42 S.E.2d 593 | N.C. | 1947
Civil action to recover damages for alleged wrongful death, G.S., 28-172, G.S., 28-173.
On former appeal,
Upon the retrial the case was submitted to the jury on the same issues as at former trial. The jury answered the first issue as to joint and concurrent negligence in the affirmative, and the fourth issue as to contributory negligence in the negative, and assessed damages in the sum of $18,000.
From judgment for plaintiff in accordance with the verdict, the defendants appeal to Supreme Court, and assign error.
At the outset it is appropriate to call attention to Rule 19 (2) of the Rules of Practice in the Supreme Court,
Nevertheless, in view of the fact that both appeals are in the same action and from the same judgment on verdict finding joint and concurrent actionable negligence of all defendants, we consider them together, treating separately the respective assignments of error.
Appeal of defendants Yates Clyde Farris and Atlantic Greyhound Corporation:
These defendants present for consideration several assignments of error, some of which require discussion.
One of the assignments relates to the introduction in evidence of the discharge of James Murray Pate, Jr., intestate of plaintiff, from the U.S. Army. In this connection, it appears that in the course of the introduction of evidence by plaintiff, testimony was elicited on cross-examination of the father of intestate that the intestate entered the National Guard in 1939, and mustered into the regular army in 1940; that he served three years overseas, and returned in May, 1945; and that he had received his discharge at the time of the accident. Then after cross-examination as to the military rating and rank of the intestate, the witness identified and plaintiff offered the army discharge in evidence. The court admitted it, and all defendants objected and excepted. Later in the course of the trial, the court told the jury that the court was worried about the competency of the discharge and instructed the jury that the court was of its own motion withdrawing the discharge from the consideration of the jury, and excluding it as evidence in the trial, and instructed the jury not to take it into consideration in any manner when the jury should come to consider the issues later on in the trial. All defendants object and except for that the discharge having been read to the jury, the harmful effect of it as evidence could not be removed from the minds of the jurors.
We are of opinion that the discharge was incompetent, and should not have been received into evidence. Stanley v. Lumber Co.,
These defendants also assign as error that portion of the charge in respect to the first issue, with reference to their liabilities, wherein the court instructed the jury that "if you find by the greater weight of the evidence" certain specific facts, "then I charge you that such acts, conduct, and omissions of the defendant Yates Clyde Farris would be negligence . . ." It is contended here that the court in using the words "would be negligence" instead of "would constitute negligence," expressed an opinion in violation of G.S.,
However, they contend that when this instruction is taken in connection with the charge given by the court in response to questions from the jurors, reversible error appears. One juror asked, "What responsibility is a driver charged with when meeting an automobile in apparent distress? You read if I understand the laws of North Carolina, something with reference to, we'll say, the bus driver supposedly keeping himself under control or being under control, if possible. That is the point that we have at issue here." The other juror asked, "If when approaching a vehicle in distress, you are automatically charged with a certain responsibility. If, in the driver's judgment, the vehicle is not in distress, he thinks the distress of the approaching vehicle has ended, and the approaching vehicle is approaching in a normal manner, does the responsibility placed upon the driver of the first vehicle cease, such as reducing his rate of speed below the law required in North Carolina?"
In response to these questions, the court applied the rule of the prudent man. And while these defendants contend that such instructions do not answer the questions asked by the jurors, they have not brought forward exception to the refusal of the court to give special instructions requested by them in this respect. Nevertheless, the rule of the prudent man is applicable. "The standard of conduct required in an emergency, as elsewhere, is that of the prudent man." Ingle v. Cassady,
Other assignments of error brought forward by these appellants, upon due consideration, likewise fail to show cause for disturbing the judgment on verdict rendered.
Appeal by defendant George W. Sharpe:
This appellant assigns as error the refusal of the court to give certain requests for specific instruction, to some of which consideration is required which is now given:
(1) That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as follows: That if the jury should find that the bus was being operated at a rapid rate of speed around a curve, and that it was on its left side of the highway, and that if the jury should further find that Carol Sharpe was operating the car belonging to defendant, George Sharpe, to her right of *418 the center line of the highway, then the law would be that Carol Sharpe did not have the duty of stopping or taking other action to avoid an accident up until such time that it appeared that a collision would be unavoidable, for the reason that the said Carol Sharpe had the right to assume, up to the point of collision, that the said bus would assume its proper and rightful position to its right of the center of the highway in passing.
