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Tobin v. Hoffman

Court of Appeals of Maryland
May 15, 1953
202 Md. 382 (Md. 1953)

Opinion

[No. 142, October Term, 1952.]

Decided May 15, 1953.

AUTOMOBILES — Suit for Injuries Sustained in District of Columbia — Substantive Questions Governed by That Law. Where suit was brought for injuries sustained in an automobile collision in Washington, D.C., the questions of substantive law would be decided according to the law of the District of Columbia, although procedural matters would be governed by the law of this State. p. 386

AUTOMOBILES — Suit for Injuries Sustained in Collision at Intersection — Negligence of Parties Held Questions for Jury. Where an automobile passenger brought suit against the driver and against the owner and operator of a taxicab for injuries sustained at an intersection in the District of Columbia when the automobile in which plaintiff was riding was struck by the taxicab which was being driven on the favored street, and there was evidence that the automobile had stopped at the stop sign, as required by District of Columbia law, and had then proceeded into the intersection where it was struck when more than three-fourths of the way across the intersection, and evidence that there were no lights on the taxicab prior to the collision, the question of primary negligence of the taxicab operator should have been submitted to the jury. Further, the trial court also erred in holding plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in failing to see the approaching taxicab, which question, together with the question as to the negligence of the automobile driver, should have been submitted to the jury. pp. 386-389

AUTOMOBILES — Partnership Between Motorist and Passenger — Imputation to Passenger of Motorist's Negligence — Requisite for. The mere existence of a partnership between a motorist and his passenger and her husband, or even between the motorist and the passenger herself, and a common purpose in the journey, did not render inevitable an imputation to the passenger of the motorist's negligence, if any. Before the motorist's alleged negligence could be imputed to the passenger there had to be a finding that the passenger could exercise, or in fact exercised, control over the car's operation, and whether the passenger had such control was a question for the jury. p. 389

AUTOMOBILES — Joint Enterprise Between Driver and Passenger — Decisive Element in Determining. Paramount in the finding of a joint enterprise between a driver and a passenger is the mutual right of control, and decisive in such a case is whether or not the passenger has a right to impose on the driver his views with respect to the vehicle's operation, and whether, enjoying such a power, the adventurer failed to exercise it, or did, but negligently so. pp. 389-390

AUTOMOBILES — Joint Adventurers — Vicarious Liability of. The vicarious liability of joint adventurers is designed for the protection of third persons, and does not inhibit a contest between an automobile driver and his passenger. p. 390

AUTOMOBILES — Joint Adventurers — Contention That Negligence of Driver Imputable to Passenger — Jury Question As to Duty of Passenger to Direct Operation of Car. Where an automobile passenger brought suit against the driver and against the owner and operator of a taxicab for injuries sustained in a collision between the vehicles, and it was contended that the driver and the passenger were joint adventurers and hence the alleged negligence of the driver was imputable to the passenger, the evidence presented a question for the jury as to whether the passenger, who was not a driver although she was learning to drive, had a right or duty to direct and interfere with the experienced driver's operation of the car. pp. 389-390

AUTOMOBILES — Suit by Passenger against Driver — Not Barred, under Applicable Law, by Fact That Driver was Partner of Plaintiff's Husband, Where Suit Was against Driver Individually — Contribution Agreement — Effect of. Where an automobile passenger was injured in a collision which occurred in the District of Columbia between a taxicab and the automobile in which she was riding, which automobile was being driven by her husband's co-partner, the District of Columbia law did not preclude the passenger from bringing suit against her husband's co-partner in his individual capacity, notwithstanding that the alleged tort was committed within the ambit of the partnership activities, since, the suit being brought against the co-partner in his individual capacity and the plaintiff's husband being joined as a party-plaintiff, not as a party-defendant, the suit was not against the partnership and was not a case of a wife suing her husband for his wrong, and hence was not barred by the District of Columbia common-law rule that spouses are not liable for the tortious acts of one against the other. Further, a voluntary partnership dissolution agreement in which plaintiff's husband agreed to contribute to the defendant co-partner to the extent of one-half of any moneys the latter must pay in the event a judgment against him exceeded the limits of his liability insurance, did not inhibit the suit, especially in view of the fact that the agreement was made after the accident. pp. 390-392

R.W.W.

Decided May 15, 1953.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Prince George's County (MARBURY, J.).

