Williams v. State Ex Rel. Ellis

155 A. 339, 161 Md. 39, 1931 Md. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 11, 1931
Docket[No. 20, April Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 155 A. 339 (Williams v. State Ex Rel. Ellis) 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
Williams v. State Ex Rel. Ellis, 155 A. 339, 161 Md. 39, 1931 Md. LEXIS 6 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There is only one question in this case, but, as that is to the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, and as the evidence tending to prove the negligence of the defendant and its causal connection with the death of plaintiff’s decedent is wholly circumstantial, it is necessary to review all the facts with some particularity.

James P. Drury resided, with two daughters, on a small farm situate on the north side of the state road in St. Mary’s County, a little less than half a mile from Mechanicsville. On the evening of January 3rd, 1929, he was at Mechanics-ville. Wilson Fairall testified that he saw him there about 7 o’clock and talked to him. “After that time I seen him when he went on up the road. He lived a little less than half a *41 mile up the road, north of Mechanicsville, in the direction of Charlotte Hall. I saw him just as he started up the road; it was then between seven-thirty and eight o’clock. A colored boy was with him. * * * I would say he is crazy (it was stated at the argument that the colored boy was an idiot and could not be used as a witness), and he was in company with Mr. Drury when I saw him going up the road, that was between seven-thirty and eight o’clock.” He testified then to finding a man lying off the north side of the state road about twenty feet from the road into the Drury home. This was between 8 and 8.30. He did not recognize him, and went back to Mechanicsville for help. He went to Hobert S. Burroughs, a justice of the peace, and they, with Stanley Williams, a nephew of Mr. Drury, went to the scene of the accident. It was then that Mr. Drury was recognized, first by his nephew. Mr. Drury was lying seven or eight feet to the right of the east edge of the concrete part of the road, and between twenty or twenty-one feet south of the road leading into his home.

Dr. Johnson, the physician who was sent for by Squire Burroughs, said Mr. Drury had been removed to his home when he arrived and found him unconscious, and he so continued until he died on January 4th. He found the skull fractured near the crown. He did not recall “any other wound on the body, nothing serious.” “The cut on the scalp was '* * * about three inches across, * * * but the depression in the skull whore the bones were fractured did not seem to be over about one inch, as if the centre of the blow, the force of the blow, had been at one particular spot, and the bone was depressed, as I recall, about one-eighth of an inch, the bone was pressed into the brain * * * I think there were several smaller clean cut wounds like glass, or something like that. There were some cuts there as if 'it was made by glass, I did not find any glass. I do not know how it was cut, just some clean cuts, a cut that might have been produced by a glass or some other cutting surface. There was not any glass found when I examined the wound and dressed it. The main cut was not with glass, but some other light cuts, I think, were.”

*42 Robert S. Burroughs testified that he found a man who was moaning at the place where Mr. Fairall took him and Stanley Williams, who recognized the man as his uncle. “When I found him in company with Mr. Eairall and Stanley Williams, he was on the right of the road going from Mechanicsville to Charlotte Hall, below Mr. Drury’s gate, towards Mechanicsville. His body was off the road. * * * We went back the next morning and there was only one puddle of blood where his head was lying.” The distances from the state road and the way into Drury’s were measured the morning of the trial by Eairall in witness’ presence. Witness heard that a car with a broken windshield had passed through the village, found the car, and that it belonged to Matthew Williams, the defendant appellant. “Saw Mr. Matthew Williams and asked him how his windshield got broken and he said that going home that night some one threw a brick or something in his windshield and broke it out. I asked him where it happened and he said up there next to the canning factory, close to Mr. Drury’s gate, just above Mr. Drury’s gate. So I asked him if he would mind driving up with me and show me the point where it happened. * * * I kept on driving and told him to tell me where to stop and we passed Mr. Drury’s gate and we got to a point where there was a lot of glass and he told me to stop; he said that is where it happened. * * * I asked him how can you account for this glass falling all the way back ? So he followed me as far back as the glass went, which went back to where Mr. Drury was found. Well, he supposed that must have happened down there and that is where he stopped. * * *We did not find broken glass at the point where I found Mr. Drury’s body the night before. We found it the following morning. . We followed it along to that point. When Mr. Matthew Williams, the defendant, accompanied me up the road to show me where ha thought he had been struck by a brick, at first I went by the point where Mr. Drury’s body was found (the witness was driving). I would say twenty-five yards above Mr. Drury’s gate there was glass there. Then I followed the glass back and found scattering glass at *43 the point where Mr. Drury was found.” On cross-examination, he said: “There was glass along the road between that and the point opposite where Mr. Drury’s body was found. There was no glass off the road where Mr. Drury’s body was found. The glass followed on back from where Mr. Williams stopped his car, back about to where Mr. Drury was found, on the right hand side coming up.” “I would not like to say just what he told me as to the exact time when he went along there, but what he told me corresponded with around eight o’clock.”

Stanley Williams, the first to identify Mr. Drury, who was his uncle, examined the Ford coupé of the appellant at Mechanicsville on January 4th, and said: “I found the windshield was broken out, a -little over half of it was broken out, a little piece on the left and the right hand front headlight was bent back. There were two or three little pieces on the right hand side of the car, the glass was sticking in there, there were two or three hairs in there. I could see those hairs very clearly. They were kind of a red like, sandy red like, almost the same color as mine. The blood was on the right hand side of the car where the windshield was broken out, right in the corner of it, two or three little pieces sticking up in the iranio of the windshield. I knew Mr. James B. Drury; he was my uncle. His hair was a light color like, sandy color, almost the same color as mine. It was found right on the little piece of glass sticking up in the frame of the windshield.”

Burwood Buckler, who lived about a mile and a half north of Mechanicsville, said he and his wife were on the state road leading south from their home in the direction of Mechanicsville, on their way to Mrs. Buckler’s mother’s, and said: “I came along that road between Drury’s lane and Mechanicsville around seven-thirty or quarter of eight * * * going south. I met an automobile between the lane leading into Drury’s house and Mechanicsville. I could not say what kind of automobile it was. I met it between Mr. Drury’s gate and the turn at Mr. Charley Herbert’s where you turn down into Mechanicsville. Before I met that automobile I *44 met two walkers on the opposite side of the road from where I was.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 A. 339, 161 Md. 39, 1931 Md. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-ex-rel-ellis-md-1931.