Meese v. Goodman

176 A. 621, 167 Md. 658, 98 A.L.R. 480, 1934 Md. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1934
Docket[Nos. 46, 47, October Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 176 A. 621 (Meese v. Goodman) 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
Meese v. Goodman, 176 A. 621, 167 Md. 658, 98 A.L.R. 480, 1934 Md. LEXIS 153 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On May 7th, 1933, about 1:30 o’clock A. M., the plaintiff, Gladys Goodman, while the guest of Charles E. New-. comer, in the latter’s automobile, which he was driving, was seriously and permanently injured when the automobile collided, first on the right, with an automobile driven by the defendant, John R. Rullman, Jr., and then, to the left with a trolley pole of the United Railways & Electric Company planted in the center of the North Ave *661 nue Bridge in Baltimore City, just eastward of the intersection of McMechen Street and North Avenue.

The suit was brought against the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, the receivers of the United Railways & Electric Company, John R. Rullman, Sr., John R. Rullman, Jr., and Hazel E. Newcomer, administratrix of Charles E. Newcomer, deceased. The plaintiff non prossed as to John R. Rullman, Sr., and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and obtained a judgment against the other defendants, of whom the receivers of the United Railways & Electric Company and John R. Rullman, Jr., separately appealed. Mrs. Newcomer did not appeal.

The plaintiff was employed at her father’s restaurant at Roland Park as a waitress. Her working hours were from 3:30 o’clock in the afternoon to 1 o’clock in the morning. On the night of the accident, after closing the restaurant, the plaintiff, her brother, Kenneth Goodman, her cousin, James H. Meyers, Adeline Jenkins, and Elmer Ness got into Newcomer’s Essex automobile with him. They let Ness out at Chestnut and Thirty-sixth Streets, and the five others drove to the Goodman home on Chestnut Street, stopping just long enough for the plaintiff to go into the house and out again. Someone suggested taking a drive, so the party started for the home of a girl friend of the plaintiff, who lived two blocks away. The friend declined to go along. The party of five then proceeded through Druid Hill Park, coming to North Avenue at Park Avenue, where they turned eastward (left), and thence to the North Avenue Bridge, where the collision occurred, resulting in the death of Newcomer and Kenneth Goodman, and the injury of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s proof of negligence, so far as it affects the defendant Rullman, is substantially contained in her testimony as follows:

“We had an accident or collision on North Avenue Bridge. When we reached McMechen Street I saw a big red truck in front of us, and in back of the truck was a machine, a closed car, closed automobile. We were behind *662 that car. I saw that when we came to McMechen Street. * * * The first time I saw the truck was when I got to McMechen Street. I looked ahead and saw the big truck and this car in back of it, and Mr. Newcomer wanted, I think, to pass the other car, I don’t know, and we started gradually to pass this car and we had gotten up to about the middle of the car that was in front of us — I don’t know whose it was — and suddenly, without any warning at all, the car in front of us made a quick left turn and we hit it * * * about middle ways. The right hind side of the car I was riding in, the right front wheel and fender hit that car. The next thing I knew I heard a little crash (with the trolley pole on her left) and that’s all I know.”

“When I first saw the truck in front of the car I was riding in and the automobile that was behind it, the truck was the closest over to the curb. The other automobile was almost directly in back of the truck only a little over to the left. * * * I don’t know how fast the car I was riding in was going, but we couldn’t have been going very fast. (Meyers said they were going about twenty-five miles an hour and picked up to thirty or thirty-five miles to pass Rullman.) * * * I think we were going faster than the car I saw behind the truck as we came up on the bridge. I did not hear any warning or signal given by the driver of the car I was in before this collision, did not hear any.” Asked “what signal you observed or warning before that car turned to the left?” Plaintiff answered, “None. We were riding in the eastbound car track.”

There is evidence in the record that Newcomer was intoxicated, but the plaintiff and the other two surviving occupants of the car testified otherwise, so that the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence in intrusting her safety to a drunken driver becomes a question for the jury.

The testimony of the plaintiff, in which her companions concur, entitled Rullman to have the case against him withdrawn from the jury, as it plainly shows that he violated no duty which he owed to the plaintiff. The uncon *663 tradicted evidence is that it was Newcomer’s negligence and failure to observe the rules of the road that resulted in the plaintiff’s injuries. Hagerstown v. Foltz, 133 Md. 52, 104 A. 267; Wash., B. & A. R. Co. v. State, use of Hall, 186 Md. 103, 111 A. 164; Wilson v. Yates, 187 Md. 54, 111 A. 161. Assuming that Newcomer was sober, or that the plaintiff did not know or appreciate the fact that he was intoxicated, her only right to compensation was against him. The complaint is that Rullman suddenly turned to the left without warning into the path of the Newcomer car, a movement that could not have been so sudden for a car going at a moderate rate of speed. The plaintiff infers that, because the headlights of the Newcomer car were lighted, Rullman should have been aware of their intentions and actions. The statute says the one wishing to pass should signal the one to be overtaken. Rullman says that he never turned out of his course, that he was going straight ahead, which no witness gave as over twenty-five miles an hour, and that he was not aware of the presence of the Newcomer car until it grazed his car, nor of the truck until immediately after the Newcomer car collided with his car and the trolley pole. If there was a truck ahead followed by a pleasure car, any prudent driver would have expected the latter to pass the truck and would have governed himself accordingly.

It was not Rullman’s duty at that time and place, and under the conditions there existing, to give notice or warning to a car in his rear of his intention to pass a car or truck ahead of him. The rules of the road applicable to the situation in this case are prescribed by the Act of 1929, ch. 224 (Code, Supp. art. 56, sec. 209: “All vehicles * * * when being driven upon the highways of this State shall at all times keep to the right of the center of the highway upon all highways of sufficient width, except upon streets or roads where traffic is permitted to move in one direction only, and except when overtaking and passing another vehicle, and unless it is impracticable to travel on such side of the highway; * * * and any vehicle overtaking another going in the same direction shall *664 pass to the left of the vehicle so overtaken [Elliott on Roads and Streets (3rd Ed.) sec.

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Bluebook (online)
176 A. 621, 167 Md. 658, 98 A.L.R. 480, 1934 Md. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meese-v-goodman-md-1934.