Love v. . Queen City Lines, Inc.

174 S.E. 514, 206 N.C. 575, 1934 N.C. LEXIS 250
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 23, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 174 S.E. 514 (Love v. . Queen City Lines, Inc.) 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
Love v. . Queen City Lines, Inc., 174 S.E. 514, 206 N.C. 575, 1934 N.C. LEXIS 250 (N.C. 1934).

Opinion

ClabKSON, J.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence, the defendants made motions for judgment as in case of nonsuit. C. S., 567. We think the court below correct in refusing the motion as to the defendant, Queen City Coach Company, but not so as to Queen City Lines, Incorporated. The learned judge in the court below submitted to the jury, second issue, “Was plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendant, Queen City Lines, Incorporated, as alleged in the complaint?” This issue was premised that there was *577 sufficient, competent evidence to be submitted to tbe jury that at the time of the injury to plaintiff, the Queen City Lines, Incorporated, was jointly interested with the Queen City Coach Company, in the ownership and operation of the bus in which plaintiff was riding, when the bus ran off the road, which caused the injury to plaintiff. From the evidence, we do not think there was more than a scintilla of evidence and not sufficient to be submitted to the jury as to the liability of the Queen City Lines, Incorporated. The Queen City Lines, Incorporated, and the Queen City Coach Company were two separate corporations, operating under the provisions of the North Carolina Motor Vehicle Act, regulating the operation of motor vehicles for transportation of passengers for hire on the highways of the State. The plaintiff was injured near Wadesboro on a bus operated by the Queen City Coach Company, over a route between Charlotte and Wilmington, under franchise granted by the State to the Queen City Coach Company. The Queen City Lines, Incorporated, had no such franchise over this route, but over other routes in the State. The plaintiff did not get on the bus at the station in Charlotte, but it stopped for her at Hawthorne Lane and Seventh Street. 'She was enroute to St. Pauls to attend the funeral of her brother-in-law and to reach there, had to go to Lumberton over the line of the Queen City Coach Company. The only circumstance worth considering, in the evidence to raise a suspicion, that the corporations were jointly interested, was the pink ticket marked, “Queen City Lines, Incorporated, No. 2856,” given her by the operator of the bus, when she got on the bus and paid for a round-trip ticket. This suspicious circumstance and how the bus operator happened to have the “pink ticket” was fully explained by all the witnesses. -The operator of the bus testified: “The Queen City Coach Company had run out of transfers at that time and I was using Queen City Lines transfers until the Coach Company got theirs in. The forms are the same. The only thing to distinguish the difference would be the name of the company.”

Without going further into this aspect, we may say that from a careful reading of the record, we do not think there is any sufficient, direct or circumstantial evidence at the time of the injury complained of by plaintiff, to connect the Queen City Lines, Incorporated, with the operation of the Queen City Coach Company route, which alone had a franchise to operate under, from Charlotte to Wilmington, North Carolina.

N. C. Code of 1931 (Michie) (1933 Supplement), 2613(1): “Every corporation or person, their lessees, trustees, or receivers, before operating any motor vehicle upon the public highways of the State for the transportation of persons or property for compensation, within the purview of this act, shall apply to the commission and obtain a franchise *578 certificate authorizing such operation, and such franchise certificate shall be secured in the manner following,” etc.

N. C. Code of 1931 (Michie) (1933 Supplement), 2621(29) (a) : “There shall be paid to the Department of Revenue annually, as of the first day of January, for the registration and licensing of passenger vehicles, fees according to the following classifications and schedules: (1) Franchise Bus Carriers. — Passenger motor vehicles operating under a franchise certificate issued by the Corporation Commission under chapter fifty of the Public Laws of one thousand nine hundred and twenty-five, and amendments thereto-, for operation on the public highways of this State between fixed termini or over a regular route for the transportation of persons or property for compensation, shall be classified as ‘franchise bus carriers.’ ”

The facts in this action differ from those in Myers v. Kirk, 192 N. C., 700. We think the court below should have sustained the motions for judgment as in case of nonsuit against the Queen Oity Lines, Incorporated, and rightly overruled same as to the Queen City Coach Company. The evidence on the part of the plaintiff was to the effect that the bus she was riding in had a fixed schedule and it left Charlotte the morning of 6 February, 1933, behind time, between 15 and 20 minutes late and at the time of the wreck, was going fifty miles an hour. It could be inferred from the evidence that the brakes were defective and if they had not been, the bus driver could have stopped the bus after leaving the hard surface, in a short distance, but it went the space of two hundred yards before it ran off the road and was wrecked. There was other evidence indicating negligence. N. C. Code, 1931 (Michie), section 2621(45) (a), is as follows: “Any person who drives any vehicle upon a highway carelessly and heedlessly in wilful or wanton disregard of the rights or safety of others, or without due caution and circumspection and at a speed or in a manner so as to endanger or be likely to endanger any person or property, shall be guilty of reckless driving and upon conviction, shall be punished as provided in section 2621(102).”

Section 2621(46), is as follows: “Any person driving a vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface and width of the highway and of any other conditions then existing, and no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at such a speed as to endanger the life, limb or property of any person and in no event at a rate of speed greater than forty-five miles per hour,” etc.

The court below charged fully and correctly, as to negligence, proximate cause and damage, gave the contentions of the parties with care and the law applicable to the facts. Oyc. of Automobile Law (Huddy, *579 9tb ed.), 5-6, sec. 161, pp. 309, 310, and 311, is as follows: “Common carriers are bound to exercise a bigb degree of care for tbe safety of tbeir passengers, or, as sometimes expressed, tbe highest degree of care. However, a carrier of passengers does not insure tbeir safety. While tbe operator of a public automobile is obligated to exercise a bigb degree of care, be is not charged with tbe necessity, either of possessing superhuman powers of anticipation or of exercising such powers in a threatened emergency.”

In Lambeth v. R. R., 66 N. C., 494 (498), it is said: “Tbe policy of tbe law which is ever solicitous for tbe protection of human life, requires common carriers who have charge of tbe safety of passengers to use a bigb degree of care to guard against probable injury.”

In Overcash v. Electric Co., 144 N.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.E. 514, 206 N.C. 575, 1934 N.C. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-queen-city-lines-inc-nc-1934.