Blake v. Mallard

136 S.E.2d 214, 262 N.C. 62, 1964 N.C. LEXIS 596
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 20, 1964
Docket185
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 136 S.E.2d 214 (Blake v. Mallard) 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
Blake v. Mallard, 136 S.E.2d 214, 262 N.C. 62, 1964 N.C. LEXIS 596 (N.C. 1964).

Opinion

ShaRp, J.

Plaintiff, a pedestrian, was injured about 10:00 p.m. on May 28, 1962 when she was struck by the defendant’s automobile as she attempted to cross U. S. Highway No. 117 from east to west near the northern limits of the Town of Wallace. She appeals from the judgment of nonsuit entered at the close of her evidence which tended to show these facts:

U. S. 117 runs generally north and south through Wallace. At the place where plaintiff was struck the highway is straight for a mile in both directions. It is sixty-six feet wide from curb to curb and consists of six lanes. A center line separates two lanes for traffic in each direction with an additional lane on each side for parking. The area is a thirty-five mile per hour speed zone and is without street lights. A dirt street, known as the Labor Camp Road, intersects U. S. 117 from the west. Fifty feet north of its northern margin, an unnamed dirt street enters U. S. 117 from the east. Each street forms a T intersection where it meets the highway. Fifteen feet north of the unnamed street on the east side of the highway is the Nightingale Clubhouse, also known as Cary’s Place.

Plaintiff, a sixty-five year old colored woman wearing dark clothing, left the clubhouse with a nineteen year old girl named Queen Ella James. They stood near the highway in front of the clubhouse and talked for a while before plaintiff left Queen Ella and started across the highway “walking normally” towards the Labor Camp Road. At that *64 time Queen Ella observed the defendant’s automobile approaching from the north about two hundred yards away at a speed which she estimated at sixty miles per hour. Plaintiff testified that while she was crossing she “observed the traffic on the highway on the right and left.” She also said, “I saw a car coming pretty fast, and I started to run. . . . When I first observed it, I reckon it was 45 feet from me.” Plaintiff did not fix her location in the highway at that time but, according to Queen Ella, she started to run when she was in the fourth lane for traffic. Both the investigating officer and Queen Ella testified that plaintiff was hit approximately thirty-five feet north of the Labor Camp Road in the fourth traffic lane (outside lane for traffic going south) at the edge of the parking lane. Queen Ella said that she “did not go flying through the air when she got hit. She didn’t get knocked too far . . . (she imagined) about 4 or 5 feet.” When' the investigating officer arrived at the scene at 10:10 p.m. he found plaintiff in the street about twenty feet north of the northern margin of the Labor Camp Road. Her right 1% was broken'; she was' wildly hysterical and unable to talk. Upon an examination of defendant’s automobile, the officer found a slight dent '"near' the headlight in its right front fender, and a brush mark'on the'right' bumper. The night was clear and defendant’s car was equipped with headlights which Were' burning at the time of the accident. Both plaintiff and Queen Ella testified that defendant never sounded his horn, slackened his speed, nor turned his car until he struck plaintiff.

Plaintiff alleges that her injuries were proximately caused by defendant’s negligence in that he operated his automobile at an illegal rate of speed, without keeping it under proper control, without keeping a proper lookout, and in that he failed to sound his horn or turn from his line of travel to avoid striking her as. she attempted to cross the highway at a 'pedestrian crosswalk. Defendant denied any negligence on his part and, in the alternative, pled the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. He alleged that plaintiff, dressed in dark clothing, was standing in the center of the highway as he approached; that without any warning she suddenly darted into his lane of travel at a time and in a manner which made it impossible for him to avoid striking her.

The only question raised by this appeal is whether the court below erred in granting defendant’s motion for nonsuit. If it be assumed that plaintiff’s evidence makes out a prima facie case of actionable negligence against the defendant, the crucial question remains: Does plaintiff’s evidence establish her own contributory negligence as a matter of law-? ■ •

*65 The record does not disclose the width of the unnamed dirt street which intersects U. S. 117, but since plaintiff began her trip across the highway from the Nightingale Clubhouse she must have started at least seventy-five feet north of the northern edge of the Labor Camp Road. She was struck twenty feet north of it near the western margin of the highway. Obviously, plaintiff was crossing the highway diagonally in a southwesterly direction and not at a crosswalk as she alleged. She was, therefore, required to yield the right of way to all vehicles upon the roadway. G.S. 20-174(a). Had she crossed in the vicinity of the Nightingale where the unnamed dirt street joined the highway she would have had the right of way over a motorist approaching that intersection, G.S. 20-173(a), but this she did not do.

The failure of a pedestrian crossing a roadway at a point other than a crosswalk to yield the right of way to a motor vehicle is not contributory negligence per se; it is only evidence of negligence. Landini v. Steelman, 243 N.C. 146, 90 S.E. 2d 377. However, the court will nonsuit a plaintiff-pedestrian on the ground of contributory negligence when all the evidence so clearly establishes his failure to yield the right of way as one of the proximate causes of his injuries that no other reasonable conclusion is possible. Gamble v. Sears, 252 N.C. 706, 114 S.E. 2d 677; Barbee v. Perry, 246 N.C. 538, 98 S.E. 2d 794; Garmon v. Thomas, 241 N.C. 412, 85 S.E. 2d. 589; Tysinger v. Dairy Products, 225 N.C. 717, 36 S.E. 2d 246.

The law imposes upon a person sui juris the duty to use ordinary care to protect himself from injury. It was plaintiff’s duty to look for approaching traffic before she attempted to cross the highway. Having started, it was her duty to keep a lookout for it as she crossed. Rosser v. Smith, 260 N.C. 647, 133 S.E. 2d 499. Having chosen to walk diagonally across a six-lane highway, vigilance commensurate with the danger to which plaintiff had exposed herself was required of her. According to plaintiff’s evidence, defendant was two hundred yards away, approaching at a speed of sixty miles per hour when she started “walking normally” into his path on a southwesterly course. It behooved her to keep his approaching vehicle under constant surveillance. Instead, she continued into the path of an automobile which had been approaching on a thoroughfare, straight for a mile in the direction from which it came. Apparently she paid it no heed until she entered its lane of travel when it was only forty-five feet away. Had defendant been going twenty miles per hour when plaintiff stepped into his path, he could not have stopped in time to avoid the accident. Plaintiff by simply standing still in the inside lane could have done so.

Plaintiff is an adult woman. So far as this record discloses she was under no disability, and there was nothing to put defendant on notice *66 that she was oblivious to his approach or that she would fail to stop and yield him the right of way.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.E.2d 214, 262 N.C. 62, 1964 N.C. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-mallard-nc-1964.