Appeal of the Defendant, QueeN City Coach Company.
This defendant seriously contends that its motion for judgments as of nonsuit on the cross-actions of tbe Burke Transit Company, for contribution under G.S. 1-240, should have been allowed.
After the Queen City Coach Company was made a party defendant, the plaintiffs did not amend their pleadings and allege this defendant was also negligent and that such negligence concurred with the negligence of the Burke Transit Company, in causing the injuries and damages sustained by them. Therefore, the burden was upon the codefendant, Burke Transit Company, in its cross-actions against the Queen City Coach Company, to show by the greater weight of the evidence that the Queen City Coach Company was negligent, and that such negligence concurred with its own negligence, if any, which joint and concurrent negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries and damages sustained by the plaintiffs. Consequently, we must consider the evidence on this issue in the light most favorable to the Burke Transit Company, and such company is entitled to the benefit of every reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom.
Buckner v. Wheeldon.
The evidence tends to show that the plaintiff, Kenaldo Pascal, was driving his car 35 or 40 miles an hour in an easterly direction on Highway No. 70, east of Morganton, about 10:15 o’clock at night, and a bus of the Queen City Coach Company, being operated in a westerly direction had stopped to discharge a passenger. The bus of the Burke Transit Company was also proceeding in a westerly direction.
The driver of the Burke Transit Company’s bus testified : He was proceeding west and observed a car coming east which dimmed its lights and he also dimmed his lights. Visibility was very poor, it was “misting rain and kind of foggy, you couldn’t see very far ahead . . . and all of a sudden I saw the Queen City bus in front of me ... I saw no lights at all on the bus. I saw the bus from the lights of my bus. The Queen City bus was standing at a dead still wdien I observed it. ... I applied my brakes. My bus skidded then . . . just a short distance across the black line . . . this on-coming car was there before I had a chance to cut it back to the right and I was right at the bus just as I skidded and caught the left corner of it (the Pascal car). They were pretty bright lights on the approaching car ... To a certain extent on a wet highway that way they . . . did interfere with my seeing. . . . By the time the accident occurred I would say I was anywhere from six to eight feet from the Queen City bus. As I was getting out of my bus, the driver pulled off the highway ... I would say he pulled up ahead of me 60 or 70 feet and he had about 2 feet of his bus still on the highway. ... There was a shoulder there of 6 feet to his right. It was level. . . . The rear of the bus had . . . three or four of these small amber lights up on top. . . . I never saw those lights before the wreck happened, but after I got out of my bus and went out there those lights were burning after the wreck happened. Q. Was there a tail light burning at that time? A. No, sir. Q. Did you have any warning or notice that a bus was standing on the highway in front of you before you were in a short distance of it ? A. No. ... I was paying strict attention to the road. I did not see any lights on the Queen City bus.”
Bay W. Benfield, a witness for the plaintiffs, testified: “I was a passenger in the Burke Transit bus, seated close to the front on the driver’s side; I was looking out of the front of the bus, that is the windshield, and saw the car coming away off; I did not see the Queen City bus although at the time I was looking out of the front windshield; the first I knew the Queen City bus was in front of us, was hearing the driver, Mr- Puckett, say, ‘Oh Lord, there is a bus.’ . . . Mr. Puckett then hit the brakes and the bus sort of skidded or slid into the on-coming car; Mr. Puckett *440 never did turn to tlie left to pass the Queen City bus before the crash; I know he dimmed his lights for the on-coming car. I did not see the Queen City bus and was looking into the windshield, and it was clear; it was drizzling rain and sort of misting rain and the Queen City had only several dim lights at the top of the bus.”
A witness for the Burke Transit Company testified: “I went to the scene of this accident on the evening of February 19, 1947. I went with the Sheriff. I observed the Queen City bus when I got there. The headlights were burning, they were on. I looked to see if the tail lights were burning. The tail light was not on. There were lights on the rear of the bus. They were across the top of the bus. The lights were on the red order, but I would not say they were bright red, I would say they were close to 10 feet high.”
Other evidence also tends to show that the bus of the Queen City Coach Company, at the time of the collision, did not have a red light burning on the rear thereof, as required by G.S. 20-129 (d).
The factual situation here is somevdiat similar to that in the case of
Barlow v. Bus Lines, ante,
382, 49 S. E. (2) 793, in that- the record also contains evidence less favorable to the right of the Burke Transit Company to maintain its cross-actions against its codefendant than that set out herein, but a motion for nonsuit should not be allorved when diverse inferences may reasonably be drawn from the evidence and the controlling and pertinent facts are in dispute. The weight and credibility to be given to evidence is for the jury and not for the court on motion for nonsuit.
