Austin v. Austin

113 S.E.2d 553, 252 N.C. 283, 1960 N.C. LEXIS 555
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 6, 1960
Docket246
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 S.E.2d 553 (Austin v. Austin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Austin, 113 S.E.2d 553, 252 N.C. 283, 1960 N.C. LEXIS 555 (N.C. 1960).

Opinion

Higgins, J.

On the trial the plaintiff offered the adverse examination of the defendant. The following is his story in material substance: At the time of the accident, August 7, 1957, the defendant was a Staff Sergeant in the Marine Corps, stationed at Corps Headquarters, Washington, D. C. During “off hours” for five or six days each week for about two years he worked at a filling station, servicing automobiles. “My work in that filling station included putting brake fluid in cars from time to time; . . . My work did not include looking at the pipes that lead from the master cylinder to see if there might be leaks in the pipe. . . .1 did know that wheel cylinders would leak. I did know that leaky wheel cylinders is one reason why the fluid level gets low in the master cylinder.”

Two days before the trip to North Carolina, “I was working in the station . . . when it (the car) was gassed and put in shape for the trip to North Carolina. I checked the water . . . The mechanic checked the brakes.” The vehicle was a 1951 Oldsmobile, equipped with hydraulic brakes. The defendant, speaking of hydraulic brakes, said: “It is a system in which the fluid that you put in the master cylinder is supposed to last for an indefinite time.” The defendant had owned the Olds for about four months, having bought it secondhand.

In describing the trip to North Carolina, the defendant said: “We came through Danville on the way down. At or near Danville, I noticed my brake pedal was down. I mean when you put your foot on the brake pedal it would go down farther than it should . . . When I noticed the brake pedal was soft or going down, I stopped in a ser *285 vice station in Danville and had the brake fluid checked. I did not have any other part of the car checked except the fluid in the master cylinder. I had the brake fluid checked because the brakes were low and naturally it came to my mind it would be low on brake fluid. When a car runs out of brake fluid, to the best of my knowledge, the brakes go out. I did not examine any of the pipes or linkage between the brake pedal and the wheels when I stopped at Danville. I had never had brake fluid put in the car before that day. . . .This was the first time the brake pedal had gotten soft on me. I do not recall whether it was getting a little worse as I drove along. I did not make any inquiry of the mechanic at Danville or the filling station attendant as to why he thought the brake fluid was low.”

“After I added brake fluid in Danville ... I checked my brakes a time or two to see how they were operating. . . .They operated all right after we left the filling station.”

The defendant drove from Danville to the home of his brother, Leonard Austin, near Salisbury. The defendant’s wife and his one-year-old daughter made the trip with him. At the brother’s home the two families decided to go to Charlotte. In order that the brothers might be together, it was agreed they would ride in Leonard’s Chevrolet and that their wives and the little daughter and little son would ride in the defendant’s Oldsmobile; and that Marcia Hess Austin would do the driving. The defendant made no disclosure to Marcia Hess Austin of the condition of his brakes or the trouble he had had with them. The trip to Charlotte was begun within less than five hours from the time brake fluid was added in Danville.

On the way to Charlotte, Leonard Austin and the defendant were in front. Both cars were proceeding south on the Rimertown Road. At a point where this road made a T intersection into the east and west Gold Hill Road, the men stopped. The approach to the intersection on the Rimertown Road is down-grade. On the south side of the Gold Hill Road, at the top of the T, there is a bank eight or ten feet high. As Marcia Hess Austin approached the intersection the automobile failed to reduce speed and crashed into the south bank of the Gold Hill Road. As she approached the intersection, she exclaimed, “The brakes are gone.” In the accident Mrs. Austin was killed. The son suffered injuries from which he died two or three days later. Examination of the vehicle after the accident disclosed the master cylinder was empty. “The right rear wheel had been saturated with brake fluid, that is, the tire and inner tube,” were wet. There was also evidence of partially dried brake fluid on the outside of the wheels.

*286 Joseph P. Clark testified as an expert witness. He had spent two years in technical training study in the General Motors Institute at Flint, Michigan. He testified: “The brake system which the 1951 Olds 98 had ... is the same on all hydraulic brakes consisting of a master cylinder . . . three flexible tubes and four wheel cylinders . . . there is a small piston or . . •. actuating levers, and rubber synthetic tubes or rubber cups. It is assembled as a system which should have no air in it, it should be free from leakage at all times. . . .The principle of liquid hydraulics which makes it possible for pressure in the master cylinder to operate a lever in the wheel, . . . the pressure of all four wheels is equal; . . . the result if a hole develops in that system is the fluid will be squirted out under pressure. . . .you apply the brake until it went to the floor and you would have no brake . . . the presence of brake fluid outside of this system indicates ... a leak in the system somewhere. If thereafter the brake fluid is replenished in the reservoir of the master cylinder, . . . The addition of the fluid would have the temporary effect to build up your brake as long as it had fluid in it. . . .If you have got a leak every time the brake is applied pressure is exerted in the system, there is going to be a loss of either minor or major part of the fluid in the system.”

There was evidence the distance from Danville to Salisbury is about 100 miles. From the plaintiff’s home to the scene of the accident is about five miles. The evidence does not disclose whether Mrs. Austin had occasion to apply the brakes prior to the approach to the intersection. At that time they were gone. It is not improbable, therefore, the defendant delivered to Mrs. Austin a vehicle totally without brakes.

The question is: Did the defendant breach his duty to the intes-tates of the plaintiff by delivering to Mrs. Austin an automobile when he knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have known, the brakes were defective and operation was dangerous? The defendant, while not a mechanic, had worked during “off-hours” for two years as an attendant at a filling station. On occasion he serviced automobiles by putting brake fluid in the master cylinder. Two days before the trip to North Carolina he had the brakes adjusted by a mechanic. “At or near Danville I noticed my break pedal was down. . . .When I noticed that the brake pedal was soft or going down I stopped in a service station in Danville and had brake fluid checked. I did not have any other part of the car checked ... I had the brake fluid checked because the brakes were low and naturally it came to my mind it would be low on brake fluid. . . .When a car runs out of brake fluid, to the best of my knowledge the brakes go out. . . .1 did not ex *287 amine any other pipe or linkage between the brake pedal and the wheels when I stopped in Danville.” Not once, either in Danville or Salisbury, or between these towns, did the defendant have the fluid lines examined.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wiggins v. Paramount Motor Sales, Inc.
365 S.E.2d 192 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1988)
Stilley v. Automobile Enterprises of High Point, Inc.
284 S.E.2d 684 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1981)
Anderson v. Robinson
174 S.E.2d 45 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1970)
Wilcox v. Glover Motors, Inc.
153 S.E.2d 76 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1967)
Gibbs v. Gaimel
127 S.E.2d 271 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1962)
Wilson v. Bright
121 S.E.2d 601 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1961)
Drum v. Bisaner
113 S.E.2d 560 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.E.2d 553, 252 N.C. 283, 1960 N.C. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-austin-nc-1960.