142 N.C. 52 | N.C. | 1906
The only exception urged upon our attention or insisted upon by the appellant is that the verdict of the jury
In answer to the first, the jury found that there was a negligent act of the defendant causing the injury, and in answer to the second, they fixed the character of the negligence, the issue having been evidently framed to enable the jury to say whether the wrongful act of the defendant was one which permitted the recovery of punitive damages; but both issues determine that the injury of the plaintiff was caused by the defendant’s negligence, and there is therefore no contradiction in the issues or the verdict.
While the term “wilful negligence” may not be strictly accurate — and many cases hold that wilfulness repels or is inconsistent with the idea of negligence — it will be found that this is not necessarily or entirely true. All of the definitions of negligence contain the idea of inadvertence as one of its features, and inadvertence and wilfulness are as a rule antagonized; but some of these definitions are inadequate or partially wrong, because they give this idea of inadvertence an erroneous placing. For the purposes of this discussion negligence may be defined as “the failure to exercise the proper degree of care in the performance of some legal duty which one owes another and causing unintended damage.” The breach of duty can be and frequently is intentional
When the wilfulness is referred to the breach of duty instead of the injury caused or damage done, the term is not improper;. certainly, where the verdict of the jury on both issues fixes the act as negligent, the term “wilful” does not establish such a necessary contradiction or inconsistency as requires or permits a new trial of the cause.
In this case the evidence tends to show that the breach of duty on the part of the defendant’s agent or employee may have been, and very likely was, wilful and intentional; but no one would conclude that these employees designed or intended to cause the injury or damage which followed. The verdict in Brendles case, 125 N. C., 474, was construed and by fair interpretation was properly construed as establishing an intentional injury.
There is no error, and the judgment below is
Affirmed.