Pyle v. Lee

242 A.2d 498, 250 Md. 315, 1968 Md. LEXIS 729
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 7, 1968
Docket[No. 253, September Term, 1967.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 242 A.2d 498 (Pyle v. Lee) 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
Pyle v. Lee, 242 A.2d 498, 250 Md. 315, 1968 Md. LEXIS 729 (Md. 1968).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The source of the issue here presented is Code, Art. 66)4, § 217 (b) (1967 Repl. Vol.). Since the statute is controlling, contends the appellant (Miss Pyle), the trial judge should have declared the appellee (Lee) negligent as a matter of law or, alternatively, he should have submitted to the jury her “Request for Instruction No. 21” which reads as follows:

“The Court instructs the jury that at the time of the collision of automobiles the motor vehicle laws of Maryland provided as follows: any vehicle moving at a rate of speed ten miles or more below the maximum speed limit applicable to the particular roadway shall be driven upon the extreme right side thereof, and where shoulders and extensions are provided, then upon the extreme right side of the shoulder or extension.” (The language of the statute is italicized.)

The collision out of which the issue arises occurred at 12:45 A.M. on 11 December 1965 in the westbound lane of U. S. Route 40 between Havre de Grace and Aberdeen. Lee, alone in his 1954 Chevrolet, black with a white top, and almost out of gasoline, was in search of an open filling station. Peaco, a *317 friend who also was alone in his car, had been following Lee so as to provide assistance in case his gasoline ran out before it could be replenished. Lee drove into Skyway Auto Parts (Skyway); Peaco waited near the entrance. There were gas pumps and the place appeared to be open for business but, he was told, the tanks were empty. They decided Lee would go on toward Aberdeen with Peaco following. Before reentering Route 40 from the Skyway exit Lee looked back (to the east) and saw the glow of headlights (on a car driven by Ronald Leroy Skill-man) just behind the crest of a slight rise which he said was about a quarter of a mile away (the crest was about 800 to 900 feet distant according to a plat admitted in evidence). Thinking he “had ample time to get out on Route 40” he drove out into the slow lane and continued in a westerly direction. He said he “was out there doing about 30 or 35 miles per hour and * * * [he] must have traveled 170 or 180 feet” when he was struck in the rear.

Peaco had parked on the shoulder of the highway between the ■entrance and the exit. After Lee had entered Route 40 he started his engine, he said, but the lights seemed “to be coming too fast for * * * [him] to pull out, so * * * [he] waited.” He saw the car “swing to the left” after it passed by him but it was too late “at that rate of speed” to avoid hitting Lee. He said Lee’s rear lights were burning and that he had gone about 175 feet before he was struck. Peaco also said that when the lights were about 400 feet east of where he was parked Lee had traveled about 50 feet westerly on Route 40.

Skillman had left his home in Joppa close to 8:30 P.M. He ■drove his new 1965 Chevrolet Impala Super Sport to a nearby tavern. He drank 2 bottles of beer and at 9:15 he drove to the Steak House, a tavern in Aberdeen, where he had 2 more bottles of beer. At 10 o’clock he drove to a tavern in Havre de Grace, a distance of about 5 miles, where he met Miss Pyle. They drank more beer. He said she was “just stuttering a little bit, like when you drink.” They left around midnight to return to the Steak House in Aberdeen. Skillman entered Route 40 at an intersection about 0.70 of a mile east of Skyway and immediately accelerated to a speed of 75 to 80 miles per hour in the outside or “slow” lane. Apparently there were no other *318 vehicles on the highway at the time except Lee whose car, Skill-man said, was only “about two car lengths away from * * * [him] when * * * [he] seen it.” There “wasn’t nothing * * * [he] could do but to try to swing out, and * * * [he] hit it.” Asked if there were any lights on Lee’s car he said he “didn’t see any tail lights at all.” (Emphasis supplied.) He agreed that he was “paying strict attention to * * * [his] driving.” Miss Pyle explained that she did not see Lee’s car at all because she had her head down “looking at the tachometer.”

There is a conflict in the testimony in respect of the point of impact. The State trooper said the distance from the Sky-way exit to the debris on the road was 50 feet. Lee and Peace* said they measured the same distance with a tape measure the following morning and found it to be 175 feet. Lee’s wrecked car came to rest athwart the shoulder alongside a highway sign-which is 220 feet from the same beginning point. If the trooper’s measurement is correct then Lee’s car traveled 160 feet after being struck; if Lee and Peaco are correct, Lee’s car traveled only about 50 feet and it looks to us as though the probabilities favor the latter measurement. Curiously enough there was nothing said about tire marks on the highway. Nor did Skill-man say he applied his brakes before the collision. His car came to rest upside down on the median strip.

Route 40 at this point is straight with an excellent macadam surface. The eastbound lanes are separated from the westbound lanes by a grassy median strip 38 feet wide. Each 24 foot lane is subdivided into two 12 foot lanes, separated by a broken white line. The shoulder, 7 feet wide, slopes down to a concrete gutter. The surface of the shoulder is noticeably inferior to that of the highway. The plat and the photographs in evidence make it quite clear that the driver of a passenger car approaching Skyway from the east would have an unobstructed view straight ahead for more than 1,000 feet before reaching-the Skyway entrance and for several thousand feet beyond the-entrance. That the road was dry is undisputed. The sky was. overcast and the principal source of available light was the headlights of the vehicles involved.

Miss Pyle’s suit against Skillman and Lee was tried in the-Circuit Court for Harford County on 31 March 1967 before *319 Day, C. J., 1 and a jury. The court’s instruction to the jury was lengthy, comprehensive and unremarkable. As we have said he refused to rule that Lee was negligent as a matter of law and he denied Miss Pyle’s “Instruction No. 21.” He left it to the jury to say whether Lee or Skillman, or both, were negligent and whether Miss Pyle was contributorily negligent. The jury’s verdict reflects the exoneration of Miss Pyle and Lee of any negligence. Skillman has not appealed from the verdict against him.

Neither in her brief nor in the argument before us did Miss Pyle press her contention that the trial judge erred when he declined to instruct the jury that Lee was negligent as a matter of law. In any event, we think the trial judge was entirely justified in leaving that issue to the jury. His refusal to grant “Instruction No. 21,” however, is attacked with vigor.

Code, Art. 66j4, § 217, in its entirety, is as follows:

“§ 217. Drive on right side of roadway; exceptions.
“(a) General rule and exceptions.—Upon all roadways of sufficient width a vehicle shall be driven upon the right half of the roadway, except as follows:
“(1) When overtaking and passing another vehicle proceeding in the same direction under the rules governing such movement;

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Bluebook (online)
242 A.2d 498, 250 Md. 315, 1968 Md. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyle-v-lee-md-1968.