Barlow v. Bus Lines,
supra;
Page v. McLamb,
The evidence seems to be sufficient to carry the cross-actions to the jury, and we so hold under the authority of
Barlow v. Bus Lines, supra; Cummins v. Fruit Co.,
This defendant also excepts and assigns as error the failure of his Honor to charge the jury that an unemancipated minor is not entitled to recover for loss of time or diminished earning capacity during his minority, citing
Gillis v. Transit Corp.,
We concede the general rule to be under our decisions, that an uneman-cipated minor is not entitled to recover as an element of damages in an action for personal injuries, for loss of time and diminished earning capacity during
minority, Shipp v. Stage Lines, supra,
but the father of a minor may waive the right to recover for such loss and permit him to recover for his entire injury, including loss of wages and diminished earning capacity during minority. Although one who conducts a suit as the guardian or next friend of an infant is not a party of record, but the infant is the real party plaintiff,
Rabil v. Farris,
It is likewise said in 39 Am. Jur., Sec. 83, p. 728: “Even where the parent has not emancipated the child prior to the injury, he may thereafter waive or relinquish in favor of the child his right to the latter’s services, so as to permit the child to recover their value as part of his damages. In such a case, the child is entitled to recover the full amount to which both he and his parent would have been entitled if separate suits had been brought, and the parent is estopped from afterwards bringing any action in his own right.” It is further stated therein, that where a parent brings an action as next friend to recover for injuries to his child, and “the parent claims damages for loss of time, diminished earning capacity, medical expenses, etc., he cannot make any claim for such items *442 in a subsequent action brought in his own right, but rather, they are to be recovered by the child in the first action only.”
Where a suit is brought on behalf of a minor, it is a simple matter to limit the recovery in the pleadings or by special prayer for instructions, to such loss of wages and diminished earning capacity as the minor may suffer after he attains his majority. But where the action is brought by the father as next friend and no limitation on the minor’s right to recover is pleaded and no request is made for such limitation during the trial of the case, and the charge of the court is sufficient to include compensation for all injuries and damages sustained from and after the date of the injury, the father will be deemed to have waived his claims for loss of services and diminished earning capacity of the child during minority, in favor of such child.
Gaff v. Hubbard,
This assignment of error is not sustained.
The court below entered joint and several judgments in favor of the respective plaintiffs against both defendants. The Queen City Coach Company excepted to the form of the judgment. The exception is well taken. The plaintiffs herein seek no affirmative relief from this defendant. The only relief sought against the Queen City Coach Company is the claim for contribution, as provided in G.S. 1-240, and set out in the cross-actions of the Burke Transit Company.
Wilson v. Massagee,
We have carefully considered the additional exceptions and assignments of error brought forward by this defendant, and they present no prejudicial error.
Except as modified herein, the result below will be upheld.
Appeal of the Defendant, Bueke Tkansit Company.
The defendant excepts and assigns as error the following portion of his Honor’s charge: “The Court charges you that if the plaintiff is entitled to recover at all . . . he is entitled to recover as damages one compensation in a lump sum, for all injuries past and prospective in consequence of the wrongful and negligent acts complained of. These, Gentlemen of the Jury, are understood to embrace indemnity for actual nursing and medical expenses and loss of time, or loss from inability to perform ordinary labor or the capacity to earn money. The plaintiff is to have a reasonable satisfaction, if he be entitled to recover at all, for the loss of both bodily and mental powers or for actual suffering, both of body and mind, which are the immediate and necessary consequences of the injuries, *443 and it is for you, the jury, to say under all the circumstances what is a fair and reasonable sum which should be paid to the plaintiff by way of compensation for the injuries sustained. The age and occupation of the injured party, the nature and extent of his business, the value of his services, the amount he was earning from his business, or realized from fixed wages at the time of the injury, or whether he was employed at a fixed salary or as a professional man, are matters properly to be considered. The sum fixed by the jury should be such as fairly compensates the plaintiff for the injuries suffered in the past and those likely to occur in the future. The award is (to be) made on the basis of a cash settlement of the plaintiff’s injuries, past, present and prospective.”
The above charge is in every essential particular the charge on damages laid down as a proper one, in the case of
Ledford v. Lumber Co.,
This defendant is relying on those decisions where new trials were granted for failure to limit the recovery for prospective loss to the present worth of such loss, among them being
Daughtry v. Cline,
The other assignments of error have been carefully examined and they present no prejudicial error.
On the appeal of the Queen City Coach Company, modified and affirmed.
On the appeal of the Burke Transit Company, no error.
