McEWEN FUNERAL SERVICE, INC. v. CHARLOTTE CITY COACH LINES, INC.
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
Filed 9 April, 1958
248 N.C. 146
The courts will not take judicial notice of municipal ordinances, and therefore when municipal ordinances regulating the right of way at intersections are pleaded only by code number and not introduced in evidence, the rights of the parties will be determined in accordance with applicable State statutes and the rule of the reasonably prudent man, notwithstanding the ordinances are set out in the briefs.
2. Automobiles § 7—
Fundamental to the right to operate any motor vehicle is the rule of the prudent man declared in
3. Automobiles § 17—
G.S. 20-158(c), prescribing the right of way at intersections controlled by traffic control lights, applies only to such lights outside of towns and cities, but cities are not denied the authority to regulate the movement of traffic at street intersections. G.S. 20-158(b).
4. Automobiles § 6—
The violation of statutory rules of the road designed to provide for human safety is negligence per se unless the statute provides that its violation shall not constitute negligence as a matter of law.
5. Automobiles § 17—
Even though the municipal ordinance governing the use of intersections controlled by traffic control signals is not introduced in evidence, the use of traffic lights at intersections is general and the meaning of the lights well understood, and such signals will be obeyed by a reasonably prudent person; the red light gives warning of danger, and a green light or “go” signal is not a command to go, but is a qualified permission to proceed lawfully and carefully in the direction indicated.
6. Same—
The statute giving ambulances on emergency duty the right of way at intersections does not relieve the operator of a private or public ambulance of the duty to exercise due care, and does not require a motorist to yield such ambulance the right of way until the motorist hears and comprehends its siren or warning sound, or should have heard and understood its meaning in the exercise of the care of a reasonably prudent person.
7. Automobiles § 41g— Where evidence does not show that driver heard or should have heard warning siren, it fails to show negligence in failing to yield right of way to ambulance.
The evidence tended to show that an ambulance on emergency duty, with its siren sounding at “peak” was traveling north along a four-lane street, and entered an intersection with another, more heavily traveled,
PARKER, J., concurs in result.
JOHNSON, J., dissenting.
BOBBITT, J., concurs in dissent.
APPEAL by plaintiff from Pless, J., November 18, 1957, Term of MECKLENBURG.
In the forenoon of 19 November 1956 there was a collision at the intersection of McDowell and Fourth Streets in Charlotte between an ambulance owned by plaintiff and a bus owned by defendant. Plaintiff seeks to recover for the damages done to its vehicle. It alleges Charlotte had adopted and there was in force at the time of the collision an ordinance designated as ch. 2, art. 11, sec. 17(a) which it pleaded by title but without stating its contents. It alleged that the collision was due to defendant’s negligent failure to yield the right-of-way as required by
Defendant admitted the collision and the adoption of the ordinance referred to in the complaint. It denied the asserted negligence and pleaded contributory negligence by plaintiff in entering an intersection where the view was obstructed, operation in a careless and reckless manner at a high and illegal rate of speed and in disregard of the warning given by a red traffic light at the intersection. It avers the violation of the provisions of
At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant moved for nonsuit. The motion was allowed, and plaintiff appealed.
McDougle, Ervin, Horack & Snepp, for plaintiff, appellant.
Lassiter, Moore and Van Allen, for defendant, appellee.
Fourth Street is a very heavily traveled street. It is a major traffic artery of the City of Charlotte. It is a four-lane highway, that is, two lanes move in an easterly direction and two lanes in a westerly direction. No parking is permitted on this street. At and prior to the collision, defendant’s bus was traveling west on Fourth Street.
McDowell Street runs north-south. Traffic on it is likewise heavy, but not as heavy as on Fourth Street. It is also a four-lane street.
A traffic light with red and green lenses to regulate the flow of traffic across the intersection was in operation at the time of the collision. At the southeastern intersection was a grill which obstructed the vision down East Fourth Street of those traveling north on McDowell and likewise obstructed the vision of those on East Fourth Street of traffic on South McDowell Street. This building was separated from the vehicular portion of the streets only by the sidewalks of Fourth and McDowell Streets. The width of the sidewalks is not shown nor is the width of Fourth or McDowell Streets disclosed by the evidence. There was nothing on the lot at the southwest intersection to obstruct the view on West Fourth Street.
The ambulance was equipped with red flashing lights and a siren controlled by foot pedal. “The siren was mounted under the hood of the ambulance. The red lights were in the grill one on each side, one on the right and one on the left under the main headlamps. That was in front of the ambulance.”
Plaintiff’s vehicle, in response to an emergency call, was traveling north on McDowell Street. In the block south of Fourth Street the ambulance was traveling 35 m.p.h.—the maximum speed under the congested traffic conditions. It was in the easternmost lane of McDowell Street. The operator was familiar with the physical conditions at the intersection. One of the operators of the ambulance, the only witness testifying as to how the collision occurred, said: “As we approached the intersection of Fourth and McDowell with the siren on the very highest peak, the red lights flashing, we noticed that we had a congested intersection. We entered the intersection in the middle of McDowell Street, which is a four-lane street. We were centering the road, trying to get as close to the center of the intersection as possible. We approached the intersection, knowing that we had a red light facing us which we could see approximately a block before we got to the intersection, with the congested intersection ahead as we could see, we slowed the vehicle to approximately 20 miles an hour entering the intersection. We noticed that as we approached the intersection there was a car, a car to the left headed east on Fourth Street which stopped. We noticed on the other side of the intersection
What is the law applicable to the factual situation here presented?
