Plaintiff’s first exception is to the refusal of the trial court to allow plaintiff to describe the manner in which defendant’s employees, Stroupe and Dockery, were working. This exception is without merit since, as no part of the record shows what the excluded evidence would have been, we cannot determine whether its exclusion was prejudicial.
Cooperative Exchange v. Scott,
Plaintiff assigns as error the trial court’s allowing counsel for Sky-Line to cross-examine plaintiff, on the ground that counsel had previously been in an attorney-client relationship with plaintiff. We have examined the record carefully and find no prejudicial error resulting therefrom. None of the evidence elicited by counsel goes to the issue of defendant’s negligence nor to plaintiff’s contributory negligence, and it is therefore immaterial to the judgment of non-suit entered by the court below. Plaintiff admits this assignment is not supported by case authority.
We now come to the primary and crucial question presented for decision. Did the trial court err in allowing defendant’s motion for judgment as of nonsuit?
In considering this question we recognize the familiar rule that “On a motion for judgment of compulsory nonsuit, plaintiff’s evidence is to be taken as true, and considered in the light most favorable to him, giving him the benefit of every fact and inference of fact pertaining to the issues which may be reasonably deduced from the evidence. Plaintiff’s evidence must be considered in the light of his allegations to the extent the evidence is supported by the allegations. Defendant’s evidence which tends to impeach or contradict plaintiff’s evidence is not to be considered. Discrepancies and contradictions in plaintiff’s evidence do not justify a nonsuit, because they are for the jury to resolve.”
King v. Bonardi,
It is seriously contended by the defendant that the plaintiff did not offer sufficient evidence to sustain the allegations of his complaint; however, conceding arguendo, that there is evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant sufficient to sustain plaintiff’s allegations of actionable negligence, the plaintiff’s own evidence in *191 escapably shows that plaintiff failed to use ordinary care for his own safety and that such want of due care was at least one of the proximate causes of his injury.
“The law imposes upon a person
sui juris
the duty to use ordinary care to protect himself from injury, and the degree of such care should be commensurate with the danger to be avoided.”
Rosser v. Smith,
In the case of
Deaton v. Elon College,
We observe, parenthetically, that the case of Deaton v. Elon College, supra, can be distinguished from the instant case to the advantage of the defendant, in that the Deaton case involved latent defects of which contractee knew, or should have known, and of which the contractor had no knowledge and could not have reasonably discovered. The instant case reveals facts that tend to show that the danger was, or should have been, obvious to the plaintiff.
In the case of
Register v. Power Co.,
In the instant case plaintiff was an experienced lineman, and at the particular time was in charge of a work crew. He was familiar *192 with approved and recognized safety practices and had the necessary safety equipment not only available but within reach. He stated, “(I)f there had been rubber between me and the current I probably would not have been hurt.”
Thus it appears that in the face of obvious and recognized danger he turned his back on a known safe course of conduct and embraced a course of danger in handling a dangerous instrumentality.
The evidence elicited from his own witnesses requires the inevitable conclusion that plaintiff’s conduct constituted a failure to use ordinary care for his own safety, which, if not the sole proximate cause, was at least one of the direct proximate causes of his own injury.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
