White v. Rogers ( 1998 )


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  • UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    CURTIS LYDELL WHITE,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ROY THOMAS ROGERS; CHURNS
    TRUCK LINES, INCORPORATED,                      No. 96-2753
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    MELVIN CLENTION JOHNSON,
    Defendant.
    CURTIS LYDELL WHITE,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    ROY THOMAS ROGERS; CHURNS
    TRUCK LINES, INCORPORATED,                      No. 96-2860
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and
    MELVIN CLENTION JOHNSON,
    Defendant.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    Marvin J. Garbis, District Judge.
    (CA-95-3060-MJG)
    Argued: January 26, 1998
    Decided: February 25, 1998
    Before MURNAGHAN, NIEMEYER, and MOTZ,
    Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Olugbenga Olatokumbo Abiona, Philadelphia, Pennsyl-
    vania, for Appellant. Mark Ira Cantor, Owings Mills, Maryland, for
    Appellees.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
    Local Rule 36(c).
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    PER CURIAM:
    Curtis Lydell White was injured in an automobile accident, while
    the front seat passenger in a car driven by his cousin, Melvin Johnson.
    The car collided with a tractor trailer operated by Roy Thomas Rogers
    and owned by Churns Truck Lines, Inc. White brought this diversity
    action against Johnson, Rogers, and Churns for their asserted negli-
    gence in causing the accident and the resulting serious injuries he suf-
    fered. A jury awarded White a substantial verdict against his cousin,
    Johnson, but found Rogers and Churns not negligent. White appeals,
    challenging the district court's refusal to hold Rogers and Churns neg-
    ligent as a matter of law under the Maryland boulevard rule. White
    also appeals the court's decision to admit evidence relating to John-
    son's intoxication. Finding no error, we affirm.
    I.
    At about 8:00 pm on the evening of April 26, 1993, Rogers went
    to work at the Churns terminal in Exmore, Virginia, where he has
    2
    been employed as a truck driver for over nineteen years. After
    inspecting his truck, Rogers left the terminal at about 8:30 pm, en
    route to Woodbine, Maryland, to deliver his cargo of shrubbery early
    the next morning. At about 9:30 pm, Rogers arrived at a truck stop
    in Pocomoke, Maryland. He remained there for approximately two
    hours, chatting and drinking coffee. The truck stop is located off of
    the northbound side of Maryland Route 13, a highway with two lanes
    running in each direction.
    At about 11:30 pm that same evening, Johnson and White left a
    party at the home of Johnson's mother, driving in Johnson's car. Both
    Johnson and White were intoxicated well over the legal limit. After
    the accident Johnson's blood alcohol level measured 0.27 and White's
    measured 0.263; a blood level of 0.10 demonstrates legal intoxication
    in Maryland. See Md. Code Ann., Transp.§ 16-205.1 (Supp. 1997).
    A friend of Johnson and White who followed them from the party and
    witnessed the accident testified that Johnson traveled north on Route
    13, stayed in the right lane, adhered to the speed limit (which is 55
    mph on the relevant portion of Route 13), and drove normally.
    According to White, as Johnson drove past the truck stop Rogers
    began to leave it from the north exit. Rogers failed to stop at the exit
    or yield the right of way to Johnson, pulling instead into Johnson's
    path on Route 13. White concedes that Johnson at least briefly turned
    his attention from the road to talk to White, who apparently was
    asleep at the time. When he saw Rogers, Johnson tried to veer to the
    left, but ran into the left rear corner of the Churns truck. White
    received severe, permanent, and disfiguring injuries, including inju-
    ries to his brain, face, and spine. Johnson was arrested for and pled
    guilty to driving while intoxicated, in violation of 
    Md. Code Ann., Transp. § 21-902
    (a) (Supp. 1997).
    Not surprisingly, Rogers tells quite a different version of the story.
    According to Rogers, he returned to his truck between 11:45 pm and
    12:00 midnight. He inspected his lights and tires, got into the truck,
    looked in the mirror and saw nothing coming down the highway. He
    then proceeded to the north exit of the truck stop, and stopped to look
    again for approaching traffic. Again he saw no vehicles approaching
    and entered the highway. He states that he had reached seventh gear
    (out of ten) when Johnson's lights appeared behind him.
