Sugar v. Hafele

17 A.2d 118, 179 Md. 75, 1941 Md. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 3, 1941
Docket[No. 45, October Term, 1940.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 A.2d 118 (Sugar v. Hafele) 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
Sugar v. Hafele, 17 A.2d 118, 179 Md. 75, 1941 Md. LEXIS 105 (Md. 1941).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a judgment for the plaintiff, whose decedent, a pedestrian, died as a result of an automobile accident.

The only questions submitted and argued on appeal were the rulings of the court in refusing three prayers of the defendant, two of which, A and B, were for a directed verdict for the defendant. One, a demurrer prayer, the other, contributory negligence.

About one-thirty o’clock on the morning of January 22nd, 1939, John Henry Hafele was struck by an automobile owned and driven by Louis S. Sugar, the defendant, appellant, at or near the intersection of North and Collington Avenues in Baltimore City. The defendant was the only eyewitness who saw everything, but others were soon on the scene and one of them helped the victim of the accident into the defendant’s automobile, wherein he was driven to St. Joseph’s Hospital, where he died February 14th, 1939.

*77 John H. Hafele lived alone on the second floor of a building No. 2140 E. North Avenue, at the northwest corner of North Avenue and Collington Avenue, the entrance to his apartment being on Collington Avenue about 20 to 25 feet north of North Avenue. He was a paper hanger by trade. Between 1:15 and 1:30 he went into the Keystone Tavern, located at the southwest corner of North and Collington Avenues, where he bought a half pint of whiskey and two lemons. Thomas E. Collins, who waited on him, said he had one glass of beer; about 2 to 2:15 o’clock Hafele left for his home across North Avenue, taking the bottle of liquor and lemons with him. He did not deny saying in a statement given four days after the accident that Hafele “drank some liquor and beer.” He said Hafele “was perfectly sober.” Andrew R. Edie, an employee of the tavern, “did not notice whether he was drunk or sober.” ^

J. L. Slaysman, walking west on the south side of North Avenue, had just crossed Collington Avenue, when he heard “a crash like a thud,” looked around and saw something “flying around in the air that looked like a piece of cardboard and it hit the ground, and it was a man, and I went over there and helped the man put him in the car. When I saw the automobile, it was in the intersection on the northwest corner of North Avenue near the curb. It was going west on North Avenue”; when he first saw it, “it was right in the intersection, right at the corner of the store, in front of the store. Right in the middle of the intersection where people are supposed to walk across the street. Then the car drifted down a little bit. * * * There was a very strong smell of liquor around. The alcohol was in the air, you could smell freely. * * * It was like alcohol had been spilled.” He was “pretty sure the headlights were lit.”

Louis S. Sugar, the defendant, testified that, as he came to the second tree past Collington Avenue “it seems as though there was some one that stumbled from the tree, had been holding onto the tree, or stumbled out. in *78 the center of the street, and I applied my brakes.¡and tried to swerve to keep from hitting him, yet it struck the right side of my car. My car was practically stopped when I struck it. He stumbled out from the north curb.” He said there was no one “in sight and then I shouted and a tall fellow helped me put Mr. Hafele in the car.” He denied that Slaysman was at the scene of the accident or helped him. Slaysman had testified that “another man got on the other side and helped pull him in the seat.” He came about five minutes after the accideht. Neither he nor the defendant knows who he was. The defendant said his car did not stop in the intersection, but “probably forty to fifty feet past (west) of the intersection.” He said at the trial, “Mr. Hafele had been drinking.” On cross-examination he . said, “He seemed to be in right much pain when I put him in. the automobile. I think he was dazed.” In his report to the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles, he was “approaching close to Collington Avenue, when suddenly a man stepped, out in front of my car and I struck him. I immediately stopped my car and on my way to the-hospital, I picked up .Officer Royce Batte, of the. N. E. District. We continued on to the hospital and the man was- so intoxicated that we had difficulty in finding out his name.” Officer Batte said “he had been drinking.” .The officer also said, “I helped to carry him and he was in much. pain; I examined Mr. Hafele’s clothes. His right pocket was sopping, wet. There was glass in it. There was whiskey in the pocket.” The evidence is that the bottle had not béen -opened; the top and seal had not been broken, The defendant further testified that .when he “first saw Mr. Hafele * ■* * I sounded my horn and applied brakes, at thé same time.” He said his right front fender hit Hafele.on the right.side, so that he was facing, north, with his home directly in front of him. He gave 'the ■speed of- his car at ,15-to 18 miles;.an hour. The;X-ray disclosed fractures óf five ribs.and three in. his leg,;all on the . right sidé, and a- laceration. of the scalp. : The physician, who saw-him. first.rat.¡the'hospital said, - “I *79 smelled liquor, but that is all I can say. I noticed it in the accident room when I walked in.”

Charles Kohlman, a friend of Hafele’s who resided in the next block, was called about two o’clock and went to the hospital, was in the operating room, where he said he “smelled odor of alcohol only on his clothes. His clothes were saturated with it.” He went back from the hospital to the scene of the accident and found the “smashed” remains of his eye glasses about two doors west of the store in the corner building; each building in that block is eleven feet wide. About daybreak he went back and found the lenses all broken into small pieces, “about a foot west of that tree.” There are two small trees, according to the plat, on or about the dividing line between the store and adjoining house, and one between the 4th and 5th houses.

K. N. Speight, who has the grocery store in the corner building, over which Hafele lived, was in the rear of his store, heard brakes screech, and as soon as he had finished, he came out front and saw a man being loaded into a car, which drove on; he did not then know who it was. He found a hat, which later turned out to be Hafele’s, about 6 feet west of the first tree, which would be about 17 feet from the building line on Collington Avenue. Speight also said that about three o’clock, the same morning, the defendant had returned to the scene of the accident. “He told me he seen the gentleman coming across the street and he blowed his horn. That is all he told me. He told me he was coming across from the Keystone Saloon and saw him and sounded his horn. He did not tell me anything else.” The defendant denied Kohlman’s statement that he saw Hafele crossing the street, but didn’t deny Speight’s, merely saying he did not recall seeing him that night.

This is substantially all of the evidence upon which both parties rely.

The appellant’s contentions are that there is no legally sufficient evidence of his negligence, or, assuming the defendant was negligent, the contributory negligence of *80 plaintiff’s decedent was uncontradicted and so patent as to justify the granting of his “B” prayer.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.2d 118, 179 Md. 75, 1941 Md. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sugar-v-hafele-md-1941.