Robertson v. State, Use, Meyer

139 A.2d 715, 216 Md. 175, 1958 Md. LEXIS 412
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 26, 1958
Docket[No. 191, September Term, 1957.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 A.2d 715 (Robertson v. State, Use, Meyer) 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
Robertson v. State, Use, Meyer, 139 A.2d 715, 216 Md. 175, 1958 Md. LEXIS 412 (Md. 1958).

Opinion

Henderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The parents of a seven-year old boy, Thomas D. Meyer, who was hit by a truck on April 23, 1954, and died on August 29, 1954, as a result of his injuries, recovered judgments on jury verdicts against the driver of the truck, the owner, and *178 the hirer, a partnership trading as Hercules Block Company. The appellants challenge the refusal of motions for directed verdict and motions for judgment n. o. v. . No question is raised as to agency of the driver. The only questions raised are as to the sufficiency of the evidence of primary negligence, and whether the court’s charge to the jury fairly and adequately covered the case.

The accident occurred at about 12:50 P. M. on Norris Lane, four hundred feet east of North Point Boulevard in Baltimore County. The weather was clear, and the road dry, level and straight. The speed limit is thirty miles per hour. The road is macadam, nineteen feet wide, with a gravel shoulder on each side, eighteen inches in width, and with grassy ditches on each side beyond the shoulders. The area is not closely built up. Along the road, which runs east and west, there are some old-style detached frame dwellings, one on the south side of Norris Lane, owned by the parents of the child, and one on the north, owned by the Taylorson family, slightly to the east, although the houses face one another. In front of the Taylorson house there is a hedge about three or four feet high behind the ditch along the road, with an opening for a walkway. Mrs. Meyer testified that she had permitted Tommy, the boy, to go across the road to play with the Taylorson child, and had taken him to the edge of the road to watch him cross. She told him to let her know when he was ready to come home and she would “get him across”. She sat on her front porch, drying her hair. Some time later, she saw him come down the walk and she stood up “so I could tell him when to come across, but I didn’t have a chance. * * * He was standing at the edge of the walk, waiting for me to tell him when to come across, * * * on the shoulder, right at the edge of the walk.”' The truck, coming from her left on the north side of the road passed between her and the boy and cut off her view. When the truck passed, the boy wasn’t there. She ran down and found the boy lying in the road in front of the truck, which had swerved to the right-hand or south side of the road. She was positive that the boy was standing still and not moving when she last saw him, just before the accident. Earl Meyer, *179 seventeen years old, saw his brother, Tommy, just before the accident. He was “standing there, looking up and down.” He heard “a rubbing noise” and saw the truck standing there.

Sergeant Sigler, who investigated the accident, testified that when he reached the scene the boy was lying about ten feet in front of the truck, south of the center of the road. His right leg had a severe fracture, and the point of impact had been on the left front bumper of the truck. The truck left skid marks seventeen feet in length; he couldn’t recall whether they were straight or not. tie thought the truck was standing in the eastbound lane; there was room for the ambulance to pass to its left. There were no parked vehicles along the road.

Green, the driver of the truck, testified he was driving east in a two-ton, stake body truck about seven feet wide, at about twenty-eight miles per hour. He was “in the middle of the road * * * about 3y2 feet from the right hand side”. When he was about fifty feet away, he saw a puppy or small dog lying on the right-hand side of the road, about five feet west of the Meyer house, and “moving”. It “seemed to start across the road and I pulled to my left to keep from hitting the dog, and just about the time I got even with the walkway of the house is when I noticed the boy run out in front of me, or the shadow of the boy, seemed to be in the act of running. As I pulled back I was applying my brakes, and at the same time is when I heard this ‘Bang!’ and slid to a stop.” He thought the truck was “on an angle” when it stopped, the right rear wheel in the center of the road. He “was noticing the dog, trying to keep from hitting the dog. When I turned back from the right I noticed the figure of the boy coming out from the driveway. It seemed to be running.” If he had seen the boy in time “I probably would not have hit the boy.”

Mrs. Meyer testified that the Taylorsons had a dog. It was “standing alongside of Tommy” just before the accident. There were no other dogs around. On cross-examination, and when confronted with her pre-trial deposition in which she had said she “didn’t see the dog when Tommy was standing there”, she testified that the dog was always playing with *180 the children, and that “the dog was by Tommy, somewhere around where Tommy was”. On redirect examination she reiterated that the dog was “on the Taylorson’s side of the road.” Officer Sigler testified that the driver, Green, told him just after the accident that “he had geen this dog, and the child apparently behind the dog. * * * It’s been three years ago, and as near as I can recollect his story was he thought it came from the right, and he cut his truck a little to the left to avoid the dog and then he realized he had struck something else. * * * According to the transcript at the Edgemere Station, he thought the child and the dog had come from the right. He also stated at the hospital later, then he decided the child had come from the left.”

The appellant argues that there was no evidence that Green’s driving in the middle of the road before the accident was the proximate cause of the accident, that there was no evidence that he was driving at an excessive speed under the circumstances, or that he was driving recklessly. If we assume that the appellant is correct on all of these points, it does not follow that he was free from negligence. Viewing the evidence in the 'light most favorable to the plaintiffs, it permits the inference that Tommy was standing still upon the shoulder and did not run in front of the truck before he was struck. There is no force in the contention that this is rebutted by the physical facts. If the truck were driven or swerved to the left, and swerved back to the right, it is entirely possible that the impact occurred on the shoulder and threw him across the center. The swerve to the left, unexplained, would be evidence of negligence. See Greenbaum v. Costa, 137 Md. 524; Miles v. State, 174 Md. 292; Garozynski v. Daniel, 190 Md. 1, and Fogle v. Phillips, 191 Md. 114. Lenehan v. Nicholson, 214 Md. 414, is clearly distinguishable. There the evidence that the boy darted in front ■of the car, while it was on its proper side, was uncontradicted. It could also be inferred from the evidence in the instant case, that the driver could have seen the boy, standing on the shoulder in front of the hedge in a place of comparative safety and in plain view, and could have avoided striking him if he had seen him. Of course, the driver sought to avoid the *181 obvious inference of negligence on the ground that he acted in an emergency, created by the action of the dog, as an excuse for apparent negligence. Sonnenburg v. Monumental Tours, 198 Md. 227, 238.

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Bluebook (online)
139 A.2d 715, 216 Md. 175, 1958 Md. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-state-use-meyer-md-1958.