Horner v. Rowe

116 A. 471, 139 Md. 660, 1922 Md. LEXIS 163
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 A. 471 (Horner v. Rowe) 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
Horner v. Rowe, 116 A. 471, 139 Md. 660, 1922 Md. LEXIS 163 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for personal injuries brought by William H. Eowe, the appellee, against Michael Thomas Homer, the appellant, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County.

*661 The case, after trial, resulted in a verdict and judgment for ihe plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

The record contains but one exception and that presents the correctness of the rulings of the court, on the prayers: and on the defendant’s special exception to the plaintiff’s first prayer.

The court granted the plaintiff’s first and only prayer,, which was the usual damage prayer in such cases, and also granted the defendant’s fifth, sixth, eight and ninth prayers. The defendant’s first, second, third, fourth and seventh prayers were rejected, and his special exception to the plaintiff’s first prayer was overruled.

The declaration contains one count, and this alleges that,, at the time of the accident, the plaintiff was a passenger in an automobile truck which was, being driven along a public highway known as the Lake Shore Road, in Anne Arundel County, and the defendant, or his agent or servant, who was then driving an automobile along the road, drove it so. negligently that it struck the automobile truck in which plaintiff was riding, whereby the plaintiff was seriously and permanently injured about his body and limbs, bis right arm being fractured and the muscles and ligaments in his right shoulder and side being torn: that plaintiff has been and will be prevented in the future from following his business, and bas. incurred expense in endeavoring to be cured, and will be required to incur additional expense in the future, that the injuries were caused solely by the negligence of the defendant, and without any negligence on the part of the plaintiff directly contributing thereto.

The material facts of the case, in addition to those set out in the declaration, briefly stated, are: On the 22nd of August, 1920-, the plaintiff and fifteen others were riding in a Ford truck on a public road, known as the Lake Shore-Road, leading from the Annapolis. Road to the M’agothy River, in Anne Arundel County, and on their way to Oamp Eroening, near the river. The evidence shows that the plaintiff was seated on the left side of the truck, just behind the driver and resting against the first stay, on the inside of the- *662 truck, with his hack against the stay, and that his arms were inside the truck. The other passengers occupied seats placed lengthwise along the side of the truck and on boxes in the center of the truck. The automobile truck was going south, on the right hand side of the road, and travelling at a speed of about eight or ten miles per hour, and when it approached within fifty yards, or one hundred and fifty feet, of a bend or curve in the road, an automobile driven by the appellant came around the bend or curve, running at a speed of about thirty-five miles an hour, being on the wrong side of the road and headed directly toward the automobile truck. The automobile struck the truck at the point where the appellee was sitting, whereby the plaintiff was seriously injured about his right arm and shoulder.

The witness, White, who was driving the automobile truck, testified that he had to run off the road to try to avoid a collision, and when the driver of the automobile saw him he tried to avoid it too. He cut to his right and the rear of his car hit the top standard of the truck, and it was done so quickly that he didn’t think anybody was hurt, until Mr. Rowe, who was sitting at his back, fell over on his back unconscious for a moment or two. He testified further as follows : “Q. Now did you receive any notice that the ear was rounding the turn? A. Not until it made the turn, and of course the noise of the motor and exhaust from the rate of speed he was travelling, I knew it was a car coming. Q. Tou first saw him then as he rounded the turn ? A. Rounded the turn. He didn’t give any signal or blow any horn or anything. I didn’t see him until he was right on us and it looked like he was coming right head on us. Q. Looked like a head-on collision? A. Looked like a head-on collision. Q. And he swerved out ? A. And he swerved out. If he was coming at a moderate rate of speed he could have made the turn, and I would not have had to change my position on the road, and he could have passed. Q. Where was your truck when the collision occurred ? A. On the side of the road. He ran me off the road. Q. Tou ran off in the dirt portion ? A. I ran *663 off in the dirt portion and the wheels sunk down into four inches of dirt. Q. Now, what did the automobile do after the collision ? A. Why the last I heard of him, he was going so fast, why, nobody knows what he did do, only go. Q. He didn’t stop? A. No.”

The plaintiff testified that he was sitting in the truck, at the time of the accident, on the left side thereof, behind the chauffeur, and resting against the stay or support which holds the top up, and his wife was sitting next to him; that he was struck and knocked unconscious, but did not see the automobile coming or when it struck the truck, as he was looking out the other side of -the road, in another direction; that he was inside the truck and no part, of his body extended beyond the truck, and that both of his arms were inside the truck. He further testified that his right arm was broken by the collision, and that he was taken to the Maryland General Hospital for treatment, where he remained for four weeks; that he had not been able to: work since the accident and had no use of his right arm.

Miss Virginia Rowe, a daughter of the plaintiff, who was present when the accident occurred, testified in part that she was sitting in the middle of the truck, and that her father was sitting directly opposite to her, with his hack to the side of the truck; that she saw the ear coming: around the curve and “it was coming at a terrific rate of speed and it looked as if it was going directly through the front of our truck.” There was no horn blown, nor anything to indicate the approach of the car. “Q. And when he came around the curve what portion of the road way was his machine occupying? A. He was on the extreme left; looked like he was coming right through the front of our machine. Q. And then what did he do:? A. He tried to pull to the right and he did get the front out of the way of ours, hut the hack of his machine struck this iron piece that struck my father’s arm. Q. When the collision occurred what happened to your father ? A. Well, at, first he'was very quiet, we didn’t know whether he was conscious. He didn’t say anything. We spoke to him but he *664 didn’t answer, and my mother said he was hurt and we looked and his arm was dangling and there was blood and the sleeve was torn. When Mr. Horner’s car struck us there was a crash, and I think most of the women in the machine, there was five or six at least, and I think most of them made some sort of a noise, they hollered. Q. And what did Mr. Horner do when the collision occurred? A. He kept on going. I looked to the back of the machine and I saw him going down the road. His top was torn. Q. What was the appearance of his machine when it was going down the road ? A. He was going down just as fast as he came. Q. And was there anything about it that attracted your attention when he went away? A.

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Bluebook (online)
116 A. 471, 139 Md. 660, 1922 Md. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horner-v-rowe-md-1922.