Dashiell v. Jacoby

120 A. 751, 142 Md. 330, 1923 Md. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 120 A. 751 (Dashiell v. Jacoby) 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
Dashiell v. Jacoby, 120 A. 751, 142 Md. 330, 1923 Md. LEXIS 25 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $10,000 obtained by tbe appellee (plaintiff) against the appellant (defendant) for damages for injuries sustained by the former by reason of the alleged negligence of the latter in running his automobile at the corner’ of Park Heights Avenue and Spring Hill Avenue, in the City of Baltimore. At the place of the accident', Park Heights Avenue runs northerly and southerly, *332 and Spring Hill Avenue crosses it at right angles. The United Railway Company had two tracks near the center of Park Heights Avenue. There were T-rails on the tracks a.t thait place. P'ark Heights Avenue was a wide street and Spring Hill Avenue was about thirty feet wide, and had no street ears on it. There was a hedge running along the side of the trades between them and the paved way on Park Heights Avenue. At the time of the accident the plaintiff lived on the east side of Park Heights Avenue, at Ho. 3807, the bed of which street, from the hedge to the sidewalk, is twenty-one feet on that side and twenty-feet on the other side of the tracks. The plaintiff lived in the fourth house, or second double house, from the corner.

There is a platform along the tracks on the east side, just south of Spring Hill Avenue. The motorman described the platform as being from two and a half to three feet wide, and sixteen to eighteen feet long, running parallel with the track. It was long enough to take in both ends of a street ear. The defendant testified that it was between three and four feet wide. It was made of cinders, hut had a cement coping around it, and was four or five inches above the bed of the street. The night of the accident (about 10.30 P. AL) a north bound car stopped south of Spring Hill Avenue to take on and to let off some passengers. Two' passengers got on from the platform at the rear of the car, and the plaintiff and three ladies got off at the front. The conductor said when the two passengers got on he saw the defendant’s automobile behind the street car, off to one side and not on the track. One of the young ladies testified that when they reached Spring Hill Avenue the plaintiff, her sister, a young lady from Atlantic City and witness stood on the platform of the car in that order, waiting for the motorman to open the door. The plaintiff stepped down and then her sister. The latter said she followed right after the plaintiff, and as she was about to step down, before she had a chance to put her foot down, she heard the thud. The motorman said that the plaintiff “stepped off the car and he stepped down, and he *333 made a couple of steps or two, and the automobile struck him.” He said that the plaintiff was lying on the side of the car track, about ten feet beyond Spring Hill Avenue; that his attention was first called to. the accident by the crash; that the machine went right down the open car line, the open rail, about half way between Spring Hill Avenue and the next stop; “that the car stopped and after the crash he saw the machine continue, and he was not; going very slow;, he was going at a good rate of speed, twenty-five or thirty miles an hour.” The plaintiff said: “I made a step'off the street oar that way, as far as I could when the automobile hit me; presumably the automobile. I didn’t know what had hit me.” Again he was asked: ■ “Did yon step on the cinder path or the bed of the street? A. The cinder path. Q1. How did you get off the cinder path?' A. After1 I stepped one or two steps off the cinder path I was; hit.”

The defendant’s explanation was that when he noticed the street car coming to a stop that the front part of his car1 was about the rear platform of the; street car, and that his automobile reached about the front platform of the street oar, about the same time the car stopped; that he lessened his. speed as he came to Spring Hill Avenue, when he was going about fifteen miles, an hour, and then described the accident as follows: “As the street car stopped, the front platform opened and Mr. Jacoby jumped, from, the street car across the safety zone and ran diagonally across; 'Spring Hill Avenue-, as I noticed, him coming T swerved my car to the left, thinking he would run past, but as he got. in front of the oar he stopped and turned towards -my car — I overlooked something; — as he jnmped from the; car, the street oar, he had Ms head turned towards the street car, as, if speaking to some one on the, car; as lie got in front of my machine, I swerved my car to. the left, to avoid him, thinking; he would run past and T would miss him that Way; hut ha stopped and turned facing my car, and, I struck the; young man and he fell in a ditch between the track and the hedge ; as I continued, T noticed I was making for a trolley pole, and in order to. *334 avoid hitting the trolley pole, I turned my car to the right, on to' .the tracks and then endeavored to get off the tracks, hut on .account of the T-rail setting up above the tracks I had some difficulty in getting over; in fact, I could not get over it at that time without talcing too much time, and I stopped the machine and ran back to the young man.” He said that “when he (plaintiff) started diagonally across the street he was running; that the front part of the radiator hit the plaintiff; that he had no bumper on his ear; that the plaintiff stopped about in the center of Spring; Hill Avenue and he turned his car to the left to avoid striking him * * * that when he turned to the left he went up on the car track, as there was¡ no 'hedge at that point; that his car went up< on the tracks, and to avoid hitting a street car pole he turned north on the tracks; that he was. straddle the west, rail of the north bound track; that he supposes he went up< the track 100 feet, trying to work his way off the track, and that this would be nearly half way to the next avenue.” The lady whom the defendant married after the accident was with him, and she corroborated his account of the accident.

The motorman testified in chief “that his car stopped and after the crash he saw the machine continue; and he was not going very slow, he was going at a good rate of speed, twenty-five or thirty miles an hour.” On crossrexamination he said he could not tell how fast he was going’ down the track, and that he must have slackened, but said that when he hit the young man he was going twenty-five or thirty miles an hour. He said he could not say how fast he was going on the trade, and this appears in his. evidence in the record: “Q. How fast ? Was he going fast ?' A. I could not say. Q. Whether two, five or ten miles an hour, you cannot tell ? A. I could not tell; when he hit him he must have been going more than 18 miles an hour or he would not have gone that far before he stopped. Q. That is your judgment, but you cannot tell us how fast he was going when he got on the car track? A. Ho, I could not tell you. Q. When you say 25 or 30 miles an hour did you have an opportunity to observe *335 tbe rate at which the automobile was going before it bit him, ? A. Wo, sir. Q. You did not have an opportunity to observe tbe speed of tbe automobile before it bit him., did you ? A. Wo, sir. Q1. What make you say it was going; 25 or 30 miles an hour then? How1 could you tell the jury it was going 25 or 30 miles an hour? A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Stehley v. Belle Isle Cab Co.
71 A.2d 435 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1989)
Manor Coal Co. v. Balchumas
199 A. 534 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1938)
Thompson v. Sun Cab Co.
184 A. 576 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
Chasanow v. Smouse
178 A. 846 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1935)
Legum v. State Ex Rel. Moran
173 A. 565 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Fleischman Transportation Co. v. Egli
164 A. 228 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1933)
Jackson v. Leach
152 A. 813 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1931)
Provident Trust Co. v. Massey
125 A. 821 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1924)
Kiterakis v. State
124 A. 401 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 A. 751, 142 Md. 330, 1923 Md. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dashiell-v-jacoby-md-1923.