White v. Maryland

106 F.2d 392
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 1939
DocketNos. 4493-4496
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 106 F.2d 392 (White v. Maryland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Maryland, 106 F.2d 392 (4th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

WYCHE, District Judge.

These four actions arose out .of the death of Ellwood Anderson and Sarah, his wife, who were killed by the defendant when his automobile struck them on a' Maryland State highway on the night of February 25, 1938. By consent of the parties the causes were tried together.

Two of the actions were brought under Lord Campbell’s Act (Art. 67, Sec. 1, etc., of the Maryland Code of Public General Laws) in the name of the State of Maryland, one for the death of Ellwood Anderson to the use of Virginia Joyce Anderson, his infant child, and Ida Kinder Anderson, his mother; the other, for the death of Sarah Anderson, to the use of Virginia Joyce Anderson, her infant child, and Virginia Davidson Hammond, her mother. In the first of these actions there was a verdict and judgment in favor of the infant child in the amount of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000), but no recovery was allowed the mother; and likewise, in the second named action, there was a verdict and judgment for the infant child for Thirty Five Hundred Dollars ($3,500),. but no recovery was allowed the mother. The two remaining actions were brought by the administratrices of the estates of Ellwood and Sarah Anderson to recover funeral expenses, and for pain and suffering, under the provisions of Art. 93, Sec. 106, as amended by the Act of 1937, Chap. 127, Public General Laws of the State of Maryland. There was a judgment for Three Hundred Dollars ($300) in each of these actions.

The District Court denied defendant’s motions for directed verdicts made at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence and again at the close of all the evidence, as well as defendant’s motions to set aside the verdicts and to have judgments entered in accordance with his motions for directed verdicts.

The defendant appeals from the judgments entered against him in each case, and these appeals present the following questions for determination: (1) Was there error in denying defendant’s motions for directed verdicts ? (2) Did the District Judge err in permitting the witness George F. Galkas to testify regarding distances in which a Ford automobile could be stopped traveling at different rates of speed?

The evidence discloses the facts to be substantially as follows: On the night of their fatal injuries, Mr. and Mrs. Ellwood Anderson, accompanied by two friqnds, Misses Eliza and Margaret Stack, went to a place called Cozy Cabin Inn to dance. Cozy Cabin Inn .is about one mile south of Delmar, and is located on the west side of a Maryland State highway about one hundred feet back from the road upon which the accident occurred. Between the Cozy Cabin Inn and the highway there is a parking place for automobiles of about one hundred feet bordering on the highway and one hundred feet deep. It was customary at this place to reserve a circular driveway between the parked automobiles [395]*395so that one could drive in from the north entrance and drive around the circle formed by the lane between the automobiles about fifteen feet wide and drive out again to the highway at a point one hundred feet south of where the car entered. There are two large oak trees in front of the Inn which stand back about five feet from the highway. The oak trees are about sixty feet apart. On each of the oak trees is a floodlight directed toward the Inn, which lights up the Inn and grounds at night. Across the highway on the' east side about one hundred feet south of the Cozy Cabin Inn is a place called “Jim’s Restaurant” or “Jim’s Place”.

At midnight, or shortly thereafter, Mi. and Mrs. Anderson left the Cozy Cabin Inn, presumably to go to J im’s Place to get something to eat. They apparently walked down the south lane between the automobiles and came to the highway and shortly thereafter they were overtaken, struck and killed by defendant’s automobile some distance south of the southern driveway to the Cozy Cabin Inn.

Mr. Anderson’s body was found about one hundred, ten feet south of the southern driveway to the Cozy Cabin Inn, and about eighteen feet in front of where the car stopped; and Mrs. Anderson’s body was found about seventy-five feet from the entrance to the southern driveway and eighteen feet behind where the car stopped.

Tire or skid marks on the pavement started opposite the middle of the entrance to the southern driveway and ran south one hundred, nine feet to where the automobile stopped. The defendant was unable to state with any exactness how far south of the southern driveway he struck these people. Pie never saw them at any time while they were on the dirt shoulder. He was driving on his right side of the road. His headlights were shining brightly and were focused in the shape of a fan.. If the decedents had been on the shoulder or on the roadway fifty feet south of the driveway when he was just opposite the middle of Cozy Cabin Inn his headlights could have picked them up. The first thing defendant was conscious of was that the decedents were about ten feet in front of him, or opposite his right, fender on the roadway, and they seemed to be actively in motion and so close together that they were touching each other. When the collision occurred Mrs. Anderson fell to the west or right side of the highway and Mu Anderson was hurled through the air to the point where his body was found. Defendant testified the radio. in the automobile was playing a dance program. The other occupants of the car did not recollect whether or not the radio was playing.

There is nothing to obstruct the view of one approaching the highway from Cozy Cabin Inn either north or south; a step or two before coming on the highway a pedestrian could see the lights of an approaching automobile, whether it was coming from the north or the south.

The defendant estimated that he was traveling forty miles an hour when he approached Cozy Cabin Inn. His brakes were in good condition and there was nothing to obstruct his view.

The defendant was thoroughly familiar with the situation at the Cozy Cabin Inn and was acquainted with the fact that they had a Friday night dance, and knew the risks which were involved in driving down the Delmar road at that time of night on Friday. The weather conditions were good; the road runs north and south; the highway was dry; the road was concrete, eighteen feet wide, level and straight for a distance of one-fourth mile at least on either side north and south from the place where the accident occurred. There was no sidewalk on either side of the roadway south of the southern driveway to the Cozy Cabin Inn. There was a dirt shoulder on both sides of the highway. There was no other automobile on the highway, either going or coming or standing. At the time of the accident the defendant was returning from Philadelphia where he had driven four members of the Girls Basketball team of the Maryland State Teachers College, Salisbury, Maryland, for a game with Temple University. There was no suggestion of impropriety or intoxication on the part of either the decedents or the defendant and his companions.

The first question must be determined by consideration of all the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, and in deciding it we must be guided by the law of the State of Maryland.

The Court of Appeals of Maryland has decided: “that an operator of a motor vehicle has no right to assume that the road is clear, but that under virtually all circumstances and at all times, he must be reasonably vigilant and must anticipate and expect the presence of others. One [396]

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Bluebook (online)
106 F.2d 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-maryland-ca4-1939.