All of the special grounds of the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial present essentially the same question, viz., whether or not the court erred in instructing the jury with respect to the principles of law concerning “accident.” The plaintiff insists that neither the pleadings nor the evidence authorized a charge concerning accident.
Code
§ 102-103 defines accident as “an event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation; that which takes place or begins to exist without design.” See
Southern R. Co. v. Hill,
When the theory of accident is neither raised by the pleadings nor by the evidence, a charge on accident is error and reversible error if the charge is apt to mislead the jury. Cf.
Everett v. Clegg,
In searching the record to find whether or not there was evidence authorizing the charge on the law relative to accident, we must'keep in mind that: “To warrant the court in charging the jury on a given topic, . . . it is not necessary that the evidence should shine upon it with a clear light. It is enough if glimpses of it be afforded by the evidence. Truth is often dim, but is truth nevertheless. Frequently amongst the facts best proved is one which no witness has mentioned in his testimony, such fact being an inference from other facts.”
Brown v. Matthews,
A witness for the defendant testified to facts which show that she was in the store on the afternoon in question. She testified that she saw a child step upon the bottom of a shopping cart and reach across it toward a counter. The witness stated that she told the child: “It [grocery cart] is liable to slip out from under you.” She further testified: “. . . I hadn’t more than said it before it did go out from under her.” And when asked if the plaintiff was the girl she saw in the store, the witness testified: “I thought I recognized her [plaintiff] when she came in this morning but I won’t swear to it because I am not sure.” Although the witness did not positively identify the plaintiff as the girl she saw fall, we are of the opinion that her testimony *793 was sufficiently connected to the events under investigation by her positive testimony concerning the time and place where she saw the little girl fall so that the jury would have been authorized to conclude that the girl the witness saw fall was, in fact, the plaintiff.
Counsel for plaintiff contends that this testimony was insufficient to authorize a charge on the principles of law regarding “unavoidable accident,” contending that the introduction of this testimony was an attempt to show that the plaintiff failed to exercise due care for her own safety. However, we are dealing with a case involving a plaintiff who was nine years of age at the time she was allegedly injured. It was a jury question as to whether the plaintiff had the capacity to exercise due care for her own safety.
Savannah R. Co. v. Smith,
In
Central R. Co. v. Rylee,
Since the jury was authorized to find that the plaintiff was incapable of exercising due care for her own safety and protection, and that she did an act which caused her injuries and that this act was the sole proximate cause of her injury unconnected with any negligence of the defendant, it was authorized to find that the plaintiff’s misfortune was an accident in the eyes of the law. See
Richter v. Atlantic Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
