91 S.E. 604 | N.C. | 1917
1. Was the plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendant Benjamin May, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: "Yes."
2. Did the plaintiff, by his own negligence, contribute to his injury, as alleged in the answer? Answer: "No."
3. What damages, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover? Answer: "$500."
From the judgment rendered, defendant May appealed.
The evidence tends to prove that an automobile (79) owned by the defendant May was being operated by his daughter Mary May, assisted by one Orendorff, a party defendant upon whom no summons has been served. The machine ran into the plaintiff's vehicle, in consequence of which he was seriously injured. The defendant excepted to the issues submitted by the court and tendered other issues which the court refused to submit. The issues submitted are in the usual form in cases of this character and present every contention that is raised by the pleadings. They are similar to those approved by this Court in Clark v. Wright,
The defendant excepts because the court allowed the plaintiff to amend his complaint, contending that the amendment allowed constituted a new cause of action. The original cause of action is that the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of Orendorff and the minor daughter of the defendant May. The amendment alleges that at the time of the injury the defendant Orendorff was in the employ of the codefendant, Benjamin May, for the purpose of instructing and teaching his minor daughter to drive the automobile, and that the said agent or employee, Orendorff, was negligent and reckless in permitting the automobile to run against the buggy of the plaintiff.
We think that this is the same cause of action practically as is set out in the original complaint. The amendment seems to have been unnecessary, and is, therefore, harmless. Upon the facts in evidence, established to the satisfaction of the jury, the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon the cause of action set out in the original complaint.
The defendant moved to nonsuit at the close of the evidence and also asked the court to charge the jury that there is no evidence for the consideration of the jury that the defendant Orendorff was the agent of the defendant May. The motion to nonsuit was properly denied. The evidence introduced for the plaintiff must be taken as true upon this motion, and that offered by the defendant must not be considered. If in any view of the evidence offered for the plaintiff the jury may have reasonably inferred that the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of the defendant's agent, acting within the scope of his duty, then the motion was properly overruled.
There is evidence that the car belonged to the defendant May; that he had purchased it for the use of his family; that he permitted Orendorff to operate the car upon the public streets of Sanford for the purpose of teaching his daughter to run the car. At the time when the injury occurred his daughter was driving the car, after only a few days' experience, and Orendorff had his hand on the wheel. The plaintiff was in his buggy, to which a mule was hitched, resting under the shade of *124 some trees on the right-hand side of Hawkins Avenue, in the center (80) of the town of Sanford. The car of the defendant turned suddenly into Hawkins Avenue from Carthage Street. The plaintiff beckoned to the car and hollered to them to go back, but the signal was not obeyed. The car continued coming directly towards the plaintiff and on the wrong side of the street until it struck the buggy wheel, turned the buggy over, and threw the plaintiff to the ground with great violence, in consequence of which he was painfully and permanently injured.
The evidence tends to prove that Orendorff, an employee of the Cadillac Company, was teaching the defendant's daughter to operate the machine by and with the consent of the defendant; that the defendant had purchased the machine for the use of his family. Taking all the facts offered by the plaintiff to be true, we think the jury may have reasonably inferred that the machine was being operated with the consent of the defendant and that his daughter was being taught to operate it for the convenience of the family, and that the practice in operating the car was being conducted upon the public streets of the town by his daughter with the assistance of Orendorff.
The case, we think, differs very materially from Linville v. Nissen,
No error.
Cited: Patterson v. Lumber Co.,