Richardson v. Fleetway Cabs, Inc.

84 A.2d 910, 198 Md. 512, 1951 Md. LEXIS 354
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1951
Docket[No. 37, October Term, 1951.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 A.2d 910 (Richardson v. Fleetway Cabs, Inc.) 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
Richardson v. Fleetway Cabs, Inc., 84 A.2d 910, 198 Md. 512, 1951 Md. LEXIS 354 (Md. 1951).

Opinion

Collins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in an automobile accident case. After the jury retired, the foreman of the jury in conference with the Court stated that the jury had agreed that the accident resulted from the negligence of both drivers and asked for further instructions. After these were given the jury returned a verdict for the appellee. Appellant then filed a motion for judgment N. O. V. and for a new trial, both of which were overruled. From a judgment for costs for the appellee, the appellant appeals.

The case comes to this Court on the failure of the trial judge to instruct the jury: (1) that the proximate cause of the accident was the failure of the appellee to yield the right of way to the appellant as requested in appellant’s A prayer; and (2) that there was “no evidence in this case legally sufficient to show that the Plaintiff was guilty of any negligence contributing to the happening of the accident complained of,” as requested in appellant’s B prayer. Our disposal of the *515 B prayer will make it unnecessary to discuss the A prayer.

As the appellant contends that as a matter of law the appellant was not guilty of any contributory negligence we will discuss the evidence in a light most favorable to the appellee.

On March 17, 1950, about 8 A.M. Mrs. Lillian Richardson, the appellant, was driving a 1949 Oldsmobile in an easterly direction on Baker Street, which runs east and west, in Baltimore. The day was clear and the streets were dry. Charles Strouse, the driver of appellee’s taxicab, was driving south on Division Street, which runs north and south, he said about fifteen or twenty miles an hour, and when he reached the corner of Baker and Division Streets, each about 42 feet wide, he looked to his right and saw the Oldsmobile at a distance of fifty to seventy-five feet. He did not see the sign on Division Street, “Dangerous Intersection, Slow”. There was nothing coming from his left. Assuming that he had enough time to cross Baker Street, he proceeded across. After he started across Baker Street and had reached the south curb of Baker Street he looked to his right again and Mrs. Richardson was approximately twenty feet from him. He then blew his horn and drove straight ahead, trying to get out of her path. When he blew his horn she veered to her right. When the front of his cab had gotten five or six feet beyond the intersection, the Oldsmobile struck the rear of his cab between the center of the right rear wheel and the right rear bumper. All four doors flew open. Another witness testified that after the collision a woman passenger in the cab was in the middle of the street bleeding and the male passenger was on the left side with his head against the curb unconscious. Strouse said his cab started swaying from side to side. He tried to keep it from turning over. When the cab stopped it had turned around in a semi-circle and was facing northwest. When he got out of the cab the Oldsmobile had one wheel on the sidewalk. “It had smashed into *516 the back of another car parked at the southeast curb of Baker Street and had driven this parked car into the back-of a parked truck.”

Officer' Lupinek testified that from his investigation the point of impact between the vehicles was thirteen feet east of the west curb of Division Street and thirteen feet north of the south curb of Baker Street. The cab proceeded fifty-six feet from the point of impact south on Division Street.

Mrs. Richardson, the appellant, a school teacher in Baltimore, testified that she was driving east on Baker Street between twelve and fifteen miles an hour. As she approached Division Street at about the building line, she looked to her right and “there was nothing coming”. She then looked to her left and saw a taxicab about forty or fifty feet up Division Street. When she first saw the taxicab she did not have the impression at that time that the cab was going unusually fast. She said: “If I had been impressed with that I would have stopped, right of way or no right of way. * * * It was too far up, it was a little too far up for me to get that impression' first.” She had good brakes. When she reached the intersection she slowed down to about ten or twelve miles an hour. She said she could have stopped her car, “rather quickly. I mean rapidly, fast.” She started across the intersection. Suddenly there was a terrific impact. “The next I saw of the cab we had a collision. After the collision my car continued across Baker Street and almost hit a lamp post at the corner. I tried to control it and managed to move the wheel sufficiently to avoid the lamp post but I slid into a parked car.”

Code, 1947 Supplement, Article 66%, Section 176 provides in part: “(Vehicle Approaching or Entering Intersection.) (a) Except as hereinafter provided, all vehicles or trackless trolleys shall have the right of way over other vehicles or trackless trolleys approaching at intersecting public roads from the left, and shall give right of way to those approaching from the right.” This statute does not specify how close the vehicle ap *517 proaching from the right must be to the intersection in order to acquire the right of way over the vehicle approaching from the left. Neither does it specify how close the vehicle from the left must be to the intersection or possible point of collision before yielding the right of way. This statutory rule is not a peremptory command but rather a cautionary guide. Whether a vehicle approaching from the right is near enough to the intersection to acquire the right of way over the vehicle approaching from the left must be determined from the circumstances of the particular case, such as, the width of the intersecting streets, speed of the vehicles and other circumstances. Taxicab Co. v. Otteneritter, 151 Md. 525, 531, 532, 135 A. 587; Wlodkowski v. Yerkaitis, 190 Md. 128, 132, 57 A. 2d 792; Legum v. Hough, 192 Md. 1, 63 A. 2d 316.

Even though the appellant had the right of way, she was not relieved from the duty to use reasonable care to avoid a collision with the unfavored vehicle. The favored driver, approaching the intersection should proceed at a lawful rate of speed, keep his car under control so as to be able to stop on short notice, and look carefully to avoid injury to others. Of course, if the favored driver continues his course without exercising reasonable care, he may be liable although he has the right of way. Wlodkowski v. Yerkaitis, supra, 190 Md. at pages 131, 132, 57 A. 2d at page 795. It was said in that case at page 134: “No absolute rule declaring what constitutes contributory negligence can be formulated to apply to all cases, because, like primary negligence, it is relative and not absolute, and it necessarily depends upon the circumstances of each particular case. Unless the action of the plaintiff relied on as amounting to contributory negligence is established by clear and uncontradicted evidence, the case should not be withdrawn from the jury, and where the nature of the act relied on to establish contributory negligence can be determined only from all the circumstances surrounding the accident it is within the province of the jury to characterize it. *518

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Bluebook (online)
84 A.2d 910, 198 Md. 512, 1951 Md. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-fleetway-cabs-inc-md-1951.