Drumwright v. Wood

146 S.E.2d 1, 266 N.C. 198, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1312
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 14, 1966
Docket851
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 146 S.E.2d 1 (Drumwright v. Wood) 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
Drumwright v. Wood, 146 S.E.2d 1, 266 N.C. 198, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1312 (N.C. 1966).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

In the record defendant has 16 assignments of error. However, he has brought forward and discussed in his brief one assignment of error, and that is to the denial of his motion for judgment of compulsory nonsuit made at the close of plaintiff’s case, and to a renewal of a similar motion when he said he had no evidence to offer. Defendant in his brief states he “has elected to rely upon the nonsuit motions for purposes of this appeal.” Rule 28, Rules of Practice in the Supreme Court, 254 N.C. 810, provides: “Exceptions in the record not set out in appellant’s brief, or in support of which no reason or argument is stated or authority cited, will be taken as abandoned by him.”

Plaintiff’s evidence, considered in the light most favorable to her, shows the following facts:

On 29 February 1964 plaintiff and defendant’s intestate Zeb Vance Coley were married to each other. Since the death of Zeb Vance Coley, plaintiff has remarried. On this date Zeb Vance Coley owned a 1955 Chevrolet station wagon. Plaintiff did not know how *200 to drive an automobile. Several witnesses testified that they had known her for a number of years and had never seen her drive an automobile. About 9 p.m. on 29 February 1964 Zeb Vance Coley driving his Chevrolet station wagon arrived at James Floyd Allen’s store, which is 10 miles from Highway #54 and 16 miles from the town of Graham. Plaintiff was riding with him as a passenger on the front seat. They bought some groceries and gas, stayed 10 to 15 minutes, and Zeb Vance Coley drove away. About 9:15 or 9:20 p.m. on the same night Zeb Vance Coley, with plaintiff as a passenger, driving his automobile arrived at the home of Eldridge McDaniel, which is situate three-fourths of a mile east from the intersection of Highway #54 with Phillips Chapel Road. Zeb Vance Coley came from the direction of the town of Graham. About 5 or 10 minutes after 11 p.m. Zeb Vance Coley, with plaintiff as a passenger, drove his automobile away from Eldridge McDaniel’s home, and when he reached the Highway #54, he turned and proceeded on the highway in the direction of Phillips Chapel Road. Shortly after they left, Eldridge McDaniel got his automobile to carry Lawrence Daniel O’Neal and his wife, who were at his home, to their home. McDaniel, with the O’Neals as passengers, drove his automobile on Highway #54 to the entrance of Phillips Chapel Road, then proceeded south on Phillips Chapel Road, and about 11:35 p.m. they saw the Chevrolet station wagon of Zeb Vance Coley off Phillips Chapel Road down an embankment. They did not stop.

On 29 February 1964 Earl Michael Thompson and his wife were living in a house trailer situate about 150 to 200 feet north of Phillips Chapel Road, and about 1200 to 1500 feet south of the intersection of Highway #54 and this road. On the night of this day they and their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Stafford Wayne Hart, were playing cards in their house trailer. Mrs. Thompson testified: “I heard a loud roar and a big thud or bump around 11:15 p.m. I also heard a car horn. I jumped up and looked out the door. We could see headlights. Mr. Hart and I jumped in the car and drove down there.” Stafford Wayne Hart testified: “I went to the scene of an accident that night. I was prompted to go there by the sound of a car crash and horn blowing. I heard this about 11:15.” Earl Michael Thompson also went to the scene.

Upon arrival at the scene, this is what they saw: Zeb Vance Coley’s Chevrolet station wagon was off Phillips Chapel Road and down an embankment to the left of the road for a person entering this road from Highway #54 and passing south by the Thompson home. The rear bumper of the station wagon was about two feet from Phillips Chapel Road and the station wagon was headed down the embankment about 20 feet from a small stream or culvert. Its *201 motor was not running, its lights were on, and its horn was blowing. There was a large hole through the windshield on the right side of the front seat, and the head and upper part of plaintiff’s body to her midsection protruded through this hole onto the hood of the station wagon. She was cut about the face and was bleeding profusely. She was conscious. The body of Zeb Vance Coley, according to one version of the evidence, was sitting on the floorboard of the station wagon; according to another version of the evidence, he was in a sitting position in the front of the station wagon with his head against the passenger door and his body was holding plaintiff through the windshield. One of his feet was on the front seat in the area of the light switch, and his other foot was down in the area of the brake pedal. The front seat of the station wagon had broken away from its fastenings on the floor, and had gone forward. A heavy chain saw was at its back against it. The front end of the station wagon was pushed in and wrecked. They disconnected the horn. The steering wheel of the station wagon was bent. The station wagon was on its wheels, and all the tires were up and full of air.

Shortly after the wreck plaintiff and Zeb Vance Coley were carried in an ambulance to Alamance County Hospital. Upon arrival Zeb Vance Coley was dead. The left side of his chest was crushed flat, and all the ribs on that side were broken. Plaintiff sustained serious injuries which have already caused her to incur substantial hospital and medical expenses.

The scene of the wreck is about 1582 feet from Highway #54 if one enters Phillips Chapel Road from this highway and proceeds south along it by the Thompson house trailer. Phillips Chapel Road is a paved highway with pavement 18 feet wide. The culvert beyond which Zeb Vance Coley’s station wagon stopped is about 1581.5 feet from the center of Highway #54 to the left of Phillips Chapel Road as one travels on it in a southerly direction from Highway #54. Phillips Chapel Road is a gentle fall until one gets to within 500 feet of the culvert, and then it is progressively more of a fall. There is a curve to the right that is about 400 feet long terminating approximately at the culvert. The shoulder of the highway there is about 6% feet wide.

Alfred Cheney, Jr., a State Highway Patrolman, arrived at the scene about 11:35 p.m. that night. He testified:

“When I got there, there were no occupants in the automobile. I inspected the shoulders of the highway immediately north from where I found.the Chevrolet automobile. I found nothing in the highway there. On the shoulder of the road there Avere tire marks that led up to the rear of the automobile for *202 approximately 150 to 175 feet from the left shoulder. These tire marks went off the road they led up to the highway approximately 150 to 175 feet from the automobile and went off on the shoulder down the embankment and hit the bottom of the embankment and hit a barbed wire fence on the left side and continued until it hit the culvert. The nature of the terrain on the left side of the road from where the car was, back north toward the highway, included a barbed wire fence leading up along the bottom of the embankment and there were some small trees, several of these trees were bent over.
“At or near the culvert at the locality where the automobile was situated the barbed wire fence was down and the posts holding the wire in that vicinity were down. I don’t recall how many posts were down.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 S.E.2d 1, 266 N.C. 198, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drumwright-v-wood-nc-1966.