    3
    The parties also differ as to many other essential facts of the acci-
    dent, particularly the distance the truck had traveled from the north
    exit of the truck stop prior to impact. White maintains that based on
    a Maryland state trooper's recollection of Rogers' on-scene state-
    ments and the measurements taken by one of Rogers' experts, the
    truck traveled only 94 feet. Rogers' testimony and the evaluation of
    his expert indicate that the truck had traveled approximately 600 feet
    on the highway, had reached a speed of between 25 and 40 miles per
    hour, and took approximately 25 seconds to do so. Rogers' expert
    also concluded that Johnson was traveling between 35 and 55 miles
    per hour and was located about two- or three-tenths of a mile behind
    Rogers when Rogers entered the highway. Everyone agrees that visi-
    bility down the highway that evening was about one to one-and-a-half
    miles.
    In the course of ruling on several motions in limine, the district
    court denied White's motion to exclude evidence of Johnson's intoxi-
    cation. The court also decided to submit the questions of negligence
    and proximate cause to the jury. The jury found Johnson, but not Rog-
    ers or Churns, liable.
    White thereafter moved for judgment as a matter of law pursuant
    to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(b), which the district court
    denied. Judge Garbis explained that "[t]he parties presented different,
    and in many essential particulars, conflicting, evidence regarding how
    the car . . . came into contact with the truck. . . . There was a quintes-
    sential issue of fact as to whether the truck had cleared the intersec-
    tion and entered the flow of traffic prior to the time the car came onto
    the scene." This appeal followed.1
    II.
    Initially, White argues that the district court erred by submitting the
    question of Rogers' and Churns' negligence to the jury. White con-
    tends that Maryland law requires the district court to determine, as a
    matter of law, that on this record Rogers violated the boulevard rule.
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 Rogers and Churns have filed a protective cross-appeal, in the event
    that we set aside the jury verdict. In view of our holding, we need not
    address their cross-appeal arguments.
    4
    White principally relies on Quinn Freight Lines, Inc. v. Woods, 
    266 Md. 381
    , 385 (1972), in which the Maryland Court of Appeals reiter-
    ated
    the well established rule that when a driver of a motor vehi-
    cle enters a through highway in violation of the boulevard
    law and as a result thereof his vehicle is involved in a colli-
    sion with a vehicle traveling on the through highway, he is
    guilty of negligence as a matter of law.
    In response, Rogers contends that the boulevard rule does not require
    that the court conclude that he was negligent as a matter of law
    because he had entered the flow of traffic at the time of the accident.
    For this reason, he maintains the district court properly left the ques-
    tion of his negligence to the jury.
    Maryland's boulevard rule provides as follows:
    The driver of a vehicle about to enter or cross a highway
    from a private road or driveway or from any other place that
    is not a highway shall stop . . . [and] shall yield the right-of-
    way to any other vehicle approaching on the highway.
    
    Md. Code Ann., Transp. § 21-404
    (a), (b) (1992). The rule purports to
    "expedite the flow of traffic" on highways by dividing the world into
    "favored" and "unfavored" drivers and roads, such that "[t]he duty of
    an unfavored driver to stop and yield the right-of-way is mandatory,
    positive, and inflexible." Dean v. Redmiles , 
    280 Md. 137
    , 147 (1977).
    The favored driver may depend upon the unfavored driver's obliga-
    tion to obey the law, although he "may not proceed in complete disre-
    gard of obvious danger." Dean, 
    280 Md. at 148
    . Moreover, the
    unfavored driver's duty to yield the right-of-way to the favored driver
    extends beyond the immediate area of the intersection such that "the
    fact that an accident occurs outside the intersection does not bar the
    applicability of the boulevard rule if the collision is the result of a vio-
    lation" of the rule. Quinn, 
    266 Md. at 386-87
    ; see Simco Sales Serv.
    of Maryland, Inc. v. Schweigman, 
    237 Md. 180
    , 186 (1964); Grue v.
    Collins, 
    237 Md. 150
    , 157 (1964).
