According to the testimony of the defendant appellees the car owned by Brannen and driven by his wife was proceeding in the right lane of an interstate highway when it was passed by the vehicle in which the infant plaintiff was a passenger and which was being driven by her father. After passing the Brannens, Garrett turned into the right lane, intending to leave the highway at the next exit, but noticed a motorist with several children in the emergency lane and, intending to help them, slowed down or stopped (depending upon conflicting eyewitness accounts) and his automobile was rear-ended by the Brannen car. The Brannens testified that as they were moving down the highway in the right lane at a reasonable speed Garrett suddenly pulled in front of their car, applied his brakes and stopped so suddenly that Brannen was unable to avoid hitting it. From a verdict in favor of the defendants the plaintiff appeals.
1. The court instructed the jury on the law of accident as an event occurring without the negligence of either plaintiff or defendant. Where a motor vehicle collision occurs under circumstances such that it must be attributed to negligence on the part of the plaintiff or the defendant or both, such an instruction gives the defendant a defense to which he is not entitled and it is reversible error.
Davenport v. Little,
2. Exception is taken to a jury instruction as that part of Code § 68A-1003 (1) which forbids drivers to stop, stand, or park at the side of a limited access highway, because the second division of the statute excepts from its provisions stops for the purpose of picking up passengers. An instruction which might appear to authorize a sudden stop for any purpose without regard to other traffic on the highway would have been likely to mislead the jury. The issue was not whether the plaintiff’s father could give aid to a stranded motorist, but whether he was negligent in the manner in which he attempted to do so. No reversible error appears.
Judgment affirmed.
