The first question to be answered is; Did the court err in refusing to allow defendants’ motion to nonsuit?
The evidence viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff is sufficient to establish these facts: The collision occurred in the forenoon of 3 September 1960 at or near a bridge on Eastway Drive in Charlotte. The weather was clear and the road dry. Eastway Drive rims north and south. The maximum permissible speed is 45 m.p.h. Plaintiff was going south. Just before she reached the bridge she saw two cars which had collided in the eastern lane. This collision had stopped
several ears traveling north. The bridge and road north of the bridge were twenty-four feet wide but widened in the western lane south of the
Plaintiff’s evidence is sufficient to permit a jury to find defendants violated three statutes, G.S. 20-141, G.S. 20-146, and G.S. 20-124, each enacted to promote safe operation of motor vehicles on the highways. One who fails to comply with the provisions of these statutes is negligent.
Rudd v.
Stewart,
That the collision occurred in the western lane of travel is not controverted by defendants. Their evidence in that respect corroborates the evidence of plaintiff. The defense and evidence in support thereof is that Bustle, travelng at a lawful rate of speed, 30 to 40 m.p.h., applied his brakes at a proper place and time to prevent a collision with the vehicles which had stopped in the eastern lane of .travel. The collision occurred on Saturday. Defendants’ vehicle had been inspected and the brakes overhauled and relined on the preceding Thursday. No difficulty had been experienced with the brakes since they were inspected and relined. They had worked properly early Saturday morning; but when Bustle, to avoid colliding with the cars ahead of him, pushed the brake pedal, it went completely to the floor. He was traveling downhill. The declivity tended to accelerate his speed. He was impelled to act promptly. A collision with the vehicles ahead of him was inevitable if he remained in his lane of travel. He thought because of the extra width of the highway in the western lane he could avoid the cars in each of the lanes by pulling to his left. He sought as a means of checking his speed to throw the transmission in low gear, but was unable to do so. He actually collided with the back fender of plaintiff’s car, doing negligible injury to it. Immediately following the collision it was discovered that a segment had been broken from the flange of one of the wheels. This permitted the brake fluid to escape without activating the brakes when the pedal was pushed down and rendered the hydraulic brakes totally ineffective.
Defendants except and assign as error portions of the charge relating to the violation of the safety statutes and to the failure of the court to properly instruct the jury with respect to their defense, to wit, an unavoidable accident. Their position is that the failure of the brakes was due to a latent defect unknown and not discoverable by them; and for that reason the failure to equip defendants’ vehicle with adequate brakes was not negligence on which liability for injury could be based.
Plaintiff has shown the violation of a statute, G.S. 20-124, mandatory in its language. Notwithstanding this mandatory language, the statute must be given a reasonable interpretation to promote its intended purpose. The Legislature did not intend
The true rule is, we think, clearly and accurately stated in
Wilson v. Shumate,
Defendants’ evidence, if accepted by -the jury, was sufficient to negative the allegation of operating the tanker without -adequate brakes. Nowhere in the charge did the court so inform the jury. It charged operation without adequate brakes was negligence per se -and concluded its charge on the first issue by instructing the jury that plaintiff was entitled to recover if she had established by the greater weight of the evidence that defendants were guilty of negligence in the operation of the truck “in that they operated same upon the public highways with insufficient brakes (italicized part assigned as error) or operated same without maintaining a proper lookout or operated the same at a high -and dangerous and unreasonable speed under the circumstances then existing, or operated the same without yielding one-half -of the highway to the plaintiff, or operated the same on the wrong side of the highway, or operated the same in a dangerous and reckless manner, or in operating the same failed to use the emergency brake. . .” and that such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.
Defendants contended the failure of the brakes created a sudden emergency excusing their turning from the northbound to the southbound lane of travel. The court properly charged that defendants were not entitled to the -benefit of the sudden emergency doctrine if the situation was occasioned by excessive speed or a failure to keep a proper lookout or by failure to ascertain the defective condition of the brakes by applying them sooner than B-ustle did,
Defendants were, we think, entitled to have the court address itself particularly to the question of the alleged negligence of defendants in operating the vehicle in violation of G.S. 20-124. An unexplained failure of the brakes warranted a finding of negligence, but defendants’ evidence was sufficient to negative the charge of negligence with respect to the brakes. Whether defendants’ evidence was sufficient to overcome the showing made by plaintiff was .a question for the jury. Defendants were entitled to have the court instruct the jury what would excuse the operation of a motor vehicle with defective brakes. Defendants’ assignment of error that the court failed to so charge is well taken, and because of such failure there must be a
New trial.
