Kahlenberg v. Goldstein

431 A.2d 76, 290 Md. 477, 22 A.L.R. 4th 719, 1981 Md. LEXIS 235
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1981
Docket[No. 63, September Term, 1980.]
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 431 A.2d 76 (Kahlenberg v. Goldstein) 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
Kahlenberg v. Goldstein, 431 A.2d 76, 290 Md. 477, 22 A.L.R. 4th 719, 1981 Md. LEXIS 235 (Md. 1981).

Opinion

Rodowsky, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a motor vehicle tort case filed by a minor and her father. Judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, based upon a jury verdict, was reversed by the Court of Special Appeals. Because we conclude that the issues relating to negligent entrustment and assumption of the risk were properly submitted to the jury, we shall reverse.

The accident, which occurred on December 18, 1971, involved a single car. Lynn Kahlenberg (Plaintiff), then age 19, was a passenger. Lawrence Saul Goldstein (Lawrence), then age 20, was driving. 1 Lawrence is the son of Bernard M. *480 Goldstein (Bernard), a member of the Bar of this Court whose practice concentrates on negligence and compensation matters. Bernard was sued on the theory that he was negligent in supplying the vehicle to his son and as the parent who had signed the application for Lawrence’s most recent, but then expired, Maryland operator’s license. 2 Both Bernard and Lawrence, through their respective counsel, in 1975 obtained an order severing trial of the claim against Bernard from the trial of the claim against Lawrence, thereby avoiding the prejudice before the jury to Lawrence of having his driving record put into evidence for purposes of the claim against Bernard. Trial in August 1976 of the claim against Lawrence resulted in a hung jury. Upon retrial in February 1978 the verdict was against Lawrence for $100,000. At the trial of the claim against Bernard in April 1979, two issues were submitted to the jury. The first, whether Bernard negligently entrusted the motor vehicle to Lawrence, was answered "yes.” The response to the second issue, whether the Plaintiff assumed the risk of riding in a car driven by Lawrence, was "No.” 3 Bernard appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. 4 That court reversed, without a *481 new trial, on the ground that the Plaintiff was guilty of assumption of the risk as a matter of law. (Goldstein v. Kahlenherg, unreported, No. 751, Sept. Term, 1979, decided May 8, 1980). We granted certiorari.

Cars were very important in Lawrence’s life. He received his first driver’s license on April 24, 1967 at age 16. The Maryland driving record which Lawrence subsequently compiled up to the date of the subject accident was introduced through a witness from the Motor Vehicle Administration and is set forth in the margin 5 From July 14, 1967 through *482 April 22,1968 Lawrence had accumulated ten moving violations which resulted in the revocation of his license. On September 3, 1968 and June 19, 1969 Bernard endorsed applications by Lawrence for reinstatement of driving privileges in which Bernard certified that he was "fully aware as to why [Lawrence’s] driving privilege was revoked . ...” Lawrence’s license was reinstated April 23, 1970 after completion of a driver’s clinic.

Lawrence had moved out of the family home in Lutherville for three or four months when he was 15 and lived at various unspecified locations. He left home again at age 16 and lived in downtown Baltimore before returning to the Goldstein home. In September 1968 he went to California and lived for a time with his sister. Lawrence was married on June 18, 1970 and moved with his wife to California. There he attended college for a time, but dropped out and went to mechanic’s school for a few months. He had no steady job. His wife worked and his wife’s parents subsidized the couple in California so that he could stay in school. From time to time the Goldsteins sent Lawrence money. Lawrence obtained a California driver’s license. 6 There was no evidence that he had any California motor vehicle violations. He successively owned three different automobiles while in California, as well as a motorcycle. On *483 about three occasions prior to October of 1971 he returned to Baltimore for visits. Four violations on his Maryland record, involving occasions in June and November of 1970 and in September of 1971, occurred after reinstatement. Lawrence testified he did not tell Bernard about these traffic summonses which Lawrence simply ignored because he felt that, as a California resident, they could not be enforced against him. Bernard denied knowledge of these 1970 and 1971 violations.

Lawrence and his wife were having marital difficulties. In October 1971 Lawrence returned to the Goldstein home. He left his Dodge automobile in California. There were two automobiles at that time in the Goldstein family. One, an Oldsmobile, was used by Bernard almost exclusively. Mrs. Goldstein drove a station wagon. Lawrence was driving every day during this period, apparently using the station wagon. He was unemployed until the first week in December, but from time to time he was given money by his parents. The job he obtained was as an assistant mechanic’s helper at Tunex Diagnostic Center for which he was initially paid $20 per week in cash. Lawrence subsequently learned that his mother had made an arrangement with the proprietor of the diagnostic center under which she paid the employer a portion of the monies being paid for Lawrence’s services.

Lynn Kahlenberg, the Plaintiff, had known Lawrence and Mr. and Mrs. Goldstein for five to ten years prior to the accident. She was part of a group of young people with whom Lawrence associated-. Miss Kahlenberg was a frequent visitor to the Goldstein home and went out regularly with Lawrence prior to his marriage. When Lawrence returned from California in October of 1971 she resumed seeing him regularly, even though her father was opposed to her association with Lawrence, whom Lynn’s father considered to be a bad influence and a dangerous driver. She had been with Lawrence when he received some of his tickets for traffic violations and had been with him when he had a couple of minor accidents which did not involve any personal injury.

*484 The vehicle which Lawrence was driving at the time of the December 18, 1971 accident was a 1963 Ford with a police interceptor engine which had been purchased for $75 on Sunday, December 12, 1971. Lawrence saw the car advertised in the newspaper and he, Bernard and the Plaintiff drove that Sunday to the home of Luther Hedrick in Pasadena, Maryland where the purchase was made. Both Lawrence and Bernard testified that Lawrence purchased the car with Lawrence’s own funds. Lawrence said that he brought back to Baltimore money which he had obtained from the sale of an automobile in California. Bernard said he drove Lawrence to Pasadena because Lawrence did not know how to find the Hedrick address and because he was curious about what kind of a car could be purchased for $75. This evidence, if believed, would mean that Bernard did not supply Lawrence with the car involved in the accident. However, there was evidence to the contrary. The Plaintiff testified that Mr. and Mrs. Goldstein wished to give Lawrence a car as a Chanukah present and that Bernard paid Hedrick $75 in cash for the car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
431 A.2d 76, 290 Md. 477, 22 A.L.R. 4th 719, 1981 Md. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahlenberg-v-goldstein-md-1981.