Luttrell v. . Hardin

136 S.E. 726, 193 N.C. 266, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 136 S.E. 726 (Luttrell v. . Hardin) 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
Luttrell v. . Hardin, 136 S.E. 726, 193 N.C. 266, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 319 (N.C. 1927).

Opinion

Clarkson, J.

The first group of assignments of error on the part of plaintiff is to the exclusion of certain evidence by the court below, which the plaintiff contends, if not a direct admission, was by inference an admission of liability.

Erom careful analysis of these assignments of error, we think the court below was correct in holding the evidence incompetent. The evi *269 dence appears to be an indirect method to get before the jury that defendant had indemnity insurance. As an example, from the group (fourth assignment) : “Q. I will ask you if you told Mr. George Robbins that if the suit had been brought for only $25,000 you would have had no complaint ? A. I told him that this damage suit was brought against me for more insurance than I had; that if they should get judgment against me for more insurance than I am covered by, that I would not have the money to pay it. I told him I didn’t object to Ed. getting some money if it didn’t bother me, but as to the amount, I don’t know. He was talking to me about it, and I was sorry of it, but I couldn’t help it, but I don’t mean to admit that I was liable by saying that, for I was not.”

It is well settled in this jurisdiction: “That the assured . . . must actually sustain a loss before an action will lie upon