Perlin Packing Co. v. Price

231 A.2d 702, 247 Md. 475, 1967 Md. LEXIS 385
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 18, 1967
Docket[No. 499, September Term, 1966.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 231 A.2d 702 (Perlin Packing Co. v. Price) 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
Perlin Packing Co. v. Price, 231 A.2d 702, 247 Md. 475, 1967 Md. LEXIS 385 (Md. 1967).

Opinion

Finan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal from the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, sitting with a jury, involves twelve consolidated cases, all arising from an intersection collision between a school bus and a tractor trailer. Eleven cases arise from personal injuries to infant passengers and one case is for property damages to the tractor trailer and its contents.

The actions were severed as to the questions of liability and damages and issues were presented to the jury. The jury found the defendants (now appellants, who are the operators and owners of the two vehicles involved) negligent and rendered verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs (appellees) in the actions growing out of the injuries to the infant passengers and against the tractor-trailer owner in the property damage claim.

The accident occurred at about 8:00 a.m. on November 5, 1964, in Fruitland, Maryland, just south of Salisbury, at the intersection of U. S. Route 13 and Main Street. At the scene of the accident, U. S. Route 13 is a dual highway running in a general north-south direction, with two lanes for northbound traffic and two lanes for southbound traffic. There are also two turning lanes at the intersection where the accident occurred, one on the inside or easterly side of the southbound lanes of U. S. Route 13 to be used by vehicles turning left off U. S. Route 13 to go east on Main Street, and the other on the inside or westerly side of the northbound lanes of U. S. Route *478 13 to be used by vehicles turning left off U. S. Route 13 to go west on Main Street. U. S. Route 13 is separated by a median strip approximately 37 feet in width. Main Street is a two-lane blacktop highway running in a general east-west direction. The distance from the west side of the southbound roadway of U. S. Route 13 at Main Street to the east side of the northbound roadway of U. S. Route 13 at Main Street is 120 feet.

Traffic at the intersection of U. S. Route 13 and Main Street is controlled by automatic traffic signals. There is one traffic light suspended over the northbound lanes of U. S. Route 13 at its intersection with Main Street and one traffic light suspended over the southbound lanes of U. S. Route 13 at its intersection with Main Street. These lights are synchronized and work in unison. The distance between the two lights is 82 feet. The traffic signals were set at the time of the accident so that they would show green for traffic proceeding on U. S. Route 13 for a period of forty seconds, then change to amber for a period of six seconds and then change to red for a period of 36 seconds. When the traffic signals show green and amber for traffic on U. S. Route 13, they show a red light for traffic on Main Street and when the traffic signals show green and amber for traffic on Main Street, they show a red light for traffic on U. S. Route 13. The posted speed limit for traffic traveling on U. S. Route 13 was 35 miles per hour, and the posted speed limit for traffic traveling on Main Street was 30 miles per hour. There were no “yield” or “stop” signs in the median strip requiring a vehicle crossing U. S. Route 13 in either direction on Main Street to yield the right-of-way to a vehicle in the far lane.

Although there were three vehicles involved in this accident, we are only concerned with two. One was a school bus driven by defendant Barbara Ann King and owned by defendant Douglas J. King. This bus was on its regular route with more than thirty children on board whom Mrs. King had picked up on this particular morning and whom she was taking to a school which was about a mile to the east of the scene of the accident. The several plaintiffs in this case were either passengers in the bus or their parents. The bus was a typical International school bus about 34 feet in length. The bus had traveled almost com *479 pletely through the intersection, going east on Main Street, at the time of the accident.

The second vehicle was a 15-ton tractor trailer driven by defendant Bernard Williams and owned by defendant Perlin Packing Company. The truck was loaded with eleven tons of “swinging” beef (whole beefs hanging from overhead hooks). It was headed north on U. S. Route 13 traveling from Norfolk to the metropolitan markets. A third vehicle, a pickup truck operated by Richard Monroe Pote, was in the process of turning north-on U. S. Route 13 from a westbound course on Main Street, and was involved as a by-product of the major collision. Potebeing a witness, not a litigant.

On the morning of the accident, the weather was extremely foggy. Trooper William E. Mitchell, the Maryland State Trooper who investigated the accident, testified that he drove about 8 miles to the scene immediately after the accident occurred and that when he drove 40 miles per hour he was driving over his visibility.

The bus operator, Barbara King, had left home slightly early' on this morning because of the extreme fog. She picked up the school children on her route as usual. Mrs. King testified that she did not know how fast she was traveling as she approached the intersection, but that she was going slowly. Jerry Price, a. student who was riding in the bus and a plaintiff below, testified in his deposition, which was admitted in evidence, that Mrs, King was traveling about 35 miles per hour as she approached' the intersection and slowed down to about 15 miles per hour as she went through the intersection. Other witnesses estimated the speed of the bus to be 20 miles per hour as it traversed the intersection.

The defendant Bernard Williams was operating the tractor trailer in a northerly direction on U. S. Route 13 at a speed of about 35 miles per hour. Nora Jones, who observed the tractor trailer just prior to the accident, estimated its speed to be 35-to 40 miles per hour.

According to the testimony of defendant Barbara King, as, she approached the intersection, she saw that the light was, green for traffic on Main Street, and, therefore, went through the intersection. She had completely crossed the southbound *480 lanes of U. S. Route 13 and the area constituting the median strip when the right side of her bus was struck by the Williams’ tractor trailer.

There was no conflict about the point of impact. The bus was struck at a point slightly to the rear of its center by the front of the Williams’ vehicle. The impact was at the point where the eastbound lane of Main Street crossed the right-hand (slow) lane of the northbound lanes of U. S. Route 13. The tractor trailer left skid marks of 21 feet and 29 feet in that lane leading up to the point of impact. On impact the bus pivoted around on its front end and was driven backward into Pote’s truck, which was just entering the turnoff lane to turn north on U. S. Route 13. When the vehicles came to rest the bus was completely off U. S. Route 13 on the east side, blocking the westbound lanes of Main Street, and facing south. The Williams’ tractor trailer was more or less parallel to it, still headed north, and was to the west of the bus in the slow (east) lane of U. S. Route 13.

Defendant Williams testified that he first saw the traffic light and the school bus when he was about 50 feet from the intersection. At that point, according to Williams’ testimony, the light was “caution” for traffic on U. S. Route 13 (ergo, red for traffic on Main Street).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 A.2d 702, 247 Md. 475, 1967 Md. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perlin-packing-co-v-price-md-1967.