Yellow Cab Co. v. Lacy

170 A. 190, 165 Md. 588, 1934 Md. LEXIS 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1934
Docket[No. 57, October Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 170 A. 190 (Yellow Cab Co. v. Lacy) 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
Yellow Cab Co. v. Lacy, 170 A. 190, 165 Md. 588, 1934 Md. LEXIS 168 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Sloaa, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff, Bobert Lacy, while a guest in the automobile of Bobert H. Archer, was injured in a collision, at the inters section of Charles and Lanvale Streets in Baltimore, of Mr. Archer’s car with a taxicab of the Yellow Cab Company, *590 defendant, and, from a judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant appeals.

About 4 o’clock on the afternoon of June 19th, 1931, Mr. Lacy, in a car being’ driven by Mr. Archer, was proceeding south on Worth Charles Street in Baltimore, all of the witnesses testify, at a moderate rate of speed. A taxicab of the defendant, driven by James G-. Taylor, was coming east on Lanvale Street toward Charles, the driver intending to cross Charles Street and go on to St. Paul Street, thence to Union Station with his passenger. Some witnesses testified that the taxicab was traveling at from thirty to thirty-five miles per hour. The taxicab, coming from the right, under the law had the right of way. Code (Supp. 1929), art. 56, sec. 209. There is evidence from at least two witnesses that the taxicab struck the Archer car in its right rear, after it had cleared the Lanvale Street driveway and as much as ten feet south of the west curb on Lanvale Street. If this be true, and there is testimony of the fact as stated, all the taxicab had to do was to keep in a straight course, which would have taken it across Charles Street in the rear of the Archer car. Mr. Lacy testified: “We were going about fifteen miles an hour as we entered Lanvale Street and went across it, and I happened to look out of a window and saw a Yellow cab approaching us at a high speed from the right. It advanced without slowing or swerving and passed back out of my view. A moment after that I heard, first I felt a crash at the rear right of our car. I lurched forward, the door opened and I pitched out backward on to the street. * * * We were near the centre of Lanvale Street,” the cab forty or more feet away. Of the cab’s speed, he said he was surprised “that anyone would come into Charles Street at any such speed as that.” Mr. Archer testified that he could and did see to his right up Lanvale Street, and “there was no traffic coming.” If this were a suit between him and the defendant, his evidence might be controlling against him, but, as his guest is suing, his evidence, in this respect, loses its importance, unless the plaintiff failed, under the circumstances, to do what he could and should have done to avoid the collision. *591 Mr. Lacy testified that lie did not call Mr. Archer’s attention to the fact that he saw the cab; that there was no time to say anything; that he expected the cab to pass back of the Archer car. With this as the only notice the plaintiff had of the location of the defendant’s cab, and of the time and opportunity to warn Mr. Archer of his peril, even if he could or should have anitcipated the danger, his contributory negligence, if any, should have been, as it was, submitted to the jury. State, use of Shipley, v. Lupton, 163 Md. 180, 192, 161 A. 393, and cases there cited. Mr. Archer testified that he had cleared the crossing when the collision occurred, and he is corroborated by a pedestrian who saw the collision.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the plaintiff was granted four prayers, his A or damage prayer, and his sixth, seventh, and eighth, and the court granted all of the defendant’s eleven prayers, except its A prayer, which asked an instructed verdict, and its fourth prayer, which correctly stated the rule of the road at street intersections. The court of its own motion gave two- instructions, the first of which included the rule of the road substantially as stated in the defendant’^ rejected fourth prayer. The defendant’s fifth exception is to the granting of the plaintiff’s prayers, the refusal of its A and fourth prayers, the modification of his first, third, sixth, eighth, and ninth prayers, and the court’s two instructions.

The points discussed by the defendant in its brief and at the argument were three of its four exceptions to rulings on the evidence, the modification of its prayers, and the two instructions by the court. The defendant, in discussing the refusal of its A prayer, argues that the plaintiff’s evidence is legally insufficient because it shows that Mr. Archer’s negligence and not the defendant’s was the proximate cause of the accident, on the theory of the decision in Gitomir v. United Railways & Electric Co., 157 Md. 464, 146 A. 279, which was the case of a driver whose automobile was parked at the sidewalk, and who, first looking back before turning into the driveway, was struck by a street car which she said she did not see, but which she could and would have seen *592 Had she looked. See Sullivan v. Smith, 123 Md. 546, 556, 91 A. 456. If Mr. Archer were the plaintiff, that might have been a defense. If i’t depended on the testimony of the plaintiff, no one conld tell how the accident happened, and the defense then might be that the mere happening of an accident is. not evidence of negligence. Mr. Lacy’s testimony was that, when the Archer car was midway of the intersection, the cab was approaching at a high rate of speed, about forty feet away. From those relative positions, how did the defendant’s car, in so short a distance, half the width of Lanvale Street, get so' far out of its course as to hit the Archer car after it had cleared the Lanvale Street driveway ten feet, which Mr. Archer and Mr. ‘Carroll both testified was the location of the two cars when they collided ? Mr. Lacy said he thought the cab would pass, behind him. Instead, did the cab race after them, or did it swerve out of its course to avoid collision with the traffic into Lanvale Street from Charles ? There is nothing in the record but confusion as to what caused the cars to collide. The only evidence of the defendant’s negligence is that the collision occurred at a point on Charles Street where the Archer car had a right to be and where the cab, at the moment, had no right to be, thereby causing the injuries, and this is the evidence of the defendant’s negligence, so far as it affected Mr. Archer’s guest-, the plaintiff in this case, and warranted the action of the court in refusing to take the case from the jury. There is some evidence from which.it might be inferred that both cars got mixed up in the Charles Street traffic, but no one explained how.

The defendant’s first prayer was that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the accident was “caused” by the negligence of the defendant, to which the court added, “or contributed to,” and the same words were added to follow the word “caused” in the eighth prayer. Under the facts of this case, as testified to by Messrs. Archer and Carroll, there was evidence that the plaintiff’s injuries were caused wholly by the de *593 fendant-’s driver, but it also might be inferred from the testimony of Mr. Lacy that at the instant of collision the Archer ear had not cleared the Lanvale Street driveway, and, if this were true, with the two wholly inconsistent theories and the contradictory character of the evidence, the question of the defendant’s contribution to the accident was properly left to the jury. The defendant contends that it was Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 190, 165 Md. 588, 1934 Md. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yellow-cab-co-v-lacy-md-1934.