177 S.E. 796 | N.C. | 1935
The minor plaintiff, by his next friend, instituted an action for personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted upon him by the negligence of the servant of the defendant company. The father of the minor plaintiff instituted suit to recover for the loss of services of his son. The two cases were consolidated for the purposes of trial.
Construing the evidence most favorably to the plaintiffs, it appears that the defendant's servant was driving a truck loaded with ice in the business of his master. The driver, overtaking the minor plaintiff, a lad seven years old, on the highway, called to him and asked him if he wanted to ride, and the plaintiff replied that he did. Whereupon, the driver applied the brakes of the truck, which slowed down but went beyond the plaintiff before stopping. As it slowed down and went past him the plaintiff jumped on the moving truck, catching hold of the door, and, as he did so, fell or was thrown from the truck and injured. The brakes of the car were defective, and the car went some fifteen feet before stopping after the boy had fallen.
Persons are held liable by the law for the consequences of their acts, which they can and should foresee, and by reasonable care and prudence guard against. The act of the minor plaintiff in jumping upon and falling from the moving car was not such as the defendant in the exercise of due care could have reasonably foreseen, and to make such a requirement of it would, in the language of Brogden, J., in Gant v. Gant,
Affirmed. *547