McCarthy v. Mason

171 A. 256, 132 Me. 347, 1934 Me. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 31, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 171 A. 256 (McCarthy v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarthy v. Mason, 171 A. 256, 132 Me. 347, 1934 Me. LEXIS 21 (Me. 1934).

Opinion

Hudson, J.

On motions. Actions of tort brought severally by the husband and wife against the defendant as a consequence of a collision between the car in which both of the plaintiffs were riding and the car driven by the defendant. The cases tried together resulted in verdicts for both plaintiffs.

Some of the facts attending the accident are not in dispute, namely: That it happened about noon of a pleasant day, November 4, 1932, in Bangor, but outside the city limits, at a point [350]*350where the Odlin Road from the south enters State Route 2, the trunk line leading westerly from Bangor through Hermon and Newport to Augusta and Portland. It was a two lane cement road with ordinary gravelled shoulders on each side. From the point- of collision easterly toward Bangor for a distance of at least a quarter of a mile the road is straight and vision unobstructed. Westerly for some hundreds of feet the road is visible.

The plaintiffs were returning home from Bangor in a Studebaker touring car owned and operated by the wife, Mrs. McCarthy, her husband sitting on her right in the front seat. They “were going to turn down into the Odlin Road.” Before so doing, however, and before reaching the Odlin Road, a fire truck overtook and passed the plaintiffs and presently, upon reaching the Odlin Road, another fire truck passed them, followed by a coupe about one hundred feet behind the second piece of fire apparatus. The plaintiffs’ car was “turned to go into the Odlin Road” and when at a point at the entrance of this road, when either the whole of the automobile was off the cement or the front wheels only, the defendant’s car ran into the left side of their car and caused it to make “two or three jumps sideways and up against a large telephone pole,” about forty feet distant.

It is not denied that at the time the defendant was Fire Chief of the City of Bangor; that the two pieces of fire apparatus above mentioned had been sent out in response to a call on account of a fire not in Bangor but in Hermon, an adjoining town; that the defendant, having learned that they were proceeding with wrong information as to the location of the fire, was attempting to overtake said fire apparatus and direct it aright. For said purpose, the defendant was operating the car himself, unaccompanied, it being a red coupe known as “the Chief’s car.”

The basis of any right of recovery by the plaintiffs in these cases is negligence. Could they recover, it would be because of sufficient legal proof of negligence of the defendant as the proximate cause of the collision and lack of contributory negligence by them thereto. Negligence, many times defined, lately by our Court, is said “to be the want of ordinary care, that is, the want of such care as a reasonably prudent and careful man, mindful of his own conduct and the rights and safety of others, would exercise in a similar situ[351]*351ation, or under like circumstances. The terms ‘ordinary care’ and ‘reasonable prudence,’ as applied to the actions and affairs of men, have only a relative significance, depending upon the incidents and surroundings of the particular case. They defy arbitrary definition. What might be reasonable care under one condition of things might be negligence under another. In other words, the care which ordinarily prudent and careful persons take is commensurate with the necessity for care and the dangers of the situation.” Gravel v. LeBlanc, 131 Me., 325, 328, 162 A., 789, 790.

Defendant’s N egligence

The facts in this case warrant, if they do not compel, a discussion of the law with relation to what constitutes due care upon the part of the driver of fire apparatus in response to an alarm. No case in Maine, thus far, has dealt with this subject.

That the defendant was acting in his capacity as Fire Chief is unquestioned. It is stated, however, that he had no right so to act in this instance because the fire was not in Bangor, and it is particularly claimed that Section 13 of Chapter 29, R. S. 1930, is inapplicable, which statute provides: “Police, fire department, traffic emergency repair vehicles, and ambulances, when operated in response to calls, shall have the right of way; and on the approach of any such vehicle the driver of every other vehicle shall immediately draw his vehicle as near as practicable to the right hand curb and parallel thereto and bring it to a standstill until such public service vehicles have passed.”

The statute itself in no way qualifies the words “when operated in response to calls.” It specifies calls neither from within nor from without. Only one case have we found that seems to bear on this issue. In Hubert v. Granzow et al., 155 N. W., 204, a Minnesota case, the Court held that a fire apparatus of a city while on its way to a fire is excepted from the speed restrictions imposed by the Motor Vehicle Act, although the fire be outside the city limits, and said: “It is probably true that no legal duty is imposed upon a city fire department to assist in extinguishing fires outside the city; but it is a matter of common knowledge that such departments almost invariably respond when called upon in such cases. Actuated by motives of humanity rather than by the mandate of strict legal [352]*352duty, they seldom refuse to give their services to their neighbors in case of need. While the law may not impose a legal duty upon them to assist in extinguishing fires outside the city, it certainly does not forbid them from doing so.”

We concur. We see no good reason why such rights possessed by a fire department while acting within its home jurisdiction in the performance of its important and necessary service should not obtain as well when reasonably engaged in that kind of service outside its home, limits. The needs are the same, whether the call comes from within or without the city.

The language in our statute is general, not specific, and we do not feel called upon by reason or authority to limit its application to calls within the'city.

It is also claimed, although not strenuously so, that the Fire Chief’s car is not within the statute as a fire department vehicle. This contention can not be sustained. It is common knowledge that chiefs of fire departments do not ordinarily go to fires on fire trucks but in the Fire Chief’s car. It is important that a Chief reach a fire as quickly as possible, exercising due care, however, in doing so, in order that he may direct the work to be accomplished by the use of the apparatus. The use of the Chief’s car tends to make this possible. We can not believe that the Legislature intended to exclude a'Fire Chief’s car from the intendment of this statute. It stipulates “fire department vehicles” and makes no exception as to the Chief’s car.

In a recent New Hampshire case, Vandell v. Sanders, 155 Atl., 193, the Court held that an act exempting “fire department vehicles travelling in response to fire alarm” from speed laws included private cars used for,transporting firemen to fires.

We hold, then, that Section 13 of Chapter 29 aforesaid, is applicable to this case, that by reason of it the defendant had “the right of way” and that that was one of the facts to be considered by the jury as an element in determining whether or not, under all the attending circumstances, the defendant was then and there in the exercise of due care.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 256, 132 Me. 347, 1934 Me. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarthy-v-mason-me-1934.