Miles v. State Ex Rel. Wistling

198 A. 724, 174 Md. 292, 1938 Md. LEXIS 272
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 27, 1938
Docket[No. 51, January Term, 1938.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 198 A. 724 (Miles v. State Ex Rel. Wistling) 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
Miles v. State Ex Rel. Wistling, 198 A. 724, 174 Md. 292, 1938 Md. LEXIS 272 (Md. 1938).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal on this record is by Hall N. Miles, Jr., the driver of an automobile which struck Alfred P. Wistling, Jr., a youth, on the night of February 9th, 1937, and inflicted injuries of which the victim died two days later, *294 without having regained consciousness. An action was brought by the State of Maryland for the use of his parents, and a verdict in their favor was duly rendered, and a judgment was extended. The errors assigned are the failure of the court to sustain the objections of the defendant to certain offers of testimony, and to grant the prayer of the defendant to take the case from the jury on the ground that no negligence had been shown on the part of the defendant.

The scene of the accident was from 400 to 450 feet west of the intersection of Main Street and Somerset Avenue, two public highways of the Town of Crisfield. Main Street runs east and west and Somerset Avenue north and south. On the north side of Main Street there is a cement sidewalk, with a bounding vertical curb of four inches in height. This sidewalk is slightly more than six feet ¡in width, and from its outer curb line to the sidewalk of similar width on the south side of Main Street the highway is one inch short of twenty-five feet in width. The sidewalk on the south side does not have a curb, and is on a level with the surface of the street. On the north side óf the street, in the immediate proximity of the accident, there is a residence in which Miss Hall and Miss Muir live, and between their home and the next residence to’ the west is an alley-way or lane. A few feet east of this alley and in front of the western part of the front of the Hall-Muir house is a pole, from which projects an arm from which a municipal electric light lamp of about 100 candle power is suspended over the center of Main Street. Opposite the Hall-Muir home and on the south side of Main Street is a boarding house. On the night of the accident two automobiles were parked in front of the boarding house. These automobiles were faced east, and their right wheels were on the sidewalk, about two feet from the southern line of the highway. As the evidence is that the automobiles are six feet m width, the position of these automobiles left a space of over twenty feet clearance between these automobiles and the curb on the north margin of the street. The *295 accident happened about half past ten o’clock on a dark, foggy, and rainy night.

About these facts there is no substantial controversy. There is, however, conflict in material testimony in reference to what was the cause of the accident. Since the prayer on the part of the defendant is a demurrer to the legal sufficiency of the evidence to establish a cause of action, all the facts, and the reasonable inferences directly deducible from these facts, consistent with a right of recovery, must first be taken to be true, and then be found legally insufficient to constitute a right of action, before the refusal of the prayer of the defendant to take the case from the jury can be declared to be in error.

The testimony offered on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove that Alfred P. Wistling, Jr., the infant son of the parents for whose use the action has been brought, (Code, art. 67, secs. 1-4, as amended by Laws 1929, ch. 570, sec. 8) had been at a meeting of the Boy Scouts in a hall on east Main Street, in Crisfield, and had started to return home on his bicycle at about half past ten o’clock. He was clad in his uniform of a Boy Scout, and wore the hat of the organization as he rode against the wind westward on Main Street. Eugene Mills, a youth of twelve years and a friend of the victim, was also on his way home from the meeting, and he testified that he first observed Wistling, after the assembly ended, when the witness was about to enter the intersection of the two highways in the line of the sidewalk on the south side of Main Street. Wistling was then seen pedaling slowly ahead to his right of the center line of Main Street. While at the crossing, Mills noticed two boys ahead of him on the same sidewalk and, in order to catch up with these friends, he ran along the sidewalk on the south side of Main Street until he was abreast of Wistling on his bicycle on the highway, and had overtaken the two boys on the sidewalk. At this point, Mills had nearly reached the boarding house on the south side of the street, and not far from the line of the front of *296 the first or easternmost automobile on the sidewalk and in front of the boarding house.

Before walking further, Mills looked and saw the bicyclist Wistling riding straight ahead, his wheel to his right of the center of Main Street, about six feet from the curb on the north side of Main Street. Mills lost sight of Wistling because the body of the first automobile came between them, as Mills walked ahead with his companions. Before Mills had passed the two automobiles, he heard the noise of the collision, and he ran out between the two parked automobiles; raced across the street to the north side, and what he found was that “Alfred was laying down; his head was on the curb a little bit and he was still straddle his wheel.” The body of the injured boy was about four and a half feet from the pole which supported the arm from which the electric light bulb was suspended. The position of the bicycle indicated that it had been headed towards the west. As Mills went across the street, an automobile, which was moving towards the east and had hit the dead boy, had stopped a short distance beyond the front of the easternmost of the two parked automobiles.

There was also other testimony on the part of the plaintiff which tended to show that three ladies, who were playing cards in the Hall-Muir house, heard the crash, and, fearing an accident, arose and one looked through the front window, noticed an object lying on the street, and then the three went out on the front porch and looked across the intervening space of from twenty to twenty-five feet and observed, under the burning electric street light, something like a bundle of clothes near the curb, and nearby lay the bicycle. They saw, also, the two parked automobiles on the opposite side of the street. The testimony would indicate that the accident had occurred within a few seconds after Mills last saw the bicyclist pedaling, and within the length of the two parked automobiles.

The plaintiff further offered testimony which tended to show that the fatally injured boy had been struck by *297 an autompbile which was driven by the defendant, who was a young man in his twentieth year. He was accompanied by two other young men, one of whom rode with him on the front seat and the other on the rear seat of the automobile. Declarations of the defendant were introduced in evidence to the effect that he did not remember to have seen any cars parked on the south side of Main Street at the time and place of the accident; that he had not seen the boy before the accident; and that the left front fender of the automobile had been damaged by the collision. The officer who examined the defendant’s automobile in the accident testified that there was a narrow, vertical streak, four inches from the left end of the front bumper, which was not damaged except for dulling the finish where it had been rubbed or scraped or had struck something.

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Bluebook (online)
198 A. 724, 174 Md. 292, 1938 Md. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-v-state-ex-rel-wistling-md-1938.