Jackson v. Solomon

89 S.E.2d 436, 228 S.C. 225, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 10, 1955
Docket17072
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 89 S.E.2d 436 (Jackson v. Solomon) 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
Jackson v. Solomon, 89 S.E.2d 436, 228 S.C. 225, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 94 (S.C. 1955).

Opinion

Baker, Chief Justice.

This was an action in the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County to recover actual and punitive damages for personal injuries and property damage sustained on September 15, 1953, allegedly resulting to plaintiff-respondent when an automobile owned and operated by her was involved in a collision in the City of Charleston with a furniture truck owned by the defendant-appellant and operated by one of his agents. The complaint charged that the appellant’s truck was negligently, carelessly, recklessly, willfully and wantonly driven into and against the respondent’s automobile at the intersection of Line and Ashe Streets in the said City, and *228 that in addition to the property damage to her automobile, the respondent was seriously and permanently injured.

The appellant’s answer admitted the formal allegations of the complaint such as his residence, the ownership of the truck involved in the collision, and the agency of the driver, but denied all remaining allegations of the complaint, and set up the defenses of sole and contributory negligence, carelessness, recklessness, willfulness and wantonness of the respondent as the proximate cause of her property damage and personal injuries; and in enumerating the acts constituting negligence, carelessness, recklessness, willfulness and wantonness on the part of the respondent, among others, alleged, “In failing and neglecting to do anything whatsoever to avoid a collision although the Plaintiff knew or by the exercise of due care could have seen that a collision would occur.”

Upon the trial of the issues thus joined, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of respondent against the appellant for $429.67 actual damages and $570.33 punitive damages to property, and $36,000.00 actual personal injury damages. A motion for a new trial was noted and thereafter argued, upon the following grounds:

“1. That the verdict is the result of caprice, passion and prejudice;

“2. That the verdict is contrary to the charge of the court and illogical in that the verdict does not separately state the amount of actual and punitive damages;

“3. That the court erred in not instructing the jury that any future damages must be reduced to reasonable certainties and not to probabilities;

“4. That the court erred in not granting the defendant's requested instruction as to the last clear chance doctrine; and

“5. In the alternative for a new trial nisi in that the verdict of the jury is excessive.”

The trial Judge granted appellant’s motion for a new trial nisi, that is, “unless the plaintiff remit upon the record with *229 in five (5) days from the service of this order the sum of seven thousand ($7,000.00) dollars of the award herein for personal injury damage, and upon such remission on the record, judgment to be entered for the remainder of the verdict herein.”

The paragraph in the order immediately preceding the granting of a new trial nisi reads:

“While the verdict does not indicate caprice, passion or prejudice, I am of the opinion that it should be reduced in the amount of seven thousand ($7,000.00) dollars, in so far as the amount awarded for personal injury damage.”

The respondent, within the time limit, remitted $7,000.00 of the verdict for personal injury.

There is no dispute between the litigants as to the “Questions Involved” in this appeal, which are as follows:

“I. Should the trial Court have charged the jury on the doctrine of the ‘last clear chance’ ?

“II. Should the Court have charged the jury that recovery for future disability and pain and suffering is limited to the duration of time it is reasonably certain that the same would of necessity exist ?

“III. Should a new trial be granted upon the ground that the verdict was excessive and capricious ?”

At the conclusion of the trial Judge’s charge to the jury, and pursuant to Act No. 27 of the statutes at large of 1953, stated in the nisi order of the trial Judge to be Section 10-1210, 1953 Supplement to the 1952 Code of Laws, the jury was temporarify excused and opportunity given to counsel to not only make additional requests to charge, but also to express objections to the charge as already made. It was at this time that counsel for appellant verbally made a left-handed request that the trial Judge charge the doctrine ot the “last clear chance,” which request was refused.

This request to charge apparently stemmed from the testimony of a helper riding on the truck of appellant, and who *230 testified that the truck was stopped about midway Line Street (the street on which respondent was traveling), with sufficient room in front thereof for respondent to have driven around and thus avoided any injury to either her automobile or herself; and that when the truck came to a stop the automobile driven by respondent was 50 or 75 feet from the truck.

Ashe Street, on which the truck had been traveling from a southerly direction, enters or intersects Line' Street several feet west of its continuation after passing over Line. Street, which necessitated a vehicle being driven thereon and intending to continue to be driven thereon after passing over Line Street, to first make a right turn upon reaching said Line Street, or traveling in an easterly direction, and then a left turn to again enter upon the continuation of Ashe Street to the north of Line Street. It was the intention of the driver of the truck to continue north on Ashe Street after crossing Line Street.

The respondent was driving her car on Line Street in a westerly direction at about ten miles per hour, according to her testimony. She testified that the truck was driven into the front left side of her car; and the appellant’s only eyewitness to the collision, the helper on said truck, testified that the truck had been stopped about halfway across Line Street with the front thereof at an angle toward the continuation of Ashe Street to the north of Line Street, and that respondent drove her car into the right front end of the truck.

It is unnecessary to now decide whether the last clear chance doctrine is ever available to a defendant as against a plaintiff; that is to say, whether such doctrine is ever applicable to a plaintiff. But even if we should be inclined to view the so-called doctrine as available to a defendant, it seems to us that we don’t have to say so in the present case for the reason that the appellant did not plead it. From 38 Am. Jur., Negligence, Par. 271, which we cited with approval in Bishop v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 213 *231 S. C. 125, 48 S. E. (2d) 620, it would seem that under our rules of pleading in negligence cases, the plaintiff should, in order to avail himself of the doctrine of last clear chance, allege in his complaint facts definitely giving rise to a situation permitting recovery after an awareness of peril, or when the peril should have been discovered in time to avoid injury. In paragraph 227 of the same title (38 Am. Jur., p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 S.E.2d 436, 228 S.C. 225, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-solomon-sc-1955.