Ottenheimer v. Molohan

On August 9th, 1921, Harold S. Molohan, aged six and a half years, the infant plaintiff in this case, was struck by the automobile of Bernard M. Ottenheimer, the defendant, on the Washington-Baltimore State Road, near Cottage City, in Prince George's County, Maryland. Suit was brought by the infant, by his father and next friend, against Ottenheimer, and a verdict rendered by a jury in favor of plaintiff for $950, on which judgment was entered. This appeal is from that judgment.

The only bill of exception is to the ruling of the trial court on the prayers.

The road at the point of the accident is twenty feet wide, of which about sixteen feet is of asphalt or macadam, and two feet on each side, spoken of by witness as coping or shoulders, is concrete. So far as can be made out from the testimony, this so called coping is merely a widening of the road as originally built. On the right side of the road going towards Baltimore is a cinder drive-way in front of a gasoline station, located near the place where the child was struck. This drive-way was made by the owner of the station as a convenient means of approach to it, and is used by automobiles going in. It extends about seventy-five feet each way from the station towards Baltimore and Washington. The defendant testified that he, with a representative of his firm, Mr. Neville, was returning to Baltimore from Washington "riding leisurely along, and when we got to Cottage City, just before this accident occurred, there was a machine right in front of us which was about three or four lengths from my *Page 180 machine, and as this machine passed I noticed a couple of boys out on the cinder path to the right of the road; I did not know whether they were playing catchers or tags, but, anyhow, this little boy happened to jump away from the other boy and immediately in front of my machine.

"Q. At the time the little boy jumped in front of your machine how far was he in front of you? Ans. Right immediately on top of me; my machine was going along and I just seen the boys playing, and the first thing I knew I struck him. Q. State how many feet directly in front of your machine? Ans. He was five or six feet away when I first seen him. Q. How fast were you going? Ans. You cannot go through Cottage City fast; moderate speed; about eighteen miles. Q. What part of the road was your machine on? Ans. I was to the right of the middle of the road, the right hand side, where you have to go. Q. It was stated by the plaintiff's counsel * * *. You were off the asphalt * * *. Were you on the shoulder or out on the cinders? Ans. No, sir. Q. What did you do as soon as the little boy darted in front of you? Ans. I did not know anything until I heard a thump, and Mr. Neville, who was with me, he said, `Joe, you must have struck the boy?' I stopped as soon as I could get out of our machine, and Mr. Neville and I went back and seen the boy lying on the road, and he was unconscious," etc.

The witness further said he thought, when he went back, the boy's body "was lying on the concrete road; maybe his arm or his head or something might be on the cinders, but most part of him was lying on the cement road;" that witness travelled three or four lengths of the machine after he threw his brakes before he stopped. "Of course I did not expect to hit the child, so I was not prepared to stop immediately, but I stopped as soon as I could. Q. Were your brakes working properly? Ans. Yes, sir, I am very particular about my brakes, and I don't go without good brakes."

He further testified that at the time of the accident he had been driving five years; that he goes to Washington two or three times a week, generally over that same road. *Page 181

On cross examination witness said, before he approached Cottage City, he knew he was coming to a thickly settled community. He explained that when he said he first saw the boy when he was five or six feet in front of him he was referring to the time of the accident; before that he saw the two boys playing. "They were out in the cinder path playing before I got there, I don't know what, pulling and jerking with one another and one boy darted away in front of the machine." His estimate of the distance he went after the accident was from forty to sixty feet, and of the distance the boys were from him when he saw them playing, ten or fifteen feet. "Q. You could see they were young children five or six years of age? Ans. Yes, sir. Q. Did you slow down because of the danger of the child jumping in front of the machine? Ans. I do not expect children to run in front of my machine; they were on the cinder path. Q. How far on the cinder path were they? Ans. About four feet. Q. When you saw the boys did you slow down so that if one did jump in front of you you could stop without striking them? Ans. I was going my usual pace. Q. What was your usual pace? Ans. About eighteen miles an hour. Q. You are very particular about your brakes and you kept them in first class order? Ans. Yes, sir. Q. Is it not a fact that anyone can stop a car with good brakes in a whole lot less than forty to sixty feet? Ans. Yes, sir. Q. Why did not you? Ans. I was surprised at hitting the bay, nervous at hitting the boy, and I didn't stop right away. Q. When you saw him jump in front of you you did not do anything at all but you struck him? Ans. I was going slowly and the boy darted out in front of me and it was impossible to avoid it. Q. Did you try to turn the machine out of the way? Ans. I could not do it; I could not do anything."

