53 N.C. App. 458 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1981
The issues presented are:
FIRST: Whether the court erred in denying the motion by plaintiffs for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the
SECOND: Whether the court erred in its charge to the jury in the action on behalf of plaintiff Thomas Furr? It did, and accordingly a new trial is granted.
THIRD: Whether the court erred in granting the motion by defendants for directed verdict in the action by plaintiff Lillian Furr? It did, and accordingly the judgment is reversed.
FOURTH: Whether the court erred to the prejudice of plaintiffs in consolidating for trial the action by plaintiff Lillian Furr and the action on behalf of plaintiff Thomas Furr? Because the cases must be retried, it is unnecessary to determine the question here. Upon remand separate trials are recommended.
Appeal Of Plaintiffs
Ronald Jennings Furr and
Thomas Jennings Furr
FIRST: Plaintiffs contend the evidence established, as a matter of law, negligence of defendants and absence of insulating negligence; and that consequently the court should have granted their motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The uncontroverted act of the individual defendant, in the course and scope of his agency for the corporate defendant, violated G.S. 20-161(a), .which provides:
No person shall park or leave standing any vehicle, whether attended or unattended, upon the paved or main-traveled portion of any highway . . . unless the vehicle is disabled to such an extent that it is impossible to avoid stopping and temporarily leaving the vehicle upon the paved or main-traveled portion of the highway ....
Violation of this statute constitutes negligence per se. Hughes v. Vestal, 264 N.C. 500, 142 S.E. 2d 361 (1965). Proximate cause, nevertheless, remains a question for the jury.
[W]here the violation of a statute, intended and designed to prevent injury to person or property, which is negligence per se, is admitted or established by the evidence, it is ordinarily*461 a question for the jury to determine whether such negligence is a proximate cause of injury which resulted in damages.
Barrier v. Thomas and Howard Co., 205 N.C. 425, 427, 171 S.E. 626, 626 (1933). The court thus properly allowed the case to go to the jury for determination of whether defendants’ negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiffs’ injuries.
SECOND: Plaintiffs contended at trial that defendants’ negligence proximately caused injuries to plaintiffs father and son, and that any negligence of plaintiff Lillian Furr merely concurred with defendants’ negligence and did not insulate it. Defendants contended plaintiff Lillian Furr’s negligence was the sole proximate cause, thus insulating the negligence of defendants.
In Caulder v. Gresham, plaintiff was a passenger in a car which collided with a truck defendant had parked partially on the highway. 224 N.C. 402, 30 S.E. 2d 312 (1944). Defendant contended the car driver’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. The Supreme Court set forth the rule that the negligence of a second actor insulates that of an original tort-feasor, so as to relieve the original tortfeasor of liability, if the second actor has become aware of a potential danger created by the negligence of the original tortfeasor, and thereafter, by an independent act of negligence, brings about the accident. The negligence of the second actor does not insulate that of the original tortfeasor, however, when the second actor does not become apprised of the danger until his own negligence, added to that of the existing perilous condition, has made the accident inevitable. In that event “the negligent acts of the two tort-feasors are contributing causes and proximate factors in the happening of the accident and impose liability upon both of the guilty parties.” Id. at 404, 30 S.E. 2d at 313. The court stated that the driver of the car in which plaintiff was a passenger “was not under the duty of anticipating defendant’s negligent parking of his truck in violation of the statute and in such manner as to partially block that portion of the highway he was required to use.” Id.
The court here refused plaintiffs’ request for instructions which stated the law in the language of Caulder. In explaining proximate cause as it related to plaintiffs’ evidence the court instructed:
*462 Proximate cause ... is a real cause, a cause without which the claimed injury would not have occurred, and one which a reasonably careful and prudent person could foresee would probably produce such injury or some similar injurious result. Foreseeability, then, is an element of proximate cause. Now there may be more than one proximate cause of injuries. Therefore, the person seeking damages need not prove that the other party’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of the injury. He must prove by the greater weight of the evidence only that the other party’s negligence was a proximate cause of the injury.
... [A] violation of a safety statute does not alone entitle the person injured or damaged to recover. To justify recovery it must be proved [sic], by the greater weight of the evidence, that such violation was a proximate cause of the injury.
With regard to defendants’ contention of plaintiff Lillian Furr’s insulating negligence, the court instructed:
[IJf the Defendant has proved [sic], by the greater weight of the evidence, .■ . . that [Mrs. Furr’s] negligence was the sole proximate cause of the minor Plaintiff’s injuries and damages, then it would be your duty to answer ... in favor of the Defendant.
These instructions failed adequately to differentiate between concurring proximate causes and a sole proximate cause. They also failed to relate the law of concurring proximate causes and insulating negligence to the evidence presented. Plaintiff Lillian Furr testified, “[B]y the time I saw the fire truck it was too late. When I first saw the fire truck I slammed on brakes.” (Emphasis supplied.) From this evidence the jury could have found that any negligence on the part of plaintiff Lillian Furr concurred with defendants’ negligence to cause the accident, rather than that the accident was caused by an independent act of negligence on her part after she became aware of the potential danger created by defendants’ negligence. The failure to declare and explain the law of concurring negligence as requested and to apply it to the evidence presented was error entitling plaintiffs to a new trial. G.S. 1A-1, Rule 51(a).
