Friedman v. Hendler Creamery Co.

148 A. 426, 158 Md. 131, 1930 Md. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 8, 1930
Docket[No. 42, October Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 148 A. 426 (Friedman v. Hendler Creamery Co.) 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
Friedman v. Hendler Creamery Co., 148 A. 426, 158 Md. 131, 1930 Md. LEXIS 23 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

*133 OmrvTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Albemarle Street, running north, intersects and stops at Baltimore Street, running east and west, in Baltimore City. Both are heavily traveled public highways. Baltimore Street is forty feet wide from curb to curb with a twelve foot pavement on either side. Albemarle Street is twenty-throe and a half feet Avide with eight and one-half foot pavements. At half past three o’clock in the afternoon, on Saturday, July 14th, 1928, Mrs. Evelyn Eriedman, driving a Chrysler sedan automobile east on Baltimore Street, reached Albemarle Street at the same time that a ton and a half delivery truck owned by the Hendler Creamery Company, Incorporated, and operated by one Samuel Schwartz, its employee, proceeding north on Albemarle Street, reached Baltimore Street, and the two machines collided. As a result of the collision, Mrs. Friedman was seriously injured, and, on October 3rd, 1928, she brought an action of trespass on the case against the appellee to recover compensation for her injuries, on the theory that the collision was caused by the negligent operation of its truck by its employee. The defendant pleaded the general issrie, and the case in due course was tried in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City before the court and a jury. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, and from that judgment the plaintiff has taken this appeal.

At the conclusion of the whole case the plaintiff offered two prayers, which were granted, and the defendant eleven, of which the first three were refused and the others granted, and these rulings are the subject of the single exception submitted by the record.

The appellant’s contention is: (1) That there was in the case eAÚdence from which the jury could have found that immediately before and at the time of the collision defendant’s truck was on the left of the center line of Albemarle Street continued to intersect the center line of Baltimore Street; (2) that in placing it in that position the driver of the truck violated certain ordinances of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, known as sections 25 and 30, *134 Baltimore City Code, and art. 56, sec. 209 of the Public General Laws of Maryland, which provide that vehicles turning left from one street or highway into another shall keep to the right of the intersection of the center lines of the two highways; (3) that if the truck had been where under the law it should have been, that appellant could have stopped her automobile before it reached it; (4) that therefore the unlawful position of the truck was the direct and proximate cause of the accident; and (5) that appellee’s granted prayers ignored the evidence supporting that theory. Appellant’s reply to that contention appears to be, first, that there was no evidence in the case to support it, or, conceding that there was, that the question was fairly submitted to the jury by its prayers, and that, in any event, it was “doubtful” if appellant’s contributory negligence did not bar her right to recover:

Before considering the merits of these conflicting theories and the prayers to which they relate, it will be useful to review the evidence relating to them.

On behalf of the plaintiff, the first witness offered was Philip G. Jacobs, who testified that he was in the automobile repair business at 805-7-9 Plowman Street, which crosses Albemarle Street from one hundred to- one hundred and twenty feet south of Baltimore Street, and that immediately before the accident he "was standing at the southwest corner of Plowman and Albemarle Streets near a truck on which he had been working, when defendant’s truck, proceeding north on the- left or west side of Albemarle Street, travelling at an “average rate of speed,” passed him, that he happened to be looking toward Baltimore Street, and watched the truck as it approached that street, and as it did it turned its wheels to- make a left-hand turn into Baltimore Street, and the “front wheel had practically passed the building line, the rear of the truck was still with the line of Albemarle Street, when a Chrysler crashed into it”; that at the time of the impact the Chrysler had “pulled as though to come south on Albemarle Street and, not having sufficient room in between the curb and the truck, the crash resulted therefrom”; that *135 the collision occurred approximately between four and five feet from the southwest comer of Albemarle and Baltimore Streets, and that when he reached the scene a few minutes later he found the left front end of the Chrysler “jammed under the left side of the truck” in such a manner that it was impossible to remove it “without some leverage”; that the body of the truck was unusually high, so high that it was “sufficient for the Chrysler car to have run under the outside edge of the truck without touching any part of the hood; that there were no cars parked on the east side of Albemarle Street, between Plowman and Baltimore Streets, and the only car parked on the west side in that block was about twenty feet north of Plowman Street. On cross-examination the witness said: “The building line on Albemarle Street south of Baltimore projects beyond the northwest corner, there is an offset at the corner, and the truck, in order to come up Plowman Street and stay on the right-hand side of the street, would have to turn at this point (indicating), but the trucks usually come up on the left-hand side of the street”; that the truck was struck approximately in the center, and that the impact of the collision was “terrible”; that the entire left tire of the Chrysler was under the truck, and that the chassis stopped it from going any further.

Following that testimony, the street measurements to which we have referred were admitted, and then Morris Rottman, also an eye witness, was called. He said that at the time of the collision he was standing on the northeast corner of Baltimore Street “across Albemarle Street”; that he saw the truck “coming down on the left hand side of Albemarle Street, and that when it approached Baltimore Street it made a short cut to go west on Baltimore Street; that, instead of going to the right, he started to make a short cut to his left; that the truck must have been about four or four and a half feet away from the southwest curb of Baltimore and Albemarle Streets as it was making the turn”. On cross-examination he testified that Albemarle Street stops at Baltimore Street, and that he was standing on what would be the north *136 west comer of Baltimore and Albemarle Street if it were continued across Baltimore Street.

Tbe plaintiff then offered in evidence sections 25 and 30 of Article 1 of the Baltimore City Code (1927), as follows:

Ord. 139 (1908-09), sec. 1. “25. Vehicles keeping to the right. Vehicles shall keep to the right of the center of all streets.”

Ord. 139 (1908-09), sec. 6. “30. Turning to the left into another street. A vehicle turning to the left into another street shall pass to the right of and beyond the centre of the street intersection before turning.”

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Bluebook (online)
148 A. 426, 158 Md. 131, 1930 Md. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friedman-v-hendler-creamery-co-md-1930.