Joseph F. Neville testified that they were going along at a very moderate rate of speed, a car was ahead of them and there was no other traffic on the road; the two boys were on the cinder path; witness was on the right side of the car and saw the boys; "the little one darted out like a shot out of a gun"; witness jumped and said, "My God, you will hit *Page 182 that boy." "Q. Where was the car at that time? Ans. Within five or six feet of the boy."

Witness further testified that the car was on the asphalt, "not on the shoulder at all, but in the road proper," that witness supposes the car went forty or fifty feet after it struck the boy; witness was so certain they were not on the concrete shoulder "because there was no machine, only one previous to us and nothing was in the way and there was no necessity of Mr. Ottenheimer driving that close and I know he is an exceptionally careful driver." The car in front of them was about thirty feet ahead; witness saw the children before the first car passed them; "One standing outside and the other standing in the cinder path." Q. What were they doing? Ans. I don't know; sky-larking or fooling like children will do. Q. Was it possible for Mr. Ottenheimer to see them? Ans. He could not see them clear as I did because he was on the other side and I was on this side; it was an open car. Q. The other machine was thirty feet ahead? Ans. Yes, sir. Q. After that machine passed Mr. Ottenheimer could see them? Ans. Yes; he would have a clear view then."

There was no witness for the plaintiff who saw the collision except the injured boy, who was not examined in regard to it.

Richard H. Mansfield, a detective sergeant of the Washington Police Department, heard "a loud screeching of brakes," and looking out his window saw the machine pulling up in front of his house; he looked up the road and saw the child lying on the road about one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five feet from the machine; witness asked Mr. Ottenheimer, on the way to the hospital, how the accident happened, and he said he didn't see the child. Ottenheimer denied that he made such a statement.

Mansfield further testified that the road from the place of the accident towards Washington is straight for the distance of an eighth of a mile; that the road at Cottage City was at the time of the accident very much built up; that the boys head was lying along the outer edge of the coping. *Page 183

Richard A. Shreeve, Jr., testified that he owned the filling station in front of which the accident happened; that he was sitting in front of his place reading when he heard a lick back of him, and turning around saw the machine going down the road and the boy lying on the side of the road; that the machine stopped between one hundred and one hundred and twenty feet from the boy; that the "brakes were screeching awful loud"; that the boy was lying alongside of the road partly on the cinders, his head was on the shoulder or partly on the shoulder; that he saw the boy before the accident. "Q. Where was he when you saw him? Ans. Like this is the Baltimore Boulevard (indicating). I was sitting facing towards Bladensburg, and this child and some other child was going up the road, and a little while afterwards is when I heard the lick, and I turned around and saw the child lying back of me and the machine coming down. Q. What part of the road were they on? Ans. The right hand side, coming to Baltimore. Q. The main traveled road? Ans. When I first saw them? Q. Yes? Ans. They were on the wide part of the road, on the shoulder, going up the road. Q. You do not know whether the child was struck going up or coming back. Do you know how long about before the time of the accident that you saw the child? Can you calculate about what time it was? Ans. I do not know. I have kind of forgotten that now. I don't know exactly how long it was."

John R. Burton testified that he did not see the accident, but saw the boy lying on the road; that "he was laying at the edge of the coping; laying on the cinders right at the edge of the coping"; that he didn't know, but judged that Mr. Ottenheimer stopped about one hundred and thirty-five feet from the boy.

In his brief appellant says the only error complained of is the refusal of the court to take the case from the jury.

The only prayer granted at the request of plaintiff was the ordinary measure of damages prayer, which was free from objection, and the only prayers of defendant refused *Page 184 were those which sought to have the case withdrawn from the jury.

The Reporter is requested to set out all of defendant's prayers.

The first, second, fourth, fifth, and sixth prayers were properly refused.

The first is a general demurrer to the evidence; the fourth and fifth respectively ask for a directed verdict under the pleadings because of absence of evidence — (a) that the accident complained of in the declaration was directly caused by negligence or unskillfulness on the part of the defendant; (b) of excessive speed as alleged in the declaration.

