131 S.E. 9 | N.C. | 1926
STACY, C.J., concurring in result. Action to recover damages for personal injuries, sustained by plaintiff while at work as an employee of defendant. The issues, with answers thereto, were as follows:
1. Was plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendant company, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
2. Did the defendant by his own negligent conduct contribute to and cause his said injury? Answer: No.
3. What damages, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover? Answer: $5,000.
From judgment on this verdict, defendant appealed to the Supreme Court. Defendant's first assignment of error is based upon an incident, occurring during the trial, and stated in the case on appeal as follows: *409
"The plaintiff, in examining the jury, asked the question, `Is there any member of the jury in the employ of the Thomas Masten Indemnity Insurance Company or Association?'"
When the question was asked, the judge called the attorneys for plaintiff and defendant to the bench, and in an undertone, not heard by the jury, asked why plaintiff's attorneys desired to ask the question. Plaintiff's attorneys, in an undertone, not heard by the jury, said to the judge that Mr. Asa, agent of the Thomas Masten Indemnity Association, a mutual concern composed of lumber manufacturers, and then present, had tried to settle the case with them, and had stated to them that his association had insured defendant against loss in cases of this kind, and that Mr. Aberly (manager of defendant company) had also said that defendant was a member of the Masten Association, and that plaintiff's attorneys desired to ascertain if any member or agent of the association was on the jury. His Honor decided that the question was asked in good faith.
The defendant objected; objection overruled, and defendant excepted. It does not appear whether any of the jurors answered the question or not; therefore, the question as to whether or not an affirmative answer to the question by a member of the jury would have been ground for a challenge for cause is not presented. His Honor held only that the question, asked in good faith, was not subject to objection. There was no motion by defendant for any instruction to the jury, relative to the matter, then or thereafter during the trial, or for a continuance on the ground that the question was an intimation, at least, to the jury, by plaintiff's attorneys, that defendant was protected by indemnity insurance against any damages which it might have to pay to plaintiff, by reason of the verdict in this case. Having been informed by both the manager of defendant company, and the agent of the indemnity association, that the association and not the company, by reason of the contract of insurance, would pay such damages as plaintiff might recover, attorneys for plaintiff not only had the right, but it was also their duty to ascertain by questions addressed to jurors tendered to plaintiff, what relationship, if any, existed between members of the jury and the association, which was interested in the verdict. The fact that a juror was an agent or member of the association which would ultimately pay the damages assessed by the jury, if any, would affect the competency of the juror to serve in this case; it would have weight with the attorneys for plaintiff, at least, in determining whether they should challenge the juror, peremptorily.
In Blevins v. Cotton Mills,
We cannot hold, where an attorney for a party to an action, in the performance of his duty, and in the exercise of his right, as such attorney, inquires of jurors tendered to plaintiff, if any of them sustains such relation to an association or corporation, not a party to the action, which he knows or in good faith believes has an interest in the verdict which may be rendered, by reason of a contract, indemnifying the adverse party from loss by reason of such verdict, as would render the juror incompetent if such association or corporation was a party to the action, that the inquiry is in itself so prejudicial to defendant that defendant is entitled to have an adverse verdict set aside and the judgment reversed for this reason alone. The association or indemnity company is not ordinarily a proper party to the action, Clark v. Bonsal,
We have examined the assignments of error based upon exceptions to the evidence offered by plaintiff, and to the refusal of defendant's motion for judgment as of nonsuit, at the close of all the evidence; we do not deem it necessary to discuss these assignments seriatim: they cannot be sustained.
Defendant complains chiefly of the following instruction to the jury, upon the second issue:
"The defendant sets up contributory negligence. Contributory negligence is such conduct on the part of the plaintiff as shows that he failed to do what under the exact conditions a reasonably prudent man would have done, or that he did an act which under those conditions a reasonably prudent man would not have done. Like an action based upon negligence, it must have been the proximate cause of the injury." Defendant excepted to this instruction and assigns same as error. Defendant contends that, if the jury, having found that plaintiff was injured by the negligence of defendant as alleged in the complaint, and having therefore answered the first issue "Yes," should further find that the negligence of plaintiff contributed to his injury as one of the causes thereof, they should in accordance with a proper instruction, have answered the second issue, "Yes"; that it was error to instruct the jury, in effect, that they must find that the negligence of plaintiff was the proximate cause of the injury in order to find that it was contributory negligence as alleged in the answer. This contention of defendant is supported by Construction Co. v. R.R.,
All the evidence is to the effect that plaintiff, a man 60 years of age, was at work under the immediate direction and supervision of the manager of defendant company; that two wheels of a truck loaded with *412 lumber had got off the track; plaintiff was directed by the manager to aid in getting the truck back on the track; one wheel was pried up; while plaintiff was helping to raise the other, the lumber which was piled 12 to 14 feet on the truck, slid off and mashed him to the ground. Plaintiff sustained serious and permanent injuries. The jury has found that it was negligence for defendant to require plaintiff to work at the lower end of the truck, on which was piled lumber 12 to 14 feet high; that a prudent man, with reasonable foresight, would have foreseen that the lumber would probably slide off and mash the men who, under the direction of defendant's manager, were at work, endeavoring to raise the truck; that this negligence was the proximate cause of the injury.
A careful reading of the testimony of all the witnesses, as set out in the case on appeal, fails to disclose any evidence of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff. We find no reversible error. The judgment should be affirmed. There is
No error.
STACY, C.J., concurring in result.