The driver of vehicles proceeding in opposite directions and meeting are required by statute, G.S.,
However, the right of a motorist to assume that a driver of a vehicle coming from the opposite direction will obey the law and yield one-half the highway, or turn out in time to avoid collision, and to act on such assumption in determining his own manner of using the road, is not absolute. It may be qualified by the particular circumstances existing at the time, — such as "the proximity, the position and movement of the other vehicle, and the condition of the road as to usable width, and the like," Brown v. Products Co., supra.
Moreover, notwithstanding the right of a motorist to so assume, still this does not lessen his duty to conform to the requirement of exercising due care under the existing circumstances, that is, to conform to the rule of the reasonably prudent man. Sebastian v. Motor Lines,
Furthermore, the statute on speed restrictions, G.S.,
When these principles are applied to the evidence on which this request for instruction is based, the driver of the Sharpe car was confronted, as she says, by a large bus traveling at a high rate of speed, approaching on its left side of a slick road over a long bridge with concrete walls. This would not seem to be an ordinary condition, but rather to present a special hazard. Hence, it would have been inappropriate for the court to have instructed the jury, as a matter of law, that Carol Sharpe had the right to assume, up to the point of collision, that the bus would assume its proper and rightful position to its right of the center line of the highway in passing.
(2) The next request for instruction embodies the principle of law applicable in cases of sudden emergency. In this State a person confronted with a sudden emergency is not held by the law to the same degree of care as in ordinary circumstances, but only to that degree of care which an ordinarily prudent person would use under similar circumstances. Hinton v.R. R.,
In Hinton v. R. R., supra, it is said, "It is well understood that a person in the presence of an emergency is not usually held to the same deliberation or circumspection as in ordinary conditions." And, in Ingle v.Cassady, supra, after quoting the above statement from the Hinton case, this pronouncement follows: "In other words, the standard of conduct required in an emergency, as elsewhere, is that of the prudent man." But the principle is not available to one who by his own negligence has brought about, or contributed to the emergency. Luttrell v. Hardin, supra; Ingle v.Cassady, supra.
Applying these principles to the evidence in hand, it may well be doubted that, in so far as the driver of the Sharpe car is concerned, a sudden emergency existed. And, if one did exist, it would seem that her operation of the car contributed to it. She states in her testimony that as she approached the bridge at a speed of about 30 miles an hour, and when 30 or 40 feet north of the bridge, she saw the bus coming at about 50 or 60 miles an hour around the curve, approximately 150 feet from the south end of the bridge, and 3 or 4 feet over on her side of the road; that then she took her foot off the accelerator to slow down; that all she did to slow down was to release the accelerator; that she did not apply the brakes until she saw the bus could not get back on its right side of the road; that when she applied the brakes the car did not stop immediately, *420 and about that time the collision came; and that she "could not tell that the car skidded at all . . . If it skidded at all it did not skid at any time prior to the very instant of the collision."
Moreover, the jury has found that the driver of the Sharpe car was negligent, and that that negligence concurred with that of defendants Farris and Greyhound Corporation in bringing about the injury to and death of plaintiff's intestate. Hence, there is no error in the refusal of the instruction requested.
(3) The third request for instruction, refused by the court, is as follows: "That the proof of the mere skidding of an automobile standing alone does not constitute proof of negligence; that if the jury should find from the evidence and by its greater weight merely that the car operated by Carol Sharpe skidded, but does not find that such skidding was caused by any negligence on her part in operating the car, then such skidding standing alone does not constitute negligence, and if the jury should find from the evidence and its greater weight that the Sharpe car merely skidded, but finds no negligence in the way in which said car was operated, then neither Carol Sharpe nor defendant George W. Sharpe, would be guilty of any negligence in this case."
The general rule, as stated in Huddy (7 Ed.), Section 373, is as follows: "The mere fact of skidding of a car is not of itself such evidence of negligence as to render the owner liable for an injury in consequence thereof." Springs v. Doll,
In the light of these decisions the charge of the court is sufficient to cover the subject of the above request for instruction. The court charged, in substance, that before the first issue could be answered in the affirmative, the jury should find, among other facts, that the skidding of the car was caused by the speed of it, under the existing conditions and circumstances; and that if the jury fail to so find, the issue should be answered in the negative.