Excessive speed could well have been inferred by the jury from the testimony that, although the brakes were in good order and were put on so hard that loud screeching was heard, and were applied before or at the moment of the collision, the car was not stopped for a distance of from one hundred to one hundred and thirty-five feet, and excessive speed alone may constitute negligence if it directly contributes to the accident. Sullivan v. Smith, 123 Md. 554; Taxicab Co. v. Emanuel, 125 Md. 246.

Negligence could also be inferred from the position of the boy after the accident, as testified to by several witnesses, one of whom said his head was at the outer edge of the shoulder and the rest of his body on the cinder path, that at the time he was struck he was barely off the cinder path. The jury did not have to believe that plaintiff's witnesses were accurate in their testimony as to the position of the car on the road. Even according to defendant's testimony there would have been only a few feet between the car and the boy if the car had passed him while he was in the position on the cinder path where defendant says he first saw him, at which time he was "skylarking" or "pulling and jerking" with another little boy; and according to the testimony of defendant's companion, there was nothing to prevent defendant from seeing the boys for at least thirty feet. It cannot be said as a matter of law that defendant was free from negligence *Page 185 in passing, on the very edge of the road at a rapid rate of speed, small children playing at the road side, when there was nothing to prevent him from turning to the middle or farther side of the road. The well known habit of children, when playing, to become oblivious to dangers of this character, should have been a warning to defendant to slow down and turn as far away as practicable under the circumstances. The signs on every public road warning automobilists to "go slow" upon approaching school houses recognize this characteristic of children. "Negligence is the failure to do what a person of ordinary prudence would have done under the circumstances of the situation, or doing what such a person, under such circumstances would not have done."Geiselman v. Schmidt, 106 Md. 580. If defendant's car had been under control he might have turned aside in time to avoid the accident when he realized the actual peril at a distance of five or six feet.

In order to reverse the ruling below on these prayers "we should have to determine that the evidence does not admit of any inference of negligence in the operation of the defendant's car," and this conclusion we are unable to reach. Mears v.McElfish, 139 Md. 81.

The second and sixth prayers ask for a directed verdict on the ground of contributory negligence. The distinction between small children and adults is well recognized in this State in dealing with contributory negligence. In Balto. O.R.R. Co. v.Fryer, 30 Md. 47, it was said: "The deceased, it is true, was bound to use ordinary and reasonable care to avoid the consequences of defendant's negligence, as a condition upon which this action could be maintained; but these terms are relative and dependent, and whether such reasonable and proper care was used on the part of the deceased can only be determined by considering her age and capacity. Ordinary and reasonable care, under the circumstances, is that degree of care we might reasonably expect from one in the situation and condition of the deceased; and as she was a child of but five years of age, the degree of intelligence which she was capable of exerting for her rescue *Page 186 from danger, we may suppose to be very small." See also McMahon v. Northern Central Ry. Co., 39 Md. 438; Balto. O.R.R. Co. v. Griffin, 141 Md. 520

"The act relied on to establish as a matter of law the existence of contributory negligence must be distinct, prominent and decisive, and one about which ordinary minds would not differ in declaring it to be negligent. Where the nature and attributes of an act relied on to show negligence contributing to an injury sustained can only be determined correctly by considering all the attending and surrounding circumstances of the transaction, it falls within the province of the jury to pass upon and characterize it, and it is not for the court to determine its quality as matter of law." Cooke v. Traction Co., 80 Md. 558;Balto. O.R.R. Co. v. Hendricks, 104 Md. 84; Taxicab Co. v. Emanuel, 125 Md. 246; Washington Rockville Ry. Co. v.Sullivan, 136 Md. 202; Mears v. McElfish, 139 Md. 81;Brown v. Patterson, 141 Md. 293.

We are unable to say that the act of a boy six and a half years old inadvertently getting over the edge of a village road while playing along its side comes within the above definition.

In the cases of Havermale v. Houck, 122 Md. 82, andSullivan v. Smith, 123 Md. 546, relied on by defendant, the Court held that there was no evidence tending to show negligence on the part of defendant either as to excessive speed or otherwise. In each of these cases the plaintiff deliberately attempted to cross a city street in front of an automobile. There was no such attempt here. These prayers were properly refused.

The variance now suggested by defendant, if there was in fact a variance, was not specifically suggested by any of the prayers and cannot be considered here.

The granted prayers of defendant gave him at least as much as he was entitled to. It is not necessary, however, and we do not pass on those prayers.

Judgment affirmed, with costs to appellee. *Page 187