The provisions of the ordinances referred to in the pleadings are not in the record. Plaintiff, in its brief, quotes the provisions of the ordinance referred to in the complaint. As there quoted it merely exempts vehicles of the police department and ambulances from the provisions of the city’s ordinances regulating the operation and parking of motor vehicles. We are not informed as to the provisions of the ordinances which by the section quoted in the brief are made inapplicable to police vehicles and ambulances, nor are we given any information as to the provisions of the ordinance, sec. 24(c), pleaded by defendant. The rights of the parties are, therefore, to be determined by ascertaining applicable State statutes and the conduct to be expected of the reasonably prudent operator of a motor vehicle under the conditions existing at the time and place of this collision.
Fundamental to the right to operate any motor vehicle is the rule of the prudent man declared in
The Legislature took recognition of the fact that all highway intersections are not of equal importance because of the density of traffic on one highway as compared to the flow on an intersecting highway. Hence a rule was prescribed for this situation requiring operators of motor vehicles on a servient highway to stop in accordance with signs commanding them to do so.
The violation of statutory rules of the road designed to provide for human safety is either negligence per se, Currin v. Williams, ante, p. 32, Troxler v. Motor Lines, 240 N.C. 420, 82 S.E. 2d 342, Morgan v. Coach Co., 225 N.C. 668, 36 S.E. 2d 263, or the basis on which a jury can find negligence if the statute declares its violation shall not constitute negligence as a matter of law.
The force and meaning of the traffic lights described in this case are not on the record declared by State statute or city ordinance. The intersection being within the corporate limits,
The use of traffic lights is so general and the meaning of each color so well understood that one who operates his motor vehicle in disregard of these well-understood meanings cannot be said to be a prudent person; one who operates in accord with these meanings is not to be condemned for so doing. “A red light is recognized by common usage as a method of giving warning of danger. . . .” Weavil v. Trading Post, 245 N.C. 106, 95 S.E. 2d 533. “A green or ‘go’ signal is not a command to go, but a qualified permission to proceed lawfully and carefully in the direction indicated.” Hyder v. Battery Co., Inc., 242 N.C. 553, 89 SE 2d 124.
The statute which declared the rules of the road and fixed priorities at intersections granted a conditional priority to certain vehicles used for emergency purposes. S. 118 of that Act, now
“The driver of a vehicle upon a highway shall yield the right-of-way to . . . public and private ambulances when . . . operated upon official business and the drivers thereof sound audible signal by bell, siren or exhaust whistle. This provision shall not operate to relieve . . . a . . . public or private ambulance from the duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all persons using the highway, nor shall it protect the driver of any such vehicle from the consequences of any arbitrary exercise of such right-of-way.”
No duty rests on the operator of a motor vehicle making normal use of a highway to yield the right of way to another vehicle on an emergency mission until an appropriate warning has been directed to him, and he has reasonable opportunity to yield his prior right. The audible sound which the statute,
The Legislature, in prescribing practical warning devices for use on motor vehicles, drew a distinction between vehicles making normal use of the highway and those engaged in emergency uses. For normal use, a horn audible for 200 feet under normal conditions was deemed adequate,
The mere statement that the ambulance approached the intersection “with the siren on the very highest peak,” without further evi-
Concededly, the vision of the driver of each vehicle was obstructed until he was in, or practically in, the intersection. Plaintiff argues that defendant’s driver should have heard because southbound traffic on McDowell Street stopped. Two answers may be given to that: (1) that they were confronted by a red traffic light forbidding them to move; (2) that their vision of plaintiff’s vehicle was not obstructed. It argues that traffic on West Fourth Street headed east, although it had a green light, did not move. But the evidence discloses that their view down McDowell Street was, unlike that of defendant’s driver, unobstructed. It is a fair inference that they saw plaintiff’s vehicle approach and for that reason stopped. It is argued that the cab on East Fourth Street headed west also stopped at the edge of the intersection. It does not appear that it stopped because of the sound. It may have stopped because its driver saw the ambulance approach, or for some other reason. The evidence offered failed to establish a violation of the provisions of
The collision occurred in the northern portion of the intersection. It is manifest that the vehicles entered the intersection at approximately the same time, as that phrase is used in the statute. Negligence in that respect has not been established. Taylor v. Brake, 245 N.C. 553, 96 S.E. 2d 686; Bennett v. Stephenson, 237 N.C. 377, 75 SE 2d 147; Freeman v. Preddy, 237 N.C. 734, 76 S.E. 2d 159; S. v. Hill, 233 N.C. 61, 62 S.E. 2d 532. In evaluating the action of defendant’s driver and the asserted violation of
Plaintiff, having failed to prove a violation of any of the statutory provisions alleged, has failed to establish defendant’s negligence as a proximate cause of the collision. This renders unnecessary consideration and discussion of the asserted negligence of the driver of plaintiff’s vehicle.
Affirmed.
PARKER, J., concurs in result.
BOBBITT, J., concurs in dissent.
