White v. Parks

140 A. 70, 154 Md. 195, 1928 Md. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1928
Docket[No. 61, October Term, 1927.]
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 140 A. 70 (White v. Parks) 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
White v. Parks, 140 A. 70, 154 Md. 195, 1928 Md. LEXIS 14 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, Michael J. White, Thomas L. White and Charles A. White are co-partners trading as White Brothers, and they have a sales agency for automobilep at Westemport, Allegany County. The appellee, Lottie Parks, and her husband, James Parks, lived across the Potomac River from Westemport in Piedmont, West Virginia. Charles A. White, one of the partners, learned that the appellee and her hus *197 band bad under consideration the purchase of an automobile, and went to their home on Sunday afternoon, September 26th, 1926, for the purpose of showing the operation of an automobile, in order to sell one for his partnership. He suggested that the prospective purchasers and Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Wilt, who were present, go with him for a ride in the automobile, in order that he might have an opportunity to give a practical demonstration of its merits. The invitation was accepted, and White drove away with his four guests, the appellee sitting on the front seat next to the driver, and her husband and the other two guests on the back seat. After White had driven the automobile some distance, he suggested that the appellee, whom he knew to be an inexperienced driver, should begin learning to operate the automobile. Mrs. Parks exchanged places with White, and drove for some eighteen miles under his supervision. The highway was wide, and its surface hard and smooth, and the appellee drove slowly and carefully, and was proceeding in this manner and at the reduced speed of from ten to fifteen miles an hour, when a point was reached at the end of a sharp curve where it became necessary to turn the steering wheel to straighten out the machine, so as to keep in the road, and to avoid a steep bank which came down within two feet of the right edge of the highway. It was then the accident happened, the automobile running up the bank, falling back on its left side, and injuring the appellee. The appellee brought an action against the appellants to recover damages, and the verdict of the jury awarded her twenty-five thousand dollars, which the trial court remitted to twelve thousand dollars, the amount of the judgment from which.this appeal is taken.

The only exception is on the prayers. The first prayer of the appellee simply instructed the jury that the appellants were partners and the owners of the automobile. This prayer was conceded, and the court granted appellee’s second prayer in connection with the prayers of the appellants; and also granted appellee’s third prayer, and the first, second, fourth, fifth, sixth and eighth prayers of the appellants, and rejected their A, B, C, third, and seventh prayers.

*198 The A, B and C prayers were demurrers to the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding for the appellee by the jury. The evidence on the part of the appellee tended to show that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of White, who, according to this testimony, was looking toward and talking to the persons on the rear seat, when suddenly, without any apparent cause, he turned, seized the steering wheel, jerked it from the control of the appellee, and turned it so as to run the automobile up the bank, whereby it overturned and the appellee was hurt. On the other hand, there was evidence on the part of the appellants from which the jury could have inferred that White did not touch the steering wheel until after the appellee had brought about her mishap, by so negligently operating the automobile as to run it off the road and up the bank, before White had an opportunity to avoid the accident. This conflict of proof left the issue of fact for the jury, as it needs no argument to enforce the point that the testimony offered in behalf of the appellee, if true, was sufficient in law to charge the appellants with negligence. The appellees made no contention on brief in support of these three demurrer prayers.

The appellants’ third prayer imposed upon the appellee the burden of establishing the “state of facts alleged in the declaration,” and instructed the jury to find for the appellantg if the testimony should “leave the minds of the jury in a state of even balance as to the truth of the allegations in the declaration.” The prayer was approved in this form in Pillard v. Chesapeake Steamship Co., 124 Md. 468, 475, where it was accepted as the ordinary form of an instruction on the burden of proof in negligence cases, but no mention was made in the decision of the prayer’s reference to the “state of facts alleged” in the declaration, as constituting the measure of the quantity of proof required of the plaintiff to establish by the weight of evidence before he could recover. In its offered form, the prayer is inapplicable, unless the declaration contained no allegation of fact other than those which were essential to the cause of action, and the proof *199 at the end of the trial presented no facts entitling the plaintiff to a recovery other than those alleged in the declaration. As was pointed out in the case of United Rwys. Co. v. Cloman, 1 07 Md. 681, 694, 695, where a similar prayer was rejected on the ground that, as in the pending appeal, the declaration contained unessential or redundant allegations, and that a plaintiff might establish the facts requisite for a recovery by proving less than he had alleged and yet the jury would be instructed to find for the defendant, if the jury did not believe these non-essential or superfluous allegations had been sustained by the proof. Semble, United Rwys. Co. v. Corbin, 109 Md. 444, 446, 460; Bernheimer Bros. v. Brager, 108 Md. 551, 553, 563. In Hess v. United Rwys. Co., 137 Md. 605, 609, this form of prayer was again under consideration, and the court held its granting was not a ground of reversal, because no prejudice had resulted to the plaintiff under the circumstances of that particular case; so this form of prayer gathers no support from that decision. It is not unusual to find a declaration in tort containing allegations in tho narrative of the cause of action which are either an unnecessary or an excessive statement of what the plaintiff proves to be the breach of duty and its consequences in damages, although the testimony so adduced is sufficient to sustain the action within the allegations of the pleading. This record affords an illustration in point, and does not disclose any basis for error in the rejection of the third prayer of the appellants, which was calculated, for the reasons stated, to mislead the jury.

The seventh prayer requested an instruction that if the jury “were unable to determine from the evidence how the accident happened,” the verdict must be for the appellants. The coincidence that the form of the instruction in this case is the same as in the case of Hess v. United Rwys. Co., 137 Md. 605, where it was approved sub silentio, is not conclusive of its propriety, since that must always be determined with reference to the nature and state of the proof in the particular case before the jury. Balto. & O. R. Co. v. Stebbing, 62 Md. 504, 519. The fact that a correct abstract proposi *200

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Bluebook (online)
140 A. 70, 154 Md. 195, 1928 Md. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-parks-md-1928.