This action arises out of a road rage incident occurring on 15 July 1998 between William Donald Britt (“plaintiff’) and George Douglas Hayes (“defendant”) on U.S. Highway 701 in Tabor City, North Carolina. In his complaint for personal injuries and property damage filed 4 January 1999, plaintiff alleges that he was traveling behind defendant in the northbound lane of the highway when defendant “suddenly and without warning began backing up . . . [and] collid[ed] forcibly with [plaintiffs vehicle].” Plaintiff claims that in so acting, defendant negligently violated several rules and regulations adopted by the North Carolina Division of Motor Vehicles. He further contends that defendant’s negligence “was the sole and proximate cause of [his] injuries.”
Defendant filed an answer asserting, among other defenses, self-defense and the statute of limitations. Upon defendant’s subsequent motion for summary judgment, the trial court entered an order stating the following:
1. That Plaintiff’s action is based upon an alleged assault and battery by Defendant, to wit, the intentional backing of his tractor trailer into the Plaintiff.
2. That Plaintiff has failed to file his action within the applicable one year statute of limitation for assault and/or battery.
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IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is granted and Plaintiff’s action is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
From this order and from the order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
By his sole assignment of error, plaintiff argues that the trial court improperly entered summary judgment for defendant, because the evidence raised an issue of fact as to whether defendant intended to injure plaintiff when he backed his vehicle into plaintiff’s truck. We must disagree.
Summary judgment is appropriate if after reviewing the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and other evidentiary materials, the trial court is convinced that no genuine issue of ma
“Negligence is the breach of a legal duty proximately causing injury.” Id. at 439,
This Court has articulated the distinction between negligence and intentional torts as follows:
An intentional infliction of harm is not a negligent act. If the operator of an automobile operates his car in violation of the speed law and in so doing inflicts injury as a proximate result, his liability is based on his negligent conduct. But if the driver intentionally runs over a person, it makes no difference whether the speed is excessive or not; the driver is guilty of an assault. Such wilful conduct is beyond and outside the realm of negligence.
Ormond,
Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the evidence tends to show that he first encountered defendant on Highway 701 in or near Loris, South Carolina. Plaintiff testified that defendant ran plaintiff’s pickup truck off the highway and into a ditch after unsuccessfully attempting to pass him. Plaintiff claims that when he returned to
Although in his complaint, plaintiff purports to characterize defendant’s actions as negligent, the evidence does not bolster this theory of liability. Nothing in the record suggests that defendant’s behavior was anything but intentional, and plaintiff acknowledges as much in his deposition testimony:
Q. Was there anything in front of him that would make him want to back up?
A. No, nothing.
Q. So he did that on purpose?
A. Yes.
Q. There’s no doubt in your mind that he did that on purpose?
A. There was nothing in the left lane, nothing in the right land [sic]. Just him.
Q. No other reason for him to back up other than to hit you; is that right?
A. That’s — that’s the only way I see it.
Nonetheless, plaintiff argues that while defendant’s actions may have constituted an assault, no battery was committed, because defendant did not touch his “person.” It is plaintiff’s position that without such contact, defendant’s intent to injure remains at issue. However, this Court has stated that “[t]he intent required to prove battery is intent to act, i.e., the intent to cause harmful or offensive contact, not the intent to injure.” Russ v. Great American Ins. Companies,
Protection of the interest in freedom from intentional and unpermitted contacts with the plaintiffs person extends to any part of the body, or to anything which is attached to it and practically identified with it. Thus, if all other requisites of a battery against the plaintiff are satisfied, contact with the plaintiffs clothing, or with a cane, a paper, or any other object held in the plaintiffs hand, will be sufficient; and the same is true of the chair in which the plaintiff sits, the horse or the car the plaintiff rides or occupies, or the person against whom the plaintiff is leaning. The interest in the integrity of person includes all things which are in contact or connected with the person.
W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 9, at 39-40 (5th ed. 1984) (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted).
Therefore, we hold that the trial court was correct in concluding that the conduct of which plaintiff complains is more properly characterized as intentional, rather than negligent. Because plaintiff failed to bring an action for assault or battery within the one-year statute of limitations, his action is time-barred. Thus, summary judgment for defendant was appropriate.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the trial court.
Affirmed.
