlap in the signals.

I.

Clemons, Sr. and Clemons, Jr. except to the instruction wherein the trial judge charged the jury:

. “You are further instructed that even if you should find that Queen’s truck entered the intersection on a red light, and you shall further find that his truck was *591 so close to the Clemons’ car that to cross in front of the truck would make an accident inevitable, then the fact that Oliver W. Clemons, Jr. did not see the truck and attempted to cross the eastbound lanes of Route 193 to complete his turn, would constitute negligence on his part. And, if you find that this negligence directly contributed to the accident, your verdict must be in favor of the defendant in his case and in the case of his father Oliver W. Clemons, Sr.
“The point that the Court wishes to further instruct you on is that Oliver W. Clemons, Jr., even though this light was red for James Queen, had no right to attempt to cross the eastbound lanes in blind indifference to the approaching truck and if he knew or should have known that his progress would endanger him and others, he must use reasonable care to avoid injury to himself and others including Queen, the driver of the truck. That is to say, further, that even if he had the right of way, you find that the light was red for the truck, this does not mean that he could simply proceed across the intersection with blind indifference; he must proceed as a reasonable prudent man would have under all of the circumstances that you find as a fact existed in the case. If you find from all of the evidence that the failure of Oliver W. Clemons, Jr. to see the defendant’s truck in his attempt to cross in front of it were actions on his part which directly contrilmted to the accident, you must find your verdict in favor of the defendant in his case and in the case of his father Oliver W. Clemons, Sr., and even if you shall find any negligence on the part of Queen contributing to the accident, there can be in any negligence case more than one proximate cause of an accident; that is to state there may be two proximate causes of the accident, and you would have a right to find that Mr. Queen may have been negligent and his negligence contributed directly to the happening of the accident, and at the same time Oliver W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 A.2d 240, 250 Md. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clemons-v-e-o-bullock-inc-md-1968.