1. Was the minor plaintiff . . . injured by the negligence of the defendants as alleged in his Complaint?
2. Was the negligence of Lillian Jane Broome Furr the sole proximate cause of the injuries and damages of the plaintiffs?
Upon proper instructions on the doctrines of concurring and insulating negligence, the jury’s answer to the first issue alone resolves the negligence question. Thus, upon retrial, only the first issue should be submitted.
Appeal Of Plaintiff Lilian Jane Broome Furr
As noted above, plaintiffs’ evidence established negligence per se by defendants; and when evidence establishes negligence per se, “it is ordinarily a question for the jury to determine whether such negligence is a proximate cause of injury.” Barrier v. Thomas and Howard Co., 205 N.C. 425, 427, 171 S.E. 626, 626 (1933). Thus, the directed verdict against this plaintiff can be sustained only if plaintiffs’ evidence, considered in the light most favorable to this plaintiff, so clearly established her own negligence as one of the proximate causes of her injuries “that no other reasonable inference or conclusion may be drawn therefrom.” Rappaport v. Days Inn, 296 N.C. 382, 384, 250 S.E. 2d 245, 247 (1979).
The uncontroverted evidence established that defendants’ truck was parked in violation of G.S. 20-161. This plaintiff testified that no lights were burning on the truck at the time of the collision. She also testified that she was driving well within the posted speed limit with her headlights on; that visibility ahead of her was not clear because of an incline; that the line of headlights in the north bound lanes coupled with some lights in a parking lot ahead of her created “a black hole” of darkness in her lane of travel; that she first observed the truck when her headlights reflected from its unlighted rear; and that she im
“Plaintiffs inability to stop [her] vehicle within the radius of [her] lights cannot be considered contributory negligence per se.” Meeks v. Atkeson, 7 N.C. App. 631, 637, 173 S.E. 2d 509, 512, aff’d per curiam, 277 N.C. 250, 176 S.E. 2d 771 (1970). In discussing the duty of a motorist to exercise ordinary care for his or her own safety, Justice Ervin has stated:
The duty . . . does not extend so far as to require that [the motorist] must be able to bring his automobile to an immediate stop on the sudden arising of a dangerous situation which he could not reasonably have anticipated. Any such requirement would be tantamount to an adjudication that it is negligence to drive an automobile on a highway in the nighttime at all. The law simply decrees that a person operating a motor vehicle at night must so drive that he can stop his automobile or change its course in time to avoid collision with any obstacle or obstruction whose presence on the highway is reasonably perceivable to him or reasonably ex-pectable by him. It certainly does not require him to see that which is invisible to a person exercising ordinary care.
Chaffin v. Brame, 233 N.C. 377, 380, 64 S.E. 2d 276, 279 (1951). The jury could have found that a person exercising ordinary care under the circumstances here could not reasonably have expected the presence of defendants’ truck on the highway and could not reasonably have perceived that presence in time to avoid the collision. Plaintiffs’ evidence thus did not establish the contributory negligence of plaintiff Lillian Furr as a matter of law, and the court erred in directing a verdict against her.
Consolidation
Issue
Plaintiffs in both cases assign error to consolidation of the cases for trial.
The trial court possesses the power to order consolidation of actions for trial when the actions involve the same parties and the same subject matter, if no prejudice or harmful complications will result therefrom. This power is vested in the trial judge so as to avoid multiplicity of suits,*465 unnecessary costs, delays, and to afford protection from oppression and abuse. To sustain an exception to the court’s discretionary consolidation of the actions, injury or prejudice to the appealing party arising from such consolidation must be shown, Peeples v. R.R., 228 N.C. 590, 46 S.E. 2d 649.
Kanoy v. Hinshaw, 273 N.C. 418, 423, 160 S.E. 2d 296, 300 (1968). At the time of the collision here G.S. 1-539.21, abolishing parent-child immunity in motor vehicle cases, had not been enacted. Consequently, plaintiff Thomas Furr cannot recover from his mother, plaintiff Lillian Furr, for any negligence on her part which may have caused or concurred in causing the collision. Consolidation of the minor’s case with the mother’s creates a trial setting in which the jury might easily be confused as to from whom the minor plaintiff can recover. Further, the court here in its charge on insulating negligence referred to plaintiff Lillian Furr several times as “the Defendant.” While ordinarily a lapsus linguae of this nature might be immaterial, under the circumstances here the possibility of prejudice is considerable.
Under the circumstances presented “it would be better to try the actions brought by these plaintiffs . . . separately.” Dixon v. Brockwell, 227 N.C. 567, 571, 42 S.E. 2d 680, 682 (1947).
Result
In the appeal of plaintiffs Ronald Jennings Furr and Thomas Jennings Furr, new trial.
In the appeal of plaintiff Lillian Jane Broome Furr, reversed and remanded.