Reid v. Humphreys

122 A.2d 756, 210 Md. 178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 9, 1956
Docket[No. 161, October Term, 1955.]
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 122 A.2d 756 (Reid v. Humphreys) 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
Reid v. Humphreys, 122 A.2d 756, 210 Md. 178 (Md. 1956).

Opinion

Diílaplaini?, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This litigation grew out of a collision of a Chevrolet automobile with a milk delivery truck in the City of Salisbury early on the morning of January 22, 1954. The Chevrolet was owned and operated by Hannibal Hamblin Reid. The truck was owned by City Dairy, Inc., and was operated by William D. Humphreys, its employee.

The accident occurred on Salisbury Boulevard, between Newton Street and Maryland Avenue. The boulevard curves here to the right for northbound traffic. Salisbury Boulevard, a through highway, is also known as the Salisbury By-pass, and is a part of U. S. Route 13. At this point the boulevard is 56 feet wide from curb to curb. It has two northbound and two southbound traffic lanes. Each lane is 10 feet wide. Between the northbound and southbound lanes there is a 4-foot macadam strip, and along the curb on each side of the boulevard there is a 6-foot parking lane.

Newton Street is only about 200 feet north of Maryland *182 Avenue. On the west side of the boulevard north of Maryland Avenue there is an Atlantic Service Station. Just south of the filling station is an Atlantic billboard a few feet north of the north curb of Maryland Avenue.

The accident occurred at about 3 a. m. It was raining hard at that time and the temperature was at about the freezing point. Humphreys, a route salesman, then 23 years old, was driving a “walk-in” milk delivery truck. Driving eastwardly on Newton Street, he entered -Salisbury Boulevard and turned to the right, and proceeded southwardly in “the slow lane,” as the outside lane is called. Within a few seconds after he got on the boulevard, Reid’s automobile crashed into his truck and knocked it around some distance so that when it came to a stop about six feet south of Newton Street, it was facing east, the front wheels on the line between the slow and fast lanes, and the rear wheels at the west curb. The Chevrolet, in which Reid and Mrs. Betty Lee Huling were riding, was hurled across the west curb and the service station lawn, and crashed backwards through the billboard.

Paul L. Lokey, of Somerset County, was the first person to arrive at the scene. Humphreys was leaning against the truck “bent over and complaining of pains in his stomach.” Lokey hurried to the City Dairy plant, called for an ambulance, returned to the scene, and drove Humphreys to the Peninsula General Hospital.

Officer Walter Evans, of the Salisbury police force, arrived about five minutes after the accident. Officer Claude Smith arrived several minutes later. At the billboard they found the Chevrolet containing the two victims. They also found that the distance from the Chevrolet to the truck measured 222 feet.

Reid and Mrs. Huling were taken in the ambulance to the hospital, where they were pronounced dead. Autopsies were performed, and a report from Dr. Henry C. Freimuth, of Baltimore, Chief Toxicologist of the State of Maryland, showed that there was an alcoholic content in the spinal fluid obtained from Reid’s body in the amount of .17 per cent ethyl alcohol. Dr. Kendrick McCullough, a member of the staff of *183 the Peninsula General Hospital, testified: “This amount of alcohol indicates that he was under the influence. It would indicate impairment of judgment and slowing of reflexes and motions.” The doctor added that the accepted maximum which would permit a driver to operate an automobile safely is .15 per cent.

On April 1, 1954, suit for damages was instituted under Lord Campbell’s Act by the State of Maryland, for the use of Roy C. Huling, surviving husband of Betty Lee Huling, against Humphreys, City Dairy, Inc., and Mrs. Esna D. Reid, administratrix of Reid’s estate.

On April 14, 1954, Humphreys and City Dairy, Inc., filed cross-claims against Mrs. Reid, administratrix.

On December 1, 1954, the suit for Pluling was marked settled and satisfied, and thereupon Mrs. Reid, administratrix, to her own use and to the use of State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, Reid’s insurer, filed a counterclaim against Humphreys and City Dairy, Inc., as joint tortfeasors, claiming all or half of the sums paid in settlement of the claims of Huling and Mrs. Huling’s estate under the Maryland Joint Tortfeasors Act, Code 1951, art. 50, sec. 20 et seq.

The cross-claims of Humphreys and City Dairy, Inc., against Mrs. Reid, administratrix, and her counter-claim were tried together before a jury in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County.

Humphreys, the only surviving eyewitness of the accident, testified that when he reached the Salisbury Boulevard, he stopped at the stop sign, looked both to the north and to the south, and not seeing any cars coming, entered the boulevard, turned to the right, and continued southwardly in the lane nearest the west curb. He then testified that, soon after entering the boulevard, he saw for the first time the headlights of a northbound car coming toward him between 750 and 900 feet away. He stated that he was driving his truck at a speed of only about 10 or 15 miles an hour, and that after he had traveled about 100 or 125 feet south of Newton Street, and thus was about halfway down the short block between Newton *184 Street and Maryland Avenue, the oncoming car skidded across the road when only about 50 or 75 feet south of him, and crashed with great speed into the front of his truck.

The police officers did not find any skid marks at the scene of the accident. Officer Evans, when asked on the stand whether he found any skid marks on the road, replied: “No skidmarks on the highway that I could see at all. As I say, it was raining very hard. There wouldn’t be as many. But probably whatever there was was washed away very quick.”

The officers found very little debris on the road. All that they found was some pieces of headlight glass, a piece of chrome, and a piece of casting. These were lying near the truck.

In the cross-claims of Humphreys and City Dairy, Inc., against Mrs. Reid, administratrix, the Court instructed the jury that there was no evidence of contributory negligence on the part of Humphreys. The jury thereupon awarded Humphreys a verdict against Mrs. Reid, administratrix, for $35,000, and awarded City Dairy, Inc., a verdict against her for $1,021.96.

In Mrs. Reid’s counter-claim against Humphreys and City Diary, Inc., the Court granted a directed verdict in favor of defendants.

Mrs. Reid filed a motion for a new trial, but after Humphreys filed a remittitur for $15,000, thus reducing the verdict in his favor to $20,000, the Court overruled the motion. Mrs. Reid has appealed here from the judgments entered upon the verdicts of the jury in favor of Humphreys and City Dairy, Inc., and also from the judgment entered on the directed verdict in her counter-claim.

I.

We first consider appellant’s objection to Lokey’s testimony that on January 22, 1954, at about 3 a. m., a two-tone Chevrolet passed him at a speed of about 70 miles an hour on U. S. Route 13 about a mile and a half south of the place where the accident occurred. Appellant contended (1) that Lokey’s *185

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Bluebook (online)
122 A.2d 756, 210 Md. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-humphreys-md-1956.