Wolfe v. State Ex Rel. Brown

194 A. 832, 173 Md. 103, 1937 Md. LEXIS 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 3, 1937
Docket[No. 15, October Term, 1937.]
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 194 A. 832 (Wolfe v. State Ex Rel. Brown) 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
Wolfe v. State Ex Rel. Brown, 194 A. 832, 173 Md. 103, 1937 Md. LEXIS 289 (Md. 1937).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

James Clarence Brown died on March 7th, 1936, from injuries which he received in an automobile accident, leaving to survive him a widow,- Nellie McCombs Brown, one of the equitable plaintiffs in this case. At the time of the accident he was employed as assistant manager by the Maryland Tobacco Growers Association at an annual salary of $3,000. The widow filed a claim with the Industrial Accident Commission for compensation under Code, art. 101 (as amended). The claim was allowed and compensation is paid by the Aetna Casualty & Insurance Company, the insurer.

Subsequently the widow and the insurer brought this action against Hyman Wolfe to recover damages for the death of Brown, on the theory that the accident which resulted in the injuries from which Brown died was *107 caused by the negligence of the defendant. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and from that judgment the defendant took this appeal.

The accident,, which occurred on November 13th, 1935, on Maryland Route No. 3, a state highway leading from Washington, D. C., to La Plata, Md., at a point about one-half mile south of T. B. in Prince. George’s County, was a collision between an automobile operated by Hyman Wolfe, who was driving north towards Washington, and an automobile driven by Brown south towards La Plata.

The record submits fourteen exceptions, of which ten relate to rulings on evidence, one to rulings on the prayers, one to an objection to a statement made in the course of an argument by counsel for the plaintiffs, and two to the refusal of a motion for a new trial. That the purpose and relative significance of these exceptions may more readily appear, before considering them seriatim, a summary of the conceded facts and the contentions of the parties will be given.

The road at the point of the accident is of macadam with concrete shoulders and is about twenty-two feet wide. The accident occurred at about 11 o’clock in the morning. At that time it was raining heavily, and had been raining all the morning. Wolfe was driving a Dodge sedan, and Brown a Ford coach. The road at the point of the accident runs about north and south, and when the cars came to rest after the accident both were off the road and west of it. Near the scene of the accident and east of the road was a telephone pole, called in the testimony “Pole No. 1west of the road near the accident was another telephone pole called' “Pole No. 2.”

Hyman Wolfe at the" time of the trial was seventeen years of age and must therefore at the time of the accident have been about sixteen years old. He lived on his father’s farm at La Plata, and at the time of the accident was driving from La Plata to his father’s home in Washington. Brown was about fifty-four years old, and at the time of the accident was traveling on the business of his employer.

*108 The contention of the plaintiff is that, as Brown was proceeding south on the west, his right side of the road, Wolfe, proceeding north, was driving his car at a rate of speed, which, because of the wet, slippery, condition of the road, was highly dangerous, that he was driving it over a curve, and that, because of an emergency created by his own inattention, he was compelled to make a sudden swerve, that as a result of the concurrence of those factors his car skidded into the path of Brown’s car and caused the accident, that the skidding was the natural and proximate result of the negligent and unskillful manner in which Wolfe operated his automobile, that the accident was therefore caused by his negligence, and that he is liable for the 'injuries to Brown which were caused by the collision.

The defendant’s contention is that no inference of negligence can be drawn from those facts, which constitute the predicate of the plaintiff’s contention, and also that there is no legally sufficient evidence to show that Brown was on his right side of the road at the time of the collision. Because of their materiality to a consideration of the defendants’ demurrer prayer, the exceptions relating to rulings on evidence will be first considered.

The first person to arrive on the scene after the accident was William Voetz, who was driving north from Waldorf, which is about four miles south of T. B., where he had gone to deliver ice. Before he reached the point at which the collision occurred, a black car, which he took to be a Dodge car, passed him. He did not know then who was driving it, but later he knew that it was Wolfe. When he 'arrived he found Hyman Wolfe and a companion standing in the road, and discovered that Brown was seriously injured. He drove at once to the bus terminal, a short distance away, called the nearest police substation to report the accident, and then returned to the scene of the accident. He said that he was present at a conversation between Officer White and Hyman Wolfe, in the course of which Wolfe said: “That they were driving along and all of a sudden his partner *109 said ‘Look out, you are going to hit that telephone pole’ and Wolfe swerved over, and after that everything got black to him, he don’t know what’s going to happen”; that at that time the Wolfe car was about 100 or 150 feet from the west side of the road “into the woods,” and the Brown car about 25 feet from the west side of the road in an open field.

Following the testimony of Voetz, J. A. White, a state police officer, testified that he was notified of the accident at about 11 o’clock in the morning of November 13th, 1935, that he and Corporal Bogers then went to the place where it occurred, which was about 2% miles-north of the station, that when he arrived he found the two cars on the west side of the road, the Brown car about 30 feet from the road in a field, and the Wolfe car 150 feet from the road in a little grove of trees. He saw no skid marks but did see broken glass, and he saw blue paint on a telephone pole on the left side of the road going north, which had apparently come from the Wolfe car. He then said that he asked Wolfe to give “his idea” of what happened, and that Wolfe said “he was on his way to Washington going north up the road, and rounded the curve just below the accident, I guess about one hundred feet below where the cars struck each other, travelling at a speed between forty and forty-five an hour, and as he rounded' this curve he felt the car slipping toward the outer edge of the curve. A very small embankment there, not more than three feet high, slopes gradually off to the flat field, and some distance away was a telephone pole, and from the way the car was slipping toward the outside he felt that it might go headlong into the telephone pole, so he pulled sharply to the left, and to get the car back on the road to avoid hitting this pole. He felt the car turn around and he' saw the other car there, and he remembered nothing from then on. I asked him if he remembered the car striking the other, and he said no, he did not know anything about it until he found his car up in the grove of balsam trees.”

*110 He then compared the paint on the telephone pole with the paint on the Wolfe car, and found that the color of the paint on the pole was the same as that of the paint on Wolfe’s car.

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Bluebook (online)
194 A. 832, 173 Md. 103, 1937 Md. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfe-v-state-ex-rel-brown-md-1937.