(4) The fourth request for special instruction is that if the jury should find that Carol Sharpe were driving the Sharpe car carefully and was not guilty of any negligence, then defendant Sharpe would not be guilty of any negligence and the jury should answer the first and third issues "No." *421
In this connection, the court apparently in deference to opinion on former appeal in this case, charged the jury that the statute prohibits any person under the age of fifteen years to operate an automobile on the highways of this State, and that it is negligence per se for a child under the legal driving age to drive an automobile on the highways of the State, but that it does not necessarily follow that the defendant, in such event, is liable in damages, for the plaintiff must go forward and satisfy the jury by a preponderance of the evidence that such negligence is the proximate or one of the proximate causes of the injury of which complaint is made.
This charge is sufficiently broad to cover the subject of the above request for instruction, and there is no error in refusing to give it.
Appellant Sharpe also excepts to portions of the charge given in respect to the first issue with reference to his liability, as follows: ". . . If you also find that upon approaching said bridge the said Carol Sharpe failed to exercise reasonable care in that she approached said bridge at a high rate of speed of thirty to thirty-five miles per hour over a highway that was wet, slick and slippery, and further failed to exercise reasonable care in that she failed to decrease the speed of said car to such rate of speed as would enable her to avoid colliding with any person, vehicle or conveyance then on said highway and bridge, in compliance with legal requirements and the duty of all persons to use due care . . . then I charge you that such acts, conduct and omissions of the said Carol Sharpe would be negligence . . ."
It is contended that here the court has expressed an opinion as to the sufficiency of the evidence, in violation of the statute, G.S.,
It may be conceded that the instructions, standing alone, and lifted out of the charge as a whole, are liable to attack. But when these instructions are read in connection with other portions of the charge, that is, when the charge is read contextually, they may not fairly be misunderstood. When so read, it is seen that the court fully, clearly and specifically instructed the jury as to the various provisions of the statute, G.S.,
Appellant Sharpe also assigns as error the refusal of the court to receive opinion evidence as to the competency of Carol Sharpe as the *422 driver of an automobile. The issue here, as it relates to defendant Sharpe, is whether the traffic accident under consideration was contributed to by negligence of Carol Sharpe, the driver of his car. In such case evidence as to the general competency of a driver is inadmissible. 9 Blashfield, p. 630, Part 2, Perm. Ed. Cycl. of Automobile Law and Practice, Section 6187. The question is not as to her competency to drive, but whether she were operating the car at the time in accordance with the duty imposed by law upon operators of automobiles, that is, whether she were exercising that degree of care which an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under similar circumstances.
Appellant Sharpe also assigns as error the denial of his motion for mistrial on account of testimony of Dell Woosley, witness for defendants Greyhound Corporation and Farris, elicited upon cross-examination by counsel for plaintiff. She testified on direct examination that she was employed by the Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Insurance Company; that there is no connection at all between her employer and the Atlantic Greyhound Corporation; and that she and two others were riding in an automobile following the Sharpe car, about 100 feet behind it, and saw the collision, — describing in detail what she says she saw. Then on cross-examination, after being questioned abut discrepancies in her testimony then given and at former trial, and after she had stated that she had for six years, and then worked for the Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Insurance Company, she was asked the question: "Do you know that Company has a direct interest in the outcome of this lawsuit?" to which she answered: "I do." Counsel for defendant Sharpe objected and moved to strike. The objection was sustained and the motion allowed.
Later, after two witnesses had been examined, the jury was sent out, and counsel for defendant Sharpe, who at the time of the incident had "stepped up to the bench," and told the Judge that he desired to make a motion for mistrial but that he did not desire to do so in the presence of the jury, and would do so at the first intermission, then moved for a mistrial. The motion was denied. Defendant Sharpe excepted.
The following quotation from Keller v. Furniture Co., 199, N.C. 413,
In the light of these principles, applied to the facts in hand, no prejudicial error is made to appear.
Other assignments of error brought forward by appellant Sharpe, and not considered on the appeal of defendants Greyhound Corporation and Farris, upon due consideration likewise fail to show prejudicial error.
Hence, (1) On appeal of Atlantic Greyhound Corporation and Yates Clyde Farris
No error.
And (2) On appeal of George W. Sharpe
No error. *424