Flythe v. Eastern Carolina Coach Co.

143 S.E. 865, 195 N.C. 777, 1928 N.C. LEXIS 208
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 143 S.E. 865 (Flythe v. Eastern Carolina Coach Co.) 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
Flythe v. Eastern Carolina Coach Co., 143 S.E. 865, 195 N.C. 777, 1928 N.C. LEXIS 208 (N.C. 1928).

Opinion

CoNNOR, J.

Upon their appeal to this Court, defendants contend that the judgment rendered by the judge of the Superior Court of Guilford County, affirming the judgment of the municipal court of the city of High Point should be reversed, to the end that a new trial shall be had in said municipal court. They contend that there was error in the refusal of the judge to sustain their assignments of error, based upon exceptions taken by them at the trial in the municipal court. Their assignments of error, on the appeal to this Court, are restricted to exceptions pertinent, only (1) to the issue involving the amount which plaintiff, Irene Flythe, is entitled to recover for injuries to her person, and (2) to the issue involving the allegation in the complaint, which is *779 denied in the answers, that the bus, by the negligent operation of which said plaintiff was injured, was, at the time of its collision with the automobile, in which said plaintiff was a passenger, covered by the' policy of insurance issued by the defendant, American Fidelity and Casualty Company. No exceptions taken by defendants relative to issues submitted to and answered by the jury, on the trial in the municipal court, involving the liability of defendant, Eastern Carolina Coach Company, to plaintiffs for their respective injuries, are referred to or discussed in the brief filed in this Court, on behalf of defendants. The evidence offered at the trial, tending to establish such liability, is plenary; there is no serious controversy, apparent on the record, as to the liability of said Coach Company, by reason of the negligent operation of its bus by its driver, on a State highway, to each of the plaintiffs — to the plaintiff, L. W. Elythe, for injuries to his automobile, and to plaintiff, Irene Elythe, for injuries to her person. The controversy is chiefly as to the nature and extent of the personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, Irene Elythe, when the bus owned and operated by defendant Coach Company collided with the automobile in which she was riding as a passenger. There is no contention on defendant’s appeal to this Court that there was error in the judgment of the Superior Court in overruling defendants’ exceptions taken on the trial in the municipal court relative to the issue involving the amount which plaintiff, L. W. Elythe, is entitled to recover in this action as damages for injuries to his automobile.

It is alleged in the complaint that as the result of the negligent operation of the bus, on the State highway, causing the collision between said bus and the automobile, in which she was a passenger, the plaintiff, Irene Elythe, “was thrown violently forward, and to her right, and against the side of the Franklin automobile, resulting in painful and severe injury to the right hip of plaintiff, Irene Elythe, internally injuring the joints of the same,” and that “from said injury she suffered great mental and physical pain, and that she has since suffered great mental and physical pain and anguish; and that from said injury she has been permanently injured, and will forever be disqualified and physically unable to work and enjoy life as heretofore.” In their answers, with respect to this allegation, both defendants say that “they are advised and believe, and so allege, that the injury to Irene Elythe was negligible, and consisted principally of a bruise, and is in no manner permanent.”

The complaint in this action and the answers thereto were filed in April, 1927. The action- came on for trial at the September Term^ 1927, of the municipal court of the city of High Point. After the jury had been empaneled, and before any evidence had been offered, defend *780 ants moved the court to make an order requiring “the plaintiff, Irene Elythe, to submit to an X-ray examination by reputable physicians or surgeons, of competent skill, and indifferent as between the parties, to be appointed by the court, for the purpose of determining whether or not the injuries complained of by the plaintiff had been inflicted, said X-ray examination to be had at such time and place as may be fixed by the court.” Prior to the term of court,. at which the action was called for trial, the defendant, Eastern Carolina Coach Company, had filed a petition therein, praying the court to make an order to the same effect. In said petition it is alleged:

“2. That the plaintiff, Irene Flythe, in paragraph seven of the complaint, alleges that she had been injured in the sum of $25,000, and in her prayer demands judgment for said sum of $25,000, all of which this defendant denies upon information and belief.
“3. That this defendant is ignorant of the nature and extent of the injuries complained of; that upon information and belief defendant avers that plaintiff has apparently fully recovered, if she was ever injured; that the injuries (internal injuries to the hip bones) are latent and not perceptible to experts, and that the ends of justice require that the defendant be advised to what extent, if any, the said hip bones have been injured.
“4. That an X-ray examination of plaintiff, Irene Flythe, is material and necessary for the purpose of the trial of this cause and that such examination will subject the said plaintiff to no bodily injury, and the same can be made without any serious pain or- danger to plaintiff.
“5. That plaintiff, through her counsel of record, has been requested to submit to an X-ray examination of the parts of her anatomy which she claims have been seriously and permanently injured, and plaintiff through her counsel has refused to submit to such an examination; that plaintiff, through her counsel, has also refused to give her consent to an order of this court for such an examination' to be made by a reputable physician or surgeon of competent skill and indifferent between the parties, to be selected by this court.
“6. That the evidence which said X-ray examination would disclose can be acquired in no other way and that justice to the defendant cannot be done unless an X-ray examination of her can be had.”

While this petition had been filed some months before the term of the court at which the action was called for trial, no order had been made with respect thereto; the petition was not called to the attention of the court until after the jury had been empaneled. The motion for the order, requiring plaintiff to submit to the X-ray examination, was then made and heard by the court for the first time. The motion was denied, and defendants excepted. Defendants on their appeal to this Court *781 assign- as error tbe refusal of tbe judge of tbe Superior Court to sustain tbeir assignment of error, based upon tbis exception, on tbeir appeal from tbe judgment of tbe municipal court of tbe city of High Point to tbe judge of tbe Superior Court of Guilford County.

It has been generally held in other jurisdictions that a trial court has the power to require the plaintiff in an action to recover damages for personal injuries, to submit to an examination of bis or her person by a physician or surgeon appointed or approved by the court, where the injury complained of is latent and not apparent, either as to its nature or as to its extent, and where the plaintiff has declined to submit to such an examination at the request of defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.E. 865, 195 N.C. 777, 1928 N.C. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flythe-v-eastern-carolina-coach-co-nc-1928.