166 S.E. 329 | N.C. | 1932
This is an action to recover damages for the death of the plaintiff's intestate, alleged to have been caused by the negligent operation of the defendant's truck. When the plaintiff rested his case the court granted the defendant's motion for nonsuit, and for this reason a statement of the material facts is essential to a presentation of the appellant's exceptions.
The death occurred in the town of Southport, Brunswick County, in an alley the outlet of which is on West Street. At the northwest corner *382 of the intersection of West and Horne streets there is a store which was occupied by C. J. Williamson. Mrs. Southerland lived in a house situated on a part of the Williamson lot and facing on Howe Street. Between her residence and the Williamson store there was an unoccupied space about twenty-five feet in width, and immediately west of these lots is the one on which the deceased lived with his mother and stepfather. There is a twelve-foot alley between this lot and the lots occupied by Williamson and Mrs. Southerland, and in the alley there is an intake valve through which oil is transferred from the tank on the truck to the tank in the store. For four or five years the defendant has periodically delivered oil to Williamson in this way, and for eight or ten years Williamson has used the alley for this purpose. There was no objection to his using it. Mrs. Etherton, mother of the deceased, rented the house in which she lived together with the alley and a garage situated at its north end. She testified that the deceased, Howard Brown, born of her first marriage, would have been four years old in November, 1931, and that he was killed in the proceeding September.
On the morning of the accident he went across the alley to the home of Mrs. Southerland. She gave him a small box, left him in her yard picking up berries under a magnolia tree, and went across the street. A few minutes afterwards a man named Bender, an employee of the defendant, backed a gasoline or oil truck into the alley, suddenly left the truck, and went to the owner of the store and exclaimed, "Come here, I have killed a child." The body was found about three feet from the sidewalk and about the same distance from the store. Blood was on the sand; nearby was the box. There were bruises on the child's body and his nose was bleeding. The cause of his death was a fracture of the skull.
The plaintiff charges as the principal acts of negligence the defendant's failure (1) to give reasonable warning when backing the truck into the alley, (2) to keep a proper lookout, (3) to keep the mirror in the truck in repair, and (4) to drive instead of backing the truck into the alley.
Negligence is the breach of a legal duty to use due care. The essential elements of actionable negligence are the failure to exercise such care, injury or damage, and proximate cause. If there is sufficient proof of all these elements there is error in the judgment; if the evidence fails to establish either one of them the judgment must be affirmed. Whether there is enough evidence to support a material issue is a matter of law; and in passing upon the question of its sufficiency we must give the plaintiff the benefit of the most favorable interpretation of the evidence and of every reasonable inference. Hancock v. Southgate,
Mrs. Etherton testified that she kept her car in the garage at the end of the alley, and Williamson said that backing the truck into the alley was the usual mode of delivering oil and "had been going on for eight or ten years." The plaintiff argues that a jury might reasonably infer that the defendant's employee knew the alley was frequently used by Williamson and by the owner or the lessee of the property; that the driver gave no signal either before or at the time he entered the alley; that it was his duty to look to the rear not only before he began backing but while he was engaged in the act; that the truck was so large and the mirror so defective that the driver could not see the child; and that the evidence would justify a finding of negligence.
The defendant denies that he was negligent and says that the utmost care could not have averted the injury, as there is no evidence that the deceased was in the alley even a moment before the accident occurred.
No one saw the deceased in the alley at any time before the impact. How long he had been there no one knows. There is no evidence he was there when the truck began to move backward. When last seen alone he was on the Southerland lot. When did he leave the magnolia tree? Had he been in the alley long enough for the driver to see him and avert the injury or did he at the fatal moment rush into the alley immediately in front of the advancing truck? The witnesses do not inform us, and at this point the plaintiff's case fails him. In the absence of evidence we cannot conclude that the deceased went into the alley at any particular time. Negligence is not presumed from the mere fact that he was killed; something more is required. The plaintiff had the burden of establishing the proximate causal relation of the alleged negligence to the injury and death, and in his search for it he is led into the uncertain realm of conjecture. Henry v. R.R., ante, 277; Austin v. R. R.,
Affirmed.