Smith v. State Roads Commission & State Accident Fund

214 A.2d 792, 240 Md. 525, 1965 Md. LEXIS 469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 1, 1965
Docket[No. 438, September Term, 1964.]
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 214 A.2d 792 (Smith v. State Roads Commission & State Accident Fund) 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
Smith v. State Roads Commission & State Accident Fund, 214 A.2d 792, 240 Md. 525, 1965 Md. LEXIS 469 (Md. 1965).

Opinion

*528 McWirriams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On 17 September 1962, within a few minutes of 8:00 p.m., Joseph Leo Smith, an employee of the State Roads Commission, on his way home, drove his pickup truck off of Liberty Road and struck a telephone pole. He sustained injuries which caused his death. A post mortem examination was performed the following morning. In a specimen of blood taken from the heart there was present a concentration of alcohol amounting to 0.27%, indicating intoxication.

Within sixty days the widow (appellant), on behalf of herself and six minor children, presented her claim to the Workmen’s Compensation Commission. A hearing was held 16 January 1963 on two issues. Was the deceased in the course of his employment when fatally injured? Was the accident the result of intoxication? The Commission found that the deceased was in the course of his employment and that the accident did not result solely from his intoxication. The employer and its insurer (appellees) noted an appeal to the Baltimore City Court. By agreement, the case was submitted for determination to the court without a jury on the single issue of intoxication. This appeal is from the court’s finding that Smith’s death resulted solely from his intoxication.

Not since S. Rosenbloom, Inc. v. Willingham, 190 Md. 552, 59 A. 2d 311 (1948), have we been asked to consider the language of Sections 15 and 45 of Art. 101 of the Maryland Annotated Code (1957), which provides that where injury or death results solely from the intoxication of the injured employee, no compensation shall be paid. In that case the employee, who during twenty years of married life had never been seen intoxicated by his wife, drove his car off of the Matapeake Ferry at Sandy Point and a few minutes later, after the ferry had left, turned the car around, drove it toward the empty ferry slip and plunged into the Chesapeake Bay. No bottle was found on his person and the police who attempted to revive him by artificial respiration did not detect any odor of alcohol. Judge Henderson, for the Court, said at 558: “No one saw the decedent take a drink. His conduct may have been due to alcohol or something else. * * * The action of the decedent was more suggestive of dementia than intoxication. We cannot say that the trial court *529 was clearly wrong in finding that causes other than intoxication played a part in the accident.” Judge Henderson also reviewed the earlier cases, in all of which the evidence of intoxication was either conflicting, minimal or presented situations demonstrating that intoxication was not the sole cause of the death or injury.

In the case before us the fact of intoxication, if not actually admitted, is established, for the first time in Maryland, by evidence which is both overwhelming and unchallenged. Whether or not the trial judge was clearly erroneous in concluding that the death of Smith resulted solely from his intoxication is the issue raised by appellant’s principal contention and the one which we shall consider first.

I.

The evidence produced at the trial shows that Smith, a resident of New Windsor, was 40 years old, 6 feet tall, and weighed 214 pounds. He commuted daily in his 1948 half-ton Ford pickup truck to White Marsh, a distance of about 55 miles, where the construction of the Northeastern Expressway (now Kennedy Expressway) required his services as an inspector. Because rain fell during most of the last day of his life, Smith and Jack Hartman, another inspector, quit work around 3:30 and went to a tavern nearby. Smith borrowed five dollars from Hartman and they each had two glasses of draft beer and a barbecue sandwich. Hartman recalled that Smith had a few dollars besides the five he had loaned him. They both left around four o’clock, each going his separate way. Where Smith went or what he did thereafter we do not know.

At 8:08 p.m., Officer Robert Borgmann of the Baltimore County Police received a call directing him to investigate an accident on Liberty Road at a point 8.1 miles north of its intersection with the Beltway. Upon arrival he found Smith’s severely damaged truck lying on the north shoulder of the road just beyond a shallow curve, slightly banked to the left, and 47 feet beyond a telephone pole with which it had collided. The front wheels and the front axle were about half way between the pole and the truck. The pole itself was fractured about four feet above the ground and the impact had pushed it at ground level about a foot away from its normal position. There were *530 no marks on the road or the shoulder to indicate skidding or sliding prior to the collision. Although it had stopped raining, the surface of the road was damp. Liberty Road at this point is 25 feet wide with a solid double yellow line in the center. The posted speed limit is 30 miles per hour.

There was no evidence of any mechanical defect in the truck nor any evidence of malfunction in its operation. There was no evidence of blowout or other tire trouble nor of any defect in the road.

Dr. Russell S. Fisher, the Chief Medical Examiner, testified that both the American Medical Association and the National Safety Council take the position that a person with a concentration of 0.15% alcohol in his blood must be considered under the influence of alcohol insofar as motor vehicle operation is concerned. 1 He said the presence of 0.27% would indicate that the person was highly intoxicated, and that he would show .this-in terms of some staggering and a very clear cut and evident decrease in. his ability to perform finer motions such as ■braking or steering an automobile, walking in a straight line, or any activity requiring a high, degree of physical coordination, and that many people “pass out” at this level. He also said that the amount of alcohol in Smith’s body at the time of ■the accident amounted to a pint of o.ne hundred proof whiskey and that he did not drink less than that amount because that was the amount that was present.

It was stipulated that in September of 1962 in the eight mile stretch .of Liberty Road between the. Baltimore Beltway and the scene of the accident there were located six’ bars, saloons or cocktail- lounges.. It is conceded that Smith habitually used .this part of Liberty Road going to and returning from work.

Appellant claims that there were other factors besides intoxication which contributed to the accident. She cites the fact that the road surface was-damp; that it was a dark, cloudy day; that illumination was poor; that it- was hazy; that excessive speed is indicated; that the telephone pole was 2 feet east of the shoulder; that this was the fifth of a series of curves; *531 that some of the curves were double curves. She suggests that any number of things could have happened, such as Smith’s having been blinded by on-coming lights; swerving to avoid an animal; being run off the road by an on-coming car; sneezing; falling asleep. She argues that something else must have contributed to the accident and that a finding that intoxication was the sole cause is pure speculation.

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Bluebook (online)
214 A.2d 792, 240 Md. 525, 1965 Md. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-roads-commission-state-accident-fund-md-1965.