Carter Ex Rel. Clap v. City of Greensboro

106 S.E.2d 564, 249 N.C. 328, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 357
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 14, 1959
Docket603
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 106 S.E.2d 564 (Carter Ex Rel. Clap v. City of Greensboro) 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
Carter Ex Rel. Clap v. City of Greensboro, 106 S.E.2d 564, 249 N.C. 328, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 357 (N.C. 1959).

Opinion

HiggiNS, J.

The legal dispute involves the question of law whether the facts in evidence make out a case for the jury. The defendant contends the cause should have been withdrawn from the jury upon either of three grounds: (1) The plaintiff failed to file his claim within the time required by the city charter as a condition precedent to the institution of this action; (2) the defendant is immune from liability for negligence in this case in that the injury occurred incident to the performance of a necessary governmental function; (3) the defendant was the local managing agent for the United States under the terms of the contract and, therefore, any action for tort must be brought in the Federal court which is given exclusive jurisdiction. The defenses interposed do not involve the question of negligence, the character of the injuries, or the amount of the verdict.

I. The evidence discloses the plaintiff was horribly burned on December 2, 1946, under the circumstances alleged in the complaint. He was then three years old, living with his father and mother in one of the rental units. Later the father and mother separated, then were *331 divorced. The plaintiff remained with the mother. She was a witness in the case. It is apparent from her testimony that she was of very limited education. She testified the plaintiff had difficulty in remembering things; that “he can work around the house; he waters and feeds dogs, and he helps in the garden a little.” From the time of the injury until the last day of December he was treated in the hospital at Greensboro and then transferred to Duke Hospital in Durham where he remained until June, 1947. At Duke Hospital he underwent six different skin grafting operations; was given 17 blood transfusions; and submitted to anesthesia 41 times during the course of his treatment. He testified he goes to school, is in the 7th grade, but is crippled and handicapped in his movements. One of his school teachers, called as a witness by the defendant, testified: “He is below average • — ■ a dull, slow student.” He was without guardian. His family consisted of his mother, his stepfather, 'and a sister two years older than he. He remembers very little about the accident, his stay in the hospital, or his return home. So far as the record discloses, he was first advised of his legal rights by Mr. Jordan, now of counsel, who immediatley gave notice and filed his claim. The plaintiff was then twelve.

Ordinarily, the giving of timely notice is a condition precedent to the right to maintain an action, and nonsuit is proper unless the plaintiff alleges and proves notice. Wallace v. Asheville, 208 N.C. 74, 179 S.E. 18; Dayton v. Asheville, 185 N.C. 12, 115 S.E. 827; Pender v. Salisbury, 160 N.C. 363, 76 S.E. 228. However, there is an exception to the rule. The plaintiff may relieve himself from the necessity of giving notice by alleging and proving that at the time notice should have been given he was under such mental or physical disability as rendered it impossible for him by any ordinary means at his command to give notice; and that he actually gave notice within a reasonable time after the disability was removed. Barnett v. Elizabeth City, 222 N.C. 760, 24 S.E. 2d 264; Webster v. Charlotte, 222 N.C. 321, 22 S.E. 2d 900; Foster v. Charlotte, 206 N.C. 528, 174 S.E. 412; Hartsell v. Asheville, 166 N.C. 633, 82 S.E. 946; Terrell v. Washington, 158 N.C. 281, 73 S.E. 888.

In this case the plaintiff, as a part of his cause of action, alleged his failure to file the notice within the time fixed by the defendant’s charter and at the same time he alleged facts which, if true, brought his case within the exception. The evidence offered was sufficient to support the finding the plaintiff, the three-year-old son of one of the distressed tenants, was horribly burned; that he spent more than six months in the hospital, underwent six skin grafting surgical operations, was given 17 blood transfusions, and submitted to anesthesia 41 times. He was without guardian; his mother of limited education, *332 later divorced, and bis father, in parts unknown. Under such circumstances is it not the policy of the law and the duty of judges to guard his rights with j ealous care and to see that the door of the courthouse is not closed to him when he is without fault? The evidence required the court to submit the second issue to the jury. Its answer is conclusive. Failure to give earlier notice cfoes not justify nonsuit.

In order properly to understand the defendant’s second and third grounds for nonsuit, we quote a few pertinent provisions of the contract between the United States (FPHA) and the defendant (the Local Body): “This contract entered into this 21st day of February, 1946, by the United States (FPHA), . . . and the City of Greensboro . . . The FPHA will provide ... 96 family dwelling units ... all of which undertakings . . . shall be at its cost and expense. The local body . . . shall select and provide a site . . . deemed suitable by FPHA. . . . The local body shall prepare a plan of management for the project . . . consisting of standards for . . . adjustment of rents and an estimate of . . . income and expense. . . . The Project Management Plan shall be prepared (by the local body) in accordance with a form prescribed by FPHA . . . and submitted . . . for review and approval. . . . The local body shall manage and operate -the project ... in accordance with the provisions of this contract (including the approved Project Management Plan) and in accordance with such further rules ... as may be deemed appropriate by the local body

The project was made possible by the Act of Congress known as the Lanham Act. The purpose was to furnish temporary low rent housing accommodations for distressed families of servicemen in congested areas. The contract provided that the local body should collect the rent, retain a fixed amount per unit for ground rental, for water, for taxes, for insurance, for management expenses, and to account to the FPHA for any balance. “Notwithstanding any other provisions hereof (contract) . . . any annual deficit, resulting from the operation and management of the project . . .” shall be the sole obligation of the local body. This contract required the local body (Greensboro) to remove the (dwelling accommodations) units two years after the termination of the emergency. "... such disposition and removal . . . shall be at the sole cost ... of the local body and any salvage or proceeds . . . may be retained by the local body.” Under the terms of the contract the city received a substantial sum of money, all of which was charged against and deducted from rents received from the tenants.

The question presented by the defendant’s second .ground for non-suit is whether the defendant acted in its governmental or in its *333 proprietary capacity in carrying out its contract,.with the FPHA. If the city, in operating the housing projectMorlimited class 'of ten-. ants in which it received a substantial ground rental'and other benefits, and the salvage upon removal of the structures, was engaged in one of its governmental' activities, then the motion for nonsuit upon the second ground should have been sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.E.2d 564, 249 N.C. 328, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-ex-rel-clap-v-city-of-greensboro-nc-1959.