Hall v. Aiken County

129 S.E. 160, 132 S.C. 420, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 9, 1925
Docket11833
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 160 (Hall v. Aiken County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Aiken County, 129 S.E. 160, 132 S.C. 420, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 230 (S.C. 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Associate Justice Purdy.

This is an action against Aiken County for damages alleged to have been caused by the breaking in of a bridge on one of the highways of that County. The complaint *422 contains the usual and appropriate allegations in an action for damages against a County.

The complaint states that there were being transported upon an automobile truck four head of oxen and several laborers going from one point to another, and that they went upon the bridge in question, and, by reason of its unsound, unsafe, and decayed condition, it broke down, overturning the plaintiff’s vehicle, throwing the oxen violently into a creek upon some rocks; that the oxen were rendered sick and unfit for work for a considerable time, and that their value was greatly reduced, to his damage $250; that the automobile truck was damaged $181 by the bursting of tires and other damage to truck; that the neglect and mismanagement of the defendant was the proximate cause of the injuries; that the injury was not brought abo'ut by the plaintiff; that he did not negligently contribute thereto, and that his load did not exceed the ordinary weight such as ordinarily passed over the highway in question in the course of public travel.

The answer of the defendant is that whatever injury was suffered was due to the plaintiff’s own negligence and that of his agents and servants in charge’of the truck; that they went upon the bridge with a truck excessively loaded, and that the same was greater than the usual and ordinary load that usually passed over the bridge; that the plaintiff knew that the bridge was not constructed to' sustain such a load, or should have known it, and that in going upon, it the plaintiff and his agents and servants assumed the risk of the bridge breaking. The answer further sets up contributory negligence in going over the bridge with the load in question, knowing that it was not sufficient to sustain the load; that it was negligence on the part of the plaintiff, his agents and servants in so doing, and that this contributed to the injury as a proximate cause, without which it would not have happened.

A trial was had before his Honor, Judge Henry, and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for the full *423 amount claimed. A motion for a new trial was made and refused.

The appeal is based upon two exceptions alleging error on the part of his Honor:

1. In charging the jury that: “It is not incumbent upon the county to prove that the plaintiff was negligent, but they have got to prove that it was not negligent.” His Honor, the trial Judge, had just read, as a part of his charge, Section 2948 of Volume 3 of the Code of 1922, which shows clearly that the plaintiff had to prove that he had not brought about his own injury or damage by his own act or negligently contributed thereto. Then, immediately following the reading of the statute, he said, further :

“This cáse is out of the ordinary for this reason: The . plaintiff has not only to allege in his complaint that tiie county was negligent, but also must allege and prove that he was not negligent, and that makes it a little different from the ordinary case.”

Then follows the sentence which is alleged to be the erroneous charge:

“And it is not incumbent upon the county to prove that the plaintiff was negligent, but they have got to prove that it was not negligence.”

Then follows immediately:

“If the negligence should occur by plaintiff’s conduct, the county ought not to pay for the wrongdoing of the plaintiff or the lack of care. That is the difference in the ordinary case. The- plaintiff must allege that he was not negligent and prove it to your satisfaction, so the burden of proof is on the plaintiff.' The whole burden is on the plaintiff to prove that by the negligence of the defendant the injury occurred, if any occurred, and that they themselves were not negligent; and they claim that they were damaged in the sum of $431.41, and you will read the complaint and find out what that is.
*424 “The burden is upon the plaintiff now to prove this case; that is, that the county officers were negligent in keeping up the bridge, and that plaintiff was not negligent nor did they contribute in any way to their, injury.”

Then his Honor further charged the jury that it was the duty of the county officials to exercise ordinary care in keeping up the highways, and that this was the measure of duty of the county officials — ordinary care.

It will be seen, therefore, that if the language excepted to be taken just as it appears in the record, it is in utter contradiction tó the charge delivered at length. Standing by itself, it would clearly be erroneous, but with the explanation given the jury prior to this utterance and immediately following it, there could have been no chance for the jury to have misunderstood the Judge’s charge to the effect that the burden was on the plaintiff. As the sentence excepted to stands, it has no place in the charge, and yet it is there, but it is nullified by the general charge going along with it and as a part of it.

Certainly the idea that the county officials had to prove that the county, through its officials, was not negligent was not in the mind of his Honor, the trial Judge. He evidently thought he was saying, “But they have got to prove that he was not negligent,” referring to the plaintiff, and, taken in connection with the statute, the whole of his general charge negatives the idea that he had any such thing in mind as telling the jury that the defendant had to show that it was not negligent.

As already quoted, his Honor used the following language almost in the same sentence with-the language excepted to:

“The whole burden is on the plaintiff to prove that by the negligence of the defendant the injury occurred, if any occurred, and that they, themselves, were not negligent.”

.It will be seen from this that “they” was used by his Honor in reference to-the plaintiff, and hence that, in the sentence excepted to, it could not have been taken by the *425 jury other than in the sense of referring to the plaintiff. This exception, therefore, is overruled.

2. The second exception imputes error to his Honor in charging the jury:

“I disagree with you on the thinly settled country. I don’t think there is any difference in the amount of traffic, and all.”

This, as it stands in the record, does not appear to have been in response to a request to charge, and as to which the respondent’s attorneys say:

“Where a request to charge is tendered orally at the conclusion of the Court’s charge, and not in conformity with Circuit Court rule No. 11, it will be assumed that the failure to respond to it was based on noncompliance with the rule” —citing Bleaching Co. v. Fuel Co., 117 S. E., 735; 124 S. C., 458.

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7 S.E.2d 463 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 160, 132 S.C. 420, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-aiken-county-sc-1925.