    5
    The rule may be "mandatory, positive, and inflexible" when
    applied, but it has limits to its applicability. Once an unfavored driver
    has succeeded in entering the flow of traffic on the highway without
    interfering with a favored vehicle's right-of-way, an unfavored driver
    has fulfilled his obligations under the rule and assumes the same sta-
    tus as drivers of vehicles already traveling on the highway. See, e.g.,
    Dean, 
    280 Md. at 149
    ; Creaser v. Owens, 
    267 Md. 238
    , 244 (1972);
    Quinn, 
    266 Md. at 387
    ; Grue, 237 Md. at 157-58; McCann v. Crum,
    
    231 Md. 65
    , 68 (1963); Mallard v. Earl, 
    106 Md. App. 449
    , 468
    (1995); Hansen v. Kaplan, 
    47 Md. App. 32
    , 37 (1980); Gazvoda v.
    McCaslin, 
    36 Md. App. 604
    , 613-14 (1977).
    Where a credible evidentiary dispute exists as to whether the unfa-
    vored driver failed to yield or had entered the flow of traffic prior to
    the accident, the issue of the unfavored driver's negligence properly
    belongs to the province of the fact finder. See Grue, 237 Md. at 158;
    Ness v. Males, 
    201 Md. 235
    , 239-41 (1953); Great Coastal Express,
    Inc. v. Schruefer, 
    34 Md. App. 706
    , 722 (1977); Paul v. Lyons, 
    34 Md. App. 93
    , 97 (1976); Carter v. Correa, 
    28 Md. App. 397
    , 402-03
    (1975); Kowalewski v. Carter, 
    11 Md. App. 182
    , 189-90 (1971); see
    also Goosman v. A. Duie Pyle, Inc., 
    206 F. Supp. 120
    , 127-28 (D.
    Md. 1962), rev'd on other grounds, 
    320 F.2d 45
     (4th Cir. 1963).
    White fails to acknowledge this line of precedent. Instead, he
    focuses almost wholly on Quinn. At first glance certain language in
    Quinn seems to support White's argument. Almost immediately after
    reciting the rule that an unfavored driver's duty extends beyond the
    confines of the intersection, the Quinn court stated:
    In no case have we held that a different procedure should be
    followed where the accident occurs outside the intersection
    and the question of law is properly raised. It is for the trial
    judge . . . to rule on the applicability of the boulevard rule
    as a matter of law.
    Quinn, 
    266 Md. at 387
     (emphasis added).
    A closer look at Quinn resolves any ambiguity. The Quinn court
    included the quoted language in response to its"fear" that certain lan-
    guage in the intermediate appellate court's opinion in that case might
    6
    be misinterpreted. The Court of Appeals feared any"erroneous infer-
    ence that when a violation of the boulevard rule results in an accident
    which occurs under the present circumstances outside the intersection,
    there remains some additional question of fact as to whether the viola-
    tion constitutes negligence per se." Quinn , 
    266 Md. at 384-85
    . Thus,
    the Quinn court sought to dispel any doubt about whether "some addi-
    tional question of fact" exists after it is determined that the boulevard
    rule applies and has been violated.
    But as Quinn itself recognized, once an unfavored vehicle has suc-
    cessfully entered the flow of traffic on the favored road "the boule-
    vard rule ceases to be applicable." Quinn, 
    266 Md. at 387
    . The line
    of precedent cited above directs that when a credible dispute exists as
    to whether the unfavored vehicle had successfully joined the flow of
    traffic -- i.e., a dispute as to whether the boulevard rule even applies
    -- the question belongs to the jury. The Quinn court premised its
    entire discussion on the notion that, although the accident occurred
    outside the intersection, the rule applied and the accident resulted
    from a violation of the rule. The court simply explained that in such
    situations the trial court must apply the rule to hold the unfavored
    driver negligent as a matter of law. In those circumstances, no addi-
    tional fact finding was necessary. See also Creaser, 
    267 Md. at 244-45
     ("when the `boulevard rule' is applicable the unfavored driver
    is negligent as a matter of law" and "if an unfavored driver is involved
    in an accident with a favored vehicle under circumstances where the
    boulevard rule is applicable then . . . the unfavored driver is deemed
    to be negligent as a matter of law") (emphasis added); cf. Dennard v.
