199 S.E. 926 | N.C. | 1938
Defendant was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, resulting from negligent operation of an automobile.
From judgment imposing prison sentence, defendant appealed. Defendant's principal assignment of error is based on the denial by the court below of his motion for judgment as of nonsuit.
The evidence tended to show that the deceased, in company with two other men, was standing near a gasoline filling station on the highway near St. Pauls, North Carolina. The highway was forty feet wide and straight. It was after dark and the filling station was lighted, the lights shining out into the road. The three men were "standing in the edge of the drain ditch," or as another witness expressed it, "on the edge of the highway on the slant of the ditch," when, without warning, they were struck by an automobile that went by running very fast, and the deceased was killed and another person standing by him was seriously injured. It was testified that the automobile, after striking the other person and the deceased, ran a total distance of seventy steps in the drain ditch before getting back on the highway. No other vehicle was passing and no other person was on the highway at the time. The lights from the filling station were sufficiently bright to light the road and to reveal the presence of the men on the side of the highway from a distance of forty to one hundred yards. There was evidence that the automobile was being driven on this occasion by the defendant.
Considering this evidence, under the established rule, in the light most favorable to the State, it is apparent that there was sufficient evidence to be submitted to the jury that the death of the deceased proximately resulted from the culpable negligence of the defendant. The clearly observable position of the deceased on the edge of the drain ditch, in the light from the adjacent filling station, at the time he was struck and killed by the speeding automobile, and the unslackened continuance of the automobile with the right wheels in the ditch, without stopping, for a considerable distance, would seem to permit the inference that the automobile was being operated by the defendant recklessly and in willful or wanton disregard of the rights and safety of others, and in a manner likely to endanger the life of the deceased.
In S. v. Rountree,
The exception to the judge's charge cannot be sustained. Considered in its entirety, the charge seems to have stated the applicable rules of law substantially in accord with the decisions of this Court.
In the trial we find
No error.