Katzel v. Clark

137 A.2d 125, 215 Md. 54, 1957 Md. LEXIS 515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 16, 1957
Docket[No. 61, September Term, 1957.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 137 A.2d 125 (Katzel v. Clark) 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
Katzel v. Clark, 137 A.2d 125, 215 Md. 54, 1957 Md. LEXIS 515 (Md. 1957).

Opinion

Brune, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an automobile collision case which is somewhat unusual in its facts. The principal issue is contributory negligence, upon which ground the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict was granted at the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ *57 evidence. Judgment was entered by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County for the defendants for costs, and the plaintiffs appeal.

The plaintiffs are William Lewis Katzel, a minor seventeen years old at the time of the accident, and his father. William was driving a car involved in the collision which was apparently owned by him but was registered in his father’s name. The defendants are John W. Clark and his wife, Mrs. Vera Sybil Clark, who owned the other car involved in the collision. That car was being driven by Mrs. Clark. For brevity and simplicity, William Lewis Katzel will be referred to below as “the plaintiff” and Mrs. Clark as “the defendant”.

The accident occurred in bright daylight on a sunny afternoon. It happened at the intersection of Connecticut Avenue and the East-West Highway, in Montgomery County. There was evidence which showed or tended to show the following facts:

At this intersection Connecticut Avenue is a six-lane, north-south highway with three lanes for traffic each way. These lanes are separated by a median grassy strip. The East-West Highway is described in the testimony as an undivided, four-lane highway, which on the east side of the intersection has two lanes for westbound and two lanes for eastbound traffic. Neither the testimony nor the exhibits give a very clear idea of this road on the west side of Connecticut Avenue and of the number of lanes for traffic coming to the intersection from the west. It seems, however, that the northerly (or innermost) lane for traffic approaching from the west is opposite the southerly (or inner) lane for traffic approaching from the east, and it appears fairly clearly that a vehicle proceeding west in the southerly lane of westbound traffic on the East-West Highway cannot proceed on that Highway west of Connecticut Avenue without moving into the adjacent (northerly) lane.

There are two large overhead traffic signs a little east of the intersection. The sign over the southern westbound lane has an arrow at its left side pointing left (south) and the words “Left Turn Only”; the sign over the northern lane has a sign reading “Thru and Right” and an arrow pointing straight down at its right side. There are curved arrows painted in the *58 southerly westbound lane indicating a left turn, and there are arrows pointing straight ahead in the northerly westbound lane.

The plaintiff approached the intersection driving his small car in the westernmost of the southbound lanes on Connecticut Avenue. His speed (as to which he was supported by two police officers in a patrol car following about three car lengths behind him) was approximately 25 miles an hour. The speed limit was 30 miles an hour. Traffic was stopped for a traffic light at the intersection in the easterly and center southbound lanes on Connecticut Avenue as the plaintiff drove along the clear westerly lane. When he was about twenty feet from the intersection the traffic light turned green and he continued at the same speed as before towards and into the intersection. Traffic to his left began to move when the light changed to green. One of the police officers in a car following the plaintiff “noticed the nose of another vehicle passing the lane of traffic that was just starting up on * * * [his] left”, and the collision followed immediately. The plaintiff testified that he glanced to his left as he entered the intersection, then looked straight ahead and did not see the defendant’s car until the time of the impact.

The defendant approached the intersection from the east. She had as passengers in her car a friend, the friend’s child and her own child. The defendant was in the left-turn-only lane. She was following two trucks, each of which moved into the intersection when the traffic light turned in their favor and then made the left turn. The defendant followed them into the intersection, she says, on the green light. She claims not to have seen the overhead “Left Turn Only” sign, because she was trying to keep the children in the back of the car from interfering with her view through the rear-view mirror, because she was watching the trucks ahead and because the trucks were too high for her to see the overhead sign. However, she admitted that when she was in the intersection she realized — apparently from seeing a sign at the side of the road — that she was in the wrong lane — that is, the left-turn lane — when she wished to continue straight west. In spite of her realization of her error, she did not make the left turn, fearing that, as she was not familiar with the area, she might get lost. Instead, *59 she stopped in the intersection, waited until a car in the northerly eastbound lane of the East-West Highway made a left turn in front of her into the northbound portion of Connecticut Avenue. She then sought to move into the northerly, westbound lane of the East-West Highway in order to continue westward. She gave some hand signal to indicate what she was about to do. [It seems impossible that such a signal could have been seen by anyone alongside her on the East-West Highway or at her right in the southbound portion of Connecticut Avenue.]

The defendant did not see the plaintiff’s car until just about the instant of the collision, though a moment before it occurred her companion saw the other car and gave a quick warning of its approach. The defendant slammed on her brakes, but her car rammed the plaintiff’s car very close to its left front headlight. The point of collision was about fifteen feet east of the west curb line of Connecticut Avenue and about fourteen or fifteen feet south of the northern curb line of the East-West Highway.

The trial judge considered Valench v. Belle Isle Cab Co., 196 Md. 118, 75 A. 2d 97, controlling. There (196 Md. at 123, 75 A. 2d at 99) Judge Grason, speaking for the Court, said: “A green light does not give an operator of a motor vehicle the right to enter an intersection irrespective of traffic conditions. An automobile may lawfully be in the intersection at the time, and it may ‘be driven cautiously through the intersection.’ If this were not so, all traffic in the intersection when the light turns from green to amber would be trapped by oncoming traffic which had just been given the green light, or ‘Go’ signal. An operator of an automobile, when given the green or ‘Go’ signal at an intersection, is required to use due care and caution to see that traffic in the intersection is such that he can proceed with safety. He must regard and heed actual traffic conditions, even though he has a green or ‘Go’ signal. If a motorist enters an intersection blindly, without anticipating traffic in the intersection, he is guilty of negligence.”

In the Valench case the car which the cab driver failed to see was proceeding across a street intersection in a lawful direction and was in a proper part of the street. That is a *60

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 A.2d 125, 215 Md. 54, 1957 Md. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katzel-v-clark-md-1957.