    Green, 
    335 Md. 305
    , 307, 321-23 (1994) (even in an action by a pas-
    senger against both the favored and unfavored drivers in which the
    boulevard rule applies it is not necessary, given the definition of
    "right-of-way" under the Code, to find at least one of those drivers
    negligent as a matter of law, and it would be an invasion of the prov-
    ince of the jury to hold otherwise even where there was sufficient evi-
    dence that the favored driver operated his vehicle negligently and
    unlawfully and/or that the unfavored driver failed to yield the right-
    of-way).
    Because the parties offered conflicting evidence regarding the
    events leading up to the accident,2 the district court properly submit-
    ted the issues of negligence and proximate cause to the jury.
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 At oral argument, White asserted that because the maximum speed
    limit on the relevant portion of Route 13 was 55 mph and Rogers clearly
    7
    III.
    White also argues that the district court's decision to admit evi-
    dence of Johnson's intoxication and the testimony of Dr. Yale Caplan
    as to the effects of intoxication unfairly prejudiced White. See Fed.
    R. Evid. 403. White asserts prejudice because "[a]t no time did Rog-
    ers provide any evidence of any act or omission to act by Johnson,
    attributable to his intoxication, that directly resulted in the accident."
    Brief of Appellant at 32. We find this argument wholly meritless.
    The evidence was critical to whether Johnson operated his automo-
    bile negligently, as well as to the cause of the accident. "While evi-
    dence of intoxication does not, as a matter of law, constitute
    negligence per se, such evidence may be admissible to prove negli-
    gence" because "[e]vidence of intoxication frequently is part of a
    causal chain" and "such evidence is probative and relevant." Mitchell
    v. Montgomery County, 
    88 Md. App. 542
    , 555-56 (1991); see Quinn,
    
    266 Md. at 389
    . We cannot conclude that the district court abused its
    discretion in admitting the evidence of Johnson's intoxication, partic-
    ularly in light of the admission of Johnson's contemporaneous inat-
    tention.
    Similarly, where evidence exists that a driver was intoxicated at the
    time of an accident, expert testimony as to how the intoxication
    affects the driver's ability to operate the automobile is admissible
    under Maryland law. See Hickey v. Kendall, 
    111 Md. App. 577
    ,
    611-13 (1996), aff'd sub. nom., Kendall v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 
    348 Md. 157
     (1997) (trial judge did not err in admitting testimony of same
    Dr. Yale Caplan regarding effect of marijuana use on driver);
    Mitchell, 88 Md. App. at 556-58 (trial judge did not err in admitting
    testimony of same Dr. Caplan as to effects of alcohol intoxication on
    _________________________________________________________________
    had not reached that speed, Rogers could not have successfully entered
    the flow of traffic. Despite counsel's contentions, no Maryland court has
    held that an unfavored vehicle must reach the maximum allowable speed
    in order to successfully join the flow of traffic for boulevard rule pur-
    poses. We refuse to so hold, lest we make a mockery of the very notion
    of a maximum limit. Although the speed limit may be relevant to the
    inquiry, it is not determinative.
    8
    "coordination, length of reaction time, blurred and double vision, lack
    of peripheral and side visions, problems with depth perception, and
    lack of ability to generally comprehend and make decisions and per-
    form tasks" (internal quotation omitted)). Much like his testimony in
    Mitchell, Dr. Caplan testified here as to "what the concentration of
    intoxication meant in terms of intoxication for that particular individ-
    ual" and his conclusions were "related to Mr. Johnson's conduct
    which might have contributed to the accident." Brief of Appellant at
    40 (quoting the testimony offered by Dr. Caplan). The district court
    did not abuse its discretion in admitting this testimony.3
    AFFIRMED
    _________________________________________________________________
    3 At the outset of his brief, White maintains that the jury's verdict was
    contrary to the weight of the evidence. White failed to develop the argu-
    ment either in the brief or at oral argument. In any event, no doubt exists
    that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to Rogers, the non-
    movant, supports the jury's verdict.
    9