R. & L. Transfer Co. v. State Ex Rel. Schmidt

153 A. 87, 160 Md. 222, 1931 Md. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1931
Docket[Nos. 68, 69, October Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 153 A. 87 (R. & L. Transfer Co. v. State Ex Rel. Schmidt) 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
R. & L. Transfer Co. v. State Ex Rel. Schmidt, 153 A. 87, 160 Md. 222, 1931 Md. LEXIS 70 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of the Court.

On June 6th, 1929, a hoy, Bertold Schmidt, aged seven years, and a girl, Elfreda Matzdorf, six months older, were killed in a collision with a truck of the R. & I.. Transfer Company at the intersection of an alloy with the west side of Caroline Street in Baltimore. Suits were brought in the name of the State, for the use of the respective fathers of the children. The Schmidt ease was tried before a jury, •-and, from tbe judgment on a verdict in favor of the plaintiff appellee, the defendants appealed. The Matzdorf case was *224 submitted to the court sitting as a jury, with the addition of such testimony as was necessary to identify Elfreda Matador! as one of the victims of the collision and to prove her age and relationship to the equitable plaintiff, and the same verdict rendered and judgment entered as in the Schmidt case, from which an appeal was taken.

It appears that about 3.30 o’clock on the afternoon of June 6th, 1929, a truck of the R. & L. Transfer Company was proceeding northward on the right, or east, side of Caroline Street, in third gear (the truck having four forward gears), at a speed of from eight to ten miles an hour. At a point opposite the end of the alley, which did not intersect Caroline Street, a number of children, estimated from six to ten, were playing in the street. The truck driver blew his horn, and, the children paying no attention to his warning, he pulled over to the left side of the street, which was clear of traffic, none coming from the opposite direction. When directly opposite the east end of the alley, the driver, having turned his head toward the alley, saw two children riding a toy wagon coming at “a good rate of speed” toward the left side of the truck. He said: “They were at the intersection when I saw them.” On cross-examination he said they were between the building line and the curb, which would place them on the line of the sidewalk. “I deliberately stepped on my brakes, took my hand off the gear shift and still left her in gear, and I turned the truck a little bit to look back because I have an open view, and they hit the rear wheel and then this woman gave a scream and I jumped off and went back to the children. They were about six feet in back of the truck.” A woman who at the time was living in the fourth house above the alley (the houses are in a block, each house twenty-three feet wide) first noticed the truck when it was “half-way past the alley,” and did not really pay any attention to it until she “saw the children go under it.” Ho- one testified exactly from observation just what contact there was between the children and the truck. The driver said there was some red paint on the grey wheel of the track which he thought came from the toy wagon. The *225 children’s bodies were not crushed, and the only apparent injury was to their heads, so that they must have been pitched headlong into the truck.

Caroline Street is sixty feet wide; sidewalks ten feet; driveway forty feet ..from, curb to curb. The alley is seventeen feet wide, extending- westward from Caroline Street. The grade of the street is slightly rising to the north, the direction the truck was going. The alley is paved with concrete, and, according to the photographs in evidence, is steep. The plat in evidence shows the alley to he of the uniform width of seventeen'feet from its intersection with the Caroline Street driveway west, but the photographs show its width to he perhaps two or three: feet less across the sidewalk, and from the building line west it is of its. full width. The testimony of the driver was that the extreme length of his truck was about twenty feet, and its width about eight feet. The Code (article 56, see. 194) fixes the extreme width of motor vehicles at ninety-three inches. The testimony of three policemen who- came to the scene of the accident was that the rear wheels of the truck were midway of the- alley, so that its front end must have been from eleven to twelve feet beyond the intersection of the north side of the alley with the street. The driver testified that, as soon as he saw the children, he put on his brake and stopped the truck in one and a half feet, and that the truck, because it was left in gear, jumped forward about six feet. At that, he was seated within a foot or two- of the north side of the alley when he saw the children approaching the car. He said his glance was toward the left and rear, and that this was due to reaching- for the gear shift so as to change from third speed to high. The three policemen testified that the truck was standing on the left, or west, side of Caroline Street, eight to ten feet from the curb; the witness for the defense put it in the middle of the street. Both sides had it on the left of the center, so that it makes no- difference so: far as the legal situation is concerned.

The plaintiff contends that, because the truck at the time *226 of the accident was on the left of the center of Caroline Street when the children collided with it, this was prima fade evidence of negligence legally sufficient to^ take the case to the jury. The contention is also made that the doctrine of last clear chance applies, but it is so manifest that there was no time for the driver to do anything to avoid the consequences of the children’s negligence that there is no reason to incumber this opinion with an extended discussion of that doctrine as applied to the facts of this case.

For the contention that the fact of the truck being on the left of the center of Caroline Street is legally sufficient proof of negligence, the appellee relies upon the statement in Greenbaum v. Costa, 137 Md. 524, 528, 113 A. 79, 81, that “when upon this side of the street, no matter what his motive may have been, he lost his right of way, 'and it was incumbent upon him to exercise an even greater degree of care than would otherwise have been the case.” That was a case wherein the driver of an automobile, in order to get around a large crowd assembled on the (his) right side of the street, veered to the left and went so far as to strike a girl who was standing with one foot on the left, or west, curbstone and the other in the gutter. The sentence in which appears the quotation, “he lost his right of way,” is not wholly consistent with the one preceding it, which is, “As he approached the place where this accident occurred, the large number gathered there, if nothing else, made it prudent for him to veer his machine to the left-hand or west side of the street.” Whether one loses his right of way in going to the left of the center of the road depends on circumstances then existing on his side of the road. When the right side of the road is obstructed, he can use the left side to get by the obstruction, provided the way ahead on the left is clear; if it is not clear, it behooves him to stop until the left is open, and when it is open that is his right of way until he clears the obstruction. What Judge Stoekbridge meant by losing the right of way is qualified by what he said immediately before and immediately after the expression “he lost his right of way.”

*227 In Ottenheimer v. Molohan, 146 Md. 175, 126 A.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 87, 160 Md. 222, 1931 Md. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-l-transfer-co-v-state-ex-rel-schmidt-md-1931.