8 S.E.2d 833 | N.C. | 1940
This was an action for damages for personal injury alleged to have been caused by the negligent operation of a taxicab by the defendants.
There was evidence that the speed with which defendants' taxicab was being operated at the time was a material element of the negligence alleged. In his instructions to the jury, the trial judge, after reading the several statutes regulating the operation of motor vehicles, including those relating to speed, charged the jury as follows: "Now, gentlemen of the jury, the violation of a criminal statute such as the court has read to you, is negligence per se." Defendants noted exception to this instruction.
Verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff, and from judgment predicated thereon, defendant appealed. The appellants' principal assignment of error related to the charge of the court below wherein the jury was instructed that the violation of a criminal statute "such as the court has read to you" was negligence per se. The court had just read to the jury the speed regulations prescribed by ch. 407, Public Laws 1937, the statute in force at the time of the injury complained of. Exceeding the speed limits mentioned in that act, however, is not made a substantive criminal offense but constitute merely "primafacie evidence that the speed is not reasonable or prudent and that it is unlawful."
While it has been uniformly held by this Court that the violation of a statute imposing a rule of conduct in the operation of a motor vehicle *561
and enacted in the interest of safety constitutes negligence per se and becomes actionable upon proof of injury proximately resulting therefrom (Holland v. Strader,
Instructions to juries couched in language similar to that excepted to here have been held erroneous and new trials awarded in several recent cases. Morris v. Johnson,
The fact that the court properly charged as to proximate cause did not remove the injurious effect of the instruction quoted. Templeton v. Kelley,
New trial.