Action by Mary Tobin and Jack Tobin, her husband, against Frederick Hoffman, Alvin R. Dreas and George L. Bowen, for personal injuries sustained by Mary Tobin and medical expenses and loss of consortium sustained by Jack Tobin, as a result of a collision at an intersection in Washington, D.C., between an automobile driven by defendant Frederick Hoffman, in which automobile plaintiff Mary Tobin was riding as a passenger, and a taxicab owned by defendant George L. Bowen and operated by defendant Alvin R. Dreas. At the conclusion of plaintiffs' case the court granted defendants' motions for directed verdicts, and from the judgment entered accordingly the plaintiffs appealed.

Reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.

The cause was argued before SOBELOFF, C.J., and DELAPLAINE, COLLINS, HENDERSON and HAMMOND, JJ.

Stanley B. Frosh for the appellants.

James F. Couch, Jr., with whom were Vaughn, Couch Blackwell on the brief, for Frederick Hoffman, appellee.

Hal C.B. Clagett, with whom were Albert E. Brault and Sasscer, Clagett Powers on the brief, for Alvin R. Dreas and George L. Bowen, appellees.


A collision between two automobiles at a street intersection in Washington, D.C., gave rise to this case which was brought in the Circuit Court for Prince George's County. Questions of substantive law are therefore to be decided according to the law of the District of Columbia, although procedural matters are governed by Maryland law. Black Diamond S.S. Corp. v. Robert Stewart Sons, 336 U.S. 386, 69 S.Ct. 622, 93 L.Ed. 754; W.W. Clyde Co. v. Dyess, 10 Cir., 126 F.2d 719.

Mary Tobin, the plaintiff, was a passenger in a car driven by one of the defendants, Frederick Hoffman, her husband's business partner. Her suit was against him and against Alvin Dreas and George Bowen, the owner and operator, respectively, of a taxicab which collided with the car in which the plaintiff was riding. Her husband, Jack Tobin, was co-plaintiff, but our references to plaintiff are intended to refer to Mrs. Tobin.

Proceeding east on Kennedy Street in Washington on a dark, rainy night in May, 1951, Hoffman approached the intersection at Third Street. The latter is the favored artery, and stop signs on Kennedy Street protect Third Street traffic. The block of Third Street south of Kennedy traverses a hill, the ridge of which is approximately 200 feet south of the intersection, from which point it descends to Kennedy.

A full stop was made by Hoffman, who testified that he looked in both directions, saw nothing, and after Mrs. Tobin looked and declared that she saw nothing, he proceeded more than one-half of the way across the intersection, at which point the rear of the right side of his car was struck by the northbound taxicab. As a result of the collision, plaintiff was thrown clear of the vehicle, rendered unconscious, and sustained considerable injuries.

The above facts are uncontradicted, but from this point on the parties are in controversy as to the facts and their legal implications. Testimony of both plaintiff and Hoffman is to the effect that they saw no lights on the other vehicle and that they were not aware of its approach until an instant prior to the accident. According to the plaintiff they were then three-fourths of the way across the intersection. Hoffman also testified that after the arrival of the police, he turned off his lights at their order, but that on the taxicab one light was broken, and the other was out. He further testified that he was in sole control and operation of the vehicle and in no wise relied upon Mrs. Tobin.

At the end of the plaintiff's case the trial Court granted motions for directed verdicts in favor of each of the three defendants. In an oral opinion the Court held Mrs. Tobin guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law because "she failed to keep a proper lookout to her right for her own protection" and this, it was held, directly contributed to her injury.

After concluding that plaintiff and Hoffman were engaged in a joint enterprise, the Court added: "That means that so far as her right of action against Hoffman was concerned if she was not then an active partner she was certainly a stand-in partner for her husband and that the Tobin suit against Hoffman represents an effort on the part of one partner to sue the other partner for a tort arising out of the conduct of the partnership business and the rule with reference to joint enterprise and the assumption of risk would certainly apply in such case." Finding at most but a scintilla of evidence of negligence attributable to the cab driver, the Court also held that there was no proof of the defendants' primary negligence to warrant submission of the case to the jury.

1. Pertinent to a consideration of the question of primary negligence of the taxicab operator is Section 28(b) of the Traffic and Motor Vehicle Regulations for the District of Columbia which reads: "At any point at which an official `Stop' sign has been erected all vehicles shall come to a complete stop and shall yield to other vehicles within the intersection or approaching so closely thereto as to constitute an immediate hazard, but said driver having so yielded may proceed and other vehicles approaching the intersection shall yield to the vehicle so proceeding into or across said intersection; * * *". It has been held by the Municipal Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia that the right of way created by this regulation is not absolute in E.P. Hinkel Co. v. Gerondikas, D.C. Mun. App. 48 A.2d 459; Towles, to Use of Plymouth Ins. Co. v. Arcade-Sunshine Co., D.C. Mun. App., 32 A.2d 870; Yellow Cab Co. v. Sutton, D.C. Mun. App., 37 A.2d 655. We think these cases demonstrate that triers of fact could reasonably attribute negligence to the taxicab operator.

