189 S.E. 179 | N.C. | 1937
This was a civil action to recover damages in the sum of $35.00, alleged to have been negligently caused by the defendant to a hand-knitted boucle dress of the plaintiff.
The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff sent the dress to the defendant, who was engaged in the cleaning business, in Fayetteville, on 1 June, 1936, and the plaintiff testified: "The dress was in good condition and had never been worn. I went for the dress the next day to Mr. Perkins' place in Fayetteville. I first put the dress on in a back room in his place to see if it fitted me. It was dark back there and we came up to the front to a window and large mirror. With Mrs. Perkins I tried the dress on, fitted it, and Mrs. Perkins wrapped it; I paid a dollar and took the dress home. The first time I saw anything wrong with the dress was about a week later at my sister's house in Kinston, North Carolina, after wearing the dress to a party. The dress was wrapped in brown paper and I kept it in the chifforobe drawer. I would say it was about a week before I took the dress out to wear it to the party at my sister's; the next morning I noticed the dress had brown-looking spots on it in front and in the back. . . . It was ruined. I don't know, it was three or four weeks before I next saw Mr. Perkins about it, after I came home from Kinston."
The issues submitted to and answers made by the jury were as follows: *111
"1. Was the plaintiff's dress damaged by the negligence of the defendant? Answer: `Yes.'
"2. If so, what damage, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover? Answer: `$15.00.'"
From judgment based upon the verdict, the defendant appealed, assigning errors.
When the plaintiff had rested her case and at the close of all the evidence the defendant lodged and renewed a motion for judgment as in case of nonsuit. C. S., 567. His Honor denied the motion, announcing at the time that he held that the principle of res ipsa loquitur was applicable. His Honor also instructed the jury that this principle was applicable. The ruling of the court as to the applicability of the principle of res ipsaloquitur is the basis of exceptive assignments of error, which must be sustained.
In speaking to the subject of the principle of res ipsa loquitur, this Court said: "The principle does not apply: (1) When all the facts causing the accident are known and testified to by the witnesses at the trial,Baldwin v. Smitherman,
The motions for judgment as in case of nonsuit should have been allowed, and for that reason the judgment below is
Reversed. *112