Carrigan v. Dover

110 S.E.2d 825, 251 N.C. 97, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 534
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 4, 1959
Docket255
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 110 S.E.2d 825 (Carrigan v. Dover) 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
Carrigan v. Dover, 110 S.E.2d 825, 251 N.C. 97, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 534 (N.C. 1959).

Opinion

■Parker,. J.-.

Plaintiff -and defendants offered evidence. Defendants assign, as error the denial by the trial court of their motion for. judgment of nonsuit made at the close-of all -the evidence. Defendants’ contention in their brief on this assignment of error is that plaintiff was guilty of. contributory negligence as a matter of-law. v Plaintiff !s evidence shows the following facts:

' About 3:00 -a.m. on 26 January 1958 plaintiff was driving -a 1956 Ford automobile, which was in good operating condition, in a northerly direction along Independence Boulevard in the city of Charlotte. It was a dark might, the.weather was dry, and there was no moon. Independence Boulevard is a paved highway about 60 feet wide with three lanes for traffic going north and three lanes for traffic going south; On this occasion there was a black or white line — the evidence differs, as to the color of the. line — on the middle of the Boulevard separating the north lanes from, the south lanes.

*99 The collision in which plaintiff was injured occurred on Independence Boulevard between the intersection of Elizabeth Street and..Independence Boulevard and the intersection of Fifth Street • and. .Independence Boulevard. The distance between these two intersections is 385 feet. The parties stipulated in open court that the legal speed limit at the time and place where the collision occurred was 3.5: .miles an hour. ' '

When plaintiff reached the intersection of Elizabeth Street1 land Independence Boulevard, he was driving between 20 and 30 miles an hour in the lane of travel next to the white or black line in' the middle of Independence Boulevard. Just before-he'drove across - the -inter-' section, he -saw an automobile about 50 feet ahead travelling on Independence Boulevard in the same direction he -was going and at a -slightly lower speed than he was. About 220 feet from the 'intersection plaintiff had just passed through, Independence Boulevard'makes a slight turn to the left. When the automobile- in front approached thiá slight turn, -it gave a signal by blinker for making a left turn. Whére4 upon, plaintiff proceeded to change lanes by moving from- the' -lañé he was driving in to the center -lane. Plaintiff testified: “Just ás I got into the center lane, this big, -dark object appeared'in front of me. :I estimate it was -sitting out three feet into the center lane. The background for that object was a vacant' house.'There was ho light in there. The darkness blended together. By that time I was, I guessj twenty-five feet from the truck, and I had no time to apply my brakes or turn. I attempted to take my foot off, but I was On it and run into the right side, the right -side of my car side-swiped the truck. . . . The tractor-trailer -or a part of it was sitting in the middle lane of the three northbound lanes ... I was approximately around forty feet I estimate from the tractor-trailer when I changed lanes. I did not -see it at 'the moment I started to change lanes. The house that. I stated a minute ago was beyond the tractor-trailer i-s right, you can see it behind the sign there, the Toddle House sign. 1-t is a vacant house and.is. still there. It was dark on this occasion. The tractor-trailer on this occasion was a dark color. The tractor-trailer had no lights burning on it. There were no other warning, signals such -as flares out "-there. There was -a street light on the corner. The street light in the picture is at Fifth Street, and there is one on Independence Boulevard.-It did not make an area of broad daylight.”-The-Ford automobile was demolished, plaintiff was knocked unconscious,., and injured. .

The automobile plaintiff was following was between him-and the tractor-trailer, .when it signalled for -a left turn. The front' Automobile *100 partially kept plaintiff from seeing the tractor-trailer. He did not see the tractor-trailer, when he started to change lanes.

Plaintiff’s testimony on cross-examination was to this effect. The automobile in front of him was about five feet high. There were street lights along the Boulevard. The Toddle House was open the night of the collision. They have lights inside the Toddle House. A sign in front of the Toddle House says “Toddle House.” He did not recall whether this sign was burning at the time: this sign is not designed to put out light. There was a sign that said “No Parking, Stopping or Standing” where the tractor-trailer was parked. He was 35 feet from the tractor-trailer when he saw it. From the time he saw it until the collision there was such a short time he was unable to do anything. He tried to turn, and did not make it.

T. H. Cooper, a police officer of Charlotte and witness for plaintiff, arrived at the scene shortly after the collision, about 3:18 a.m. When he arrived, the rear end of the tractor-trailer was from two to three feet from the curb, the front end just slightly a few inches closer than the rear wheels, and twelve to eighteen inches of the tractor-trailer was in the middle lane for traffic. Cooper testified: “On the east side of Independence Boulevard for northbound traffic there is no parking. I do not know the complete wording of the signs at the Toddle House at the time of the accident, but there was a no parking sign there . . . there was no parking at that time.” Cooper testified on cross-examination to the effect that at the time Independence Boulevard was better lighted than other Charlotte streets.

Defendant Dover was driver of the tractor-trailer. Defendant Yount was the owner of the tractor-trailer. Defendants in their joint answer admit that at the time and place defendant Dover was an agent of defendant Yount, and was operating the tractor-trailer at the time with the knowledge, permission and consent of Yount, and within the scope of his employment and in furtherance of his employer’s business.

Plaintiff pleaded and introduced in evidence the following two ordinances of the city of Charlotte:

“STOPPING, STANDING, AND PARKING Section 28. PARKING PROHIBITED ON ANY STREETS WHEN SIGNS POSTED.
(a) When signs prohibiting parking are erected on any streets no person shall park a vehicle in any such designated place. “Section 36. STANDING OR PARKING CLOSE TO CURB. No person shall stand or park a vehicle in a roadway other than parallel with the edge of the roadway, headed in the direction of *101 traffic, and with the curb side wheels of the vehicle within 12 inches of the edge of the roadway. . . .”

B. A. Corbett, Jr., an employee of the Traffic Engineering Department of the city of Charlotte and a witness for the defendants, testified 1: “In January 1958, on the east side of Independence Boulevard there were four ‘No Parking, Stopping or Standing’ signs, there were four of them placed along the east side between Elizabeth and Fifth Streets.” He testified on cross-examination in respect to these four signs: “These signs were put up by my department, the Traffic Engineering Department. That is, by the city of Charlotte pursuant to the ordinances.”

Defendant Dover testified on direct examination: “The back of the trailer measured approximately eleven feet four inches from the ground. . . . When I stopped, the tractor was just north of the Toddle House, and I suppose the trailer was in the vicinity of the door of the Toddle House.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.E.2d 825, 251 N.C. 97, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carrigan-v-dover-nc-1959.