Nor can we be oblivious to the testimony of Hoffman that there were no lights on the taxicab prior to the collision. See Spund v. Myers, 67 App. D.C. 135, 90 F.2d 380, which held that evidence of headlights which were out immediately after the accident was of some evidentiary validity on the question of whether the lights were out at the time of the accident. At least it is evidence constituting more than a scintilla as to negligence.

2. We are confronted with a directed verdict for the three defendants, partly on the ground that the plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law "by failing to see the vehicle which was within view and its danger to the driver Hoffman so as to avoid the accident." With this ruling we disagree.

A jury could reasonably find that when the plaintiff and Hoffman both looked and did not see, it was because the cab had not at that time reached the peak of the hill and could not have been seen, or having started downhill, it was not visible because it was not illuminated. It must be borne in mind that Hoffman's car was struck when it was three-fourths of the way across the intersection, a situation which raises a jury question as to the conduct of the operators of both vehicles. The Court assumed negligence on the plaintiff's part when it declared that the vehicle was in view, a matter which appears to be not at all clear, at least from the plaintiff's case and in the absence of the taxicab operator's version. Reasonable men may well differ in their judgment as to this. What has been said here as to the question of plaintiff's negligence could likewise apply to defendant Hoffman's alleged negligence.

3. The next question is whether Hoffman's negligence, if any, is attributable to the plaintiff. Assuming a partnership relation between Hoffman and the plaintiff and her husband, or even between Hoffman and plaintiff herself, we do not think that the mere existence of partnership and common purpose in the journey render inevitable an imputation to her of Hoffman's negligence, if any. We recognize that notwithstanding that title to the car was in Hoffman, it was nevertheless, by agreement, partnership property. Before Hoffman's alleged negligence may be imputed to plaintiff there must be a finding that she could exercise, or in fact exercised, control over the car's operation.

Concerning the requisites of a joint adventure, the Municipal Court of Appeals (D.C. Mun. App.) held in Nat'l Trucking Storage Co. v. Driscoll, 64 A.2d 304, 305, that "to establish such relationship there must exist not only a community of interest in the subject of the venture, `but also an equal right, express or implied, to direct and control the management and movement of the car.'" Citing Gasque v. Saidman, D.C. Mun. App., 44 A.2d 537, 539, citing Steans v. Lindow, 63 App. D.C. 134, 70 F.2d 738.

This is at most a matter in the jury's realm; the Court should not declare as a matter of law that there was such control.

Paramount in the finding of a joint enterprise between a driver and a passenger is the mutual right of control, which confers upon each joint adventurer a substantial power to "steer the ship", so to speak. This is not a matter which should turn upon refinements of title, nor even solely on calculated possibilities of financial enhancement envisioned as the fruit of the journey, but rather upon the realities of the situation. Decisive in such a case is whether or not the passenger has a right to impose on the driver his views with respect to the vehicle's operation; and whether, enjoying such a power the adventurer failed to exercise it, or did, but negligently so. We are not unmindful of the consequences of holding that every joint adventurer must exercise his right of control in the operation of a vehicle, or else respond in damages when there is negligence on the part of the driver. On the other hand, it is not unreasonable, but rather in furtherance of the public safety, to encourage passengers to admonish drivers of obvious perils.

Liability springing out of a joint enterprise is vicarious; it is fallacy to impute to a passenger the driver's negligence, where the former sues the latter. Designed for the protection of third persons, the vicarious liability of joint ventures does not inhibit a driver-passenger contest. Harper, Torts, Sec. 148 (1933); Lessler, Imputed Contributory Negligence, 20 Fordham Law Review, 156, 173; Prosser on Torts, 497, 498.

Considering the sudden nature of the accident, prior to which Hoffman's operation of the car gave no indication of negligence or reason for Mrs. Tobin to anticipate harm, and the fact that Mrs. Tobin was not herself a driver, but was learning how to drive an automobile, a jury could reasonably conclude that under the circumstances she had no right or duty to intervene. To hold otherwise would perhaps vary the established policy of the law by imposing upon a passenger inexperienced in driving the duty to direct and interfere with an experienced driver.

