United Railways & Electric Co. v. State Ex Rel. Lapka

163 A. 90, 163 Md. 313, 1932 Md. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 16, 1932
Docket[No. 13, October Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 163 A. 90 (United Railways & Electric Co. v. State Ex Rel. Lapka) 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
United Railways & Electric Co. v. State Ex Rel. Lapka, 163 A. 90, 163 Md. 313, 1932 Md. LEXIS 41 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action brought for the use of the widow and infant children of Theodore J. Lapka, to recover compensation for his death, which, the equitable plaintiffs contend, resulted, from a collision between an automobile in which he was a passenger and a street car operated by the United Railways & Electric Company of Baltimore, the defendant, which occurred at the intersection of East Avenue and Elliott Street in Baltimore City on Eebruary 14th, 1931, shortly after 2 o’clock in the morning.

The trial of the case in the Baltimore City Court resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and from that judgment the defendant has taken this appeal, which presents two questions: (1) Whether the trial court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant; and (2) whether it ■erred in refusing defendant’s prayers numbered 8 and 8%.

The following facts, which appear in the record, are not disputed and may be stated in narrative form: Theodore J. Lapka, with Erank Poston, Charles S. O’Hara, and Leroy E. Eagle, were on Friday, Eebruary 13th, 1931, employed .at the Sparrows Point plant of the Bethlehem Steel Company. The four were friends, and at the end of the day’s work O’Hara, who owned an automobile, regularly drove Poston and Eagle to their homes and occasionally Lapka. On the evening referred to, they all finished their work a few minutes after 11 o’clock, and while O’Hara was in the locker room preparing to return to his home, Lapka approached and asked if he would take him, that is, Lapka, to his home in O’Hara’s automobile. O’Hara consented, and the four left the plant at about a quarter of 12. The automobile was a *317 Olirysler runabout, and O’Hara, wlio drove it, Poston, and Kagle sat in the front seat, and Lapka in the rumble seat at the rear. On their way into the city they stopped first to have some checks cashed, then at a friend’s to whom Poston wanted to pay some money, and shortly after they left there Poston left the machine, leaving in it O’Hara and Kagle in the front seat and Lapka in the rear or rumble seat. O'Hara, then started to drive to Lapka’s home, which was on Boston Street, and to reach it he drove west on Eastern Avenue to East Avenue, and turned south on East Avenue. As he attempted to cross Elliott Street, which, running east and west, intersects East Avenue, his automobile collided with a westbound street car operated by the defendant, and following the collision went diagonally across the intersection and ran into the front of a grocery store located on its southwest corner. After the accident Lapka was found lying on the sidewalk near the automobile, either dead or suffering from injuries which almost immediately caused his death. Elliott Street at that point, from building line to building line, is about 70 feet wide. The roadway is about 42 feet % inch wide; the distance from the north curb line to the north rail of the westbound track is 13 feet 4 inches, from that rail to the south rail of the eastbound track 15 feet 4% inches, and from the south rail to the south curb 13 feet 3 inches, and the sidewalks on either side are 13 feet 11 inches wide. The roadway of East Avenue is 41 feet 6 inches wide, and it is bounded on the west side by a sidewalk 14 feet 3 inches wide, and on the east side by a sidewalk 14 feet 2 inches wide.

The evidence relating to the actual occurrence of the accident is conflicting, and the opposing theories predicated upon that evidence quite irreconciliable. The plaintiff contended that it was caused by the conduct of the defendant’s motorman in operating its street car at a high and unlawful rate of speed across an intersecting street, and in failing to take reasonable care to avoid striking O’Hara’s automobile, which was in the lawful use of the intersecting street, after he became aware or should have become aware of O’Hara’s in *318 tention of crossing in front of the street car, and that Lapka’s death was caused by the collision. '

The defendant’s theory appears to be: (1) That the direct and proximate cause of the collision was the high speed at which O’Hara operated his automobile; and (2) that Lapka’s death was caused, not by the collision between the street car and the automobile, but by the collision between the automobile and the street curb or the store front, which it says was occasioned by O’Hara’s negligence.

There were but two witnesses who actually saw the entire occurrence, O’Hara, and the motorman who operated the defendant’s street car.

O’Hara testified: “I was coming down at a moderate rate of speed and as I approached within fifteen or twenty feet of the building line, I looked to my left and decreased my speed and seeing nothing coming I continued on and glanced to my right. As I reached the building line I looked to my left and saw the street car at least a quarter of a block east on Elliott Street and continued on and looking again to my right as my front wheels approached the car track, the north rail of the westbound car track, I looked and saw this street car coming at an awful rate of speed and seeing it would do me no good to' stop1 or I would be right in the middle of the tracks, I increased my speed and pulled to the right in an effort to avoid a collision. “Q. What happened ? A. The street car hit me on the left rear end and drove me into the store front on the opposite side of the street, southwest comer. Q. Had there been any bell rung or anything by the street car? A. No, sir, no warning whatever. Q. Were your lights burning as you went down there ? A. Positively. Q. When you say you got to the — got out on the car track or the rail of the westbound car track, north rail, and saw this street car coming, how was it going? A. Very fast. Q. Have you any idea what rate of speed it was going? A. I couldn’t say the exact mileage, but it was going, I would say, in excess of twenty-five miles an hour.”

He further testified that the street car did not stop until it nearly reached the next intersecting street, which is Robin- *319 sou; that he felt as though the left front end of the street car struck the automobile ; that the headlight of the street car was burning and that he had no trouble in seeing it; that when he came to the intersection he was driving at about fifteen ndles per hour and could have stopped the automobile before it reached the curb, and after it reached the curb he could have stopped it before it reached the railway tracks.

Charles Waterman, the motorman, gave this description of the accident: “I was westbound on Elliott Street Friday, February 13th, 1931, at 2.10 A. M. in the morning; approaching East Avenue I slacked my car down to a speed of about twelve miles an hour and tapped on the gong before I hit the building line of the street. When I hit the building line, I looked to my right. I seen the headlights of this automobile. Right away I glanced to my left and there was nothing coming, and I released my air brake and started to feed my car up, and I looked back again to my right and saw this automobile about forty or fifty feet away from me, when my car was about centerway from the curb to a few feet, from the center of the curb about midway from the center of the curb to where the accident happened, a little beyond the center of the street is where the accident happened. He was about forty or fifty feet away t-hen.

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Bluebook (online)
163 A. 90, 163 Md. 313, 1932 Md. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-railways-electric-co-v-state-ex-rel-lapka-md-1932.