There is slight evidence, hardly more than a suggestion, as to whether plaintiff herself and Hoffman were partners, and certainly the Court could not properly conclude as a matter of law that they were partners. The matter was not fully developed in the testimony. Even if it be assumed that Mrs. Tobin was an ostensible partner, the rights of third parties relying on such an appearance in contractual relations would be distinct from the legal consequences involved in a tort suit by her against Hoffman and other individuals.

4. Counsel presented strong arguments on the right of plaintiff to sue her husband's co-partner in tort for a wrong arising within the scope of partnership activities.

There is nothing in the policy of the Maryland Law which precludes the bringing of the suit here; nor does the law of the District of Columbia (with which we deal, infra) inhibit this action. It is clear that Maryland will not entertain a suit by one spouse against the other for his or her tort, committed during the marital status. Furstenburg v. Furstenburg, 152 Md. 247, 136 A. 534; David v. David, 161 Md. 532, 157 A. 755, 81 A.L.R. 1100. Nor can a wife sue a partnership of which her husband is a member for negligently maintaining an unguarded, dangerous elevator shaft into which she fell. David v. David, supra. In the case at bar we have a plaintiff who is suing her husband's co-partner in his individual capacity for a tort perpetrated by his own hand, albeit, within the ambit of partnership activities. Mrs. Tobin is not suing the partnership and she has not joined the co-partner (her husband) nor has Hoffman joined him as a defendant. David v. David is distinguishable in that there the partnership, i.e., both partners, one of which was the plaintiff's husband, were sued in a proceeding which would render both jointly and severally liable in damages for maintaining the open shaft, a wrong as to which they were joint tort feasors; while in the instant case, the plaintiff's husband appears only as a party-plaintiff, not a party-defendant, and the wrong sought to be recompensed was the sole wrong of Hoffman. The case at bar is thus not one of a wife suing her husband for his wrong. We declare, therefore, that this suit by the plaintiff against Hoffman is not barred, notwithstanding that in the District of Columbia the common law rule that spouses are not liable for the tortious acts of one against the other is extant and unaffected by D.C. Code (1951) Sec. 30-208 which reads in part: "Married women shall have power * * * to sue * * * for torts committed against them, as fully and freely as if they were unmarried, * * *". See Thompson v. Thompson, 218 U.S. 616, 31 S.Ct. 111, 54 L.Ed. 1180.

The record discloses a partnership dissolution agreement in which Mr. Tobin agrees to contribute to defendant Hoffman to the extent of one-half of any moneys the latter must pay in the event that a judgment against him exceeds the limits of his liability insurance. We are disinclined to hold that such a voluntary agreement, especially when made after the accident, inhibits this suit.

Most pertinent to this facet of our inquiry is the case of Yellow Cab Co. of D.C. Inc. v. Dreslin (1950), 86 U.S. App. D.C. 327, 181 F.2d 626, 19 A.L.R.2d 1001. The wife of appellee (Dreslin) sued the appellant Cab Co. for injuries sustained by her in a collision between one of its taxicabs and her husband's car, in which she was a passenger along with others, who were also plaintiffs'. Mr. Dreslin, as a party-plaintiff, sought damages for loss of consortium, medical expenses, and damages to his automobile. The Cab Co. pleaded that Mr. Dreslin was contributorily negligent and cross-claimed against him for damages to the cab and for contribution for any sums recovered by the other plaintiffs against it. Judgments for varying amounts were entered in favor of all plaintiffs except Dreslin, against whom a declaratory judgment was entered in favor of the Cab Co. for contribution. This the District Court disallowed. On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed, holding so on the rationale that contribution depends upon joint liability, and a plaintiff in a contest from which a right of contribution develops must have had a cause of action against the party from whom contribution is sought. Holding that a wife cannot sue her husband, the Court said that she had "no right to action against him and the Cab Co., hence nothing to which a right of contribution could attach."

This substantive law of the District of Columbia is applicable to the case at bar. It is unnecessary to decide and we do not intimate that such would be the disposition were the suit one governed by the law of Maryland.

For the errors pointed out, judgment of the lower court is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded for new trial, with costs to appellants.


Summaries of

Tobin v. Hoffman

Court of Appeals of Maryland
May 15, 1953
202 Md. 382 (Md. 1953)
Case details for

Tobin v. Hoffman

Case Details

Full title:TOBIN ET AL. v . HOFFMAN ET AL

Court:Court of Appeals of Maryland

Date published: May 15, 1953

Citations

202 Md. 382 (Md. 1953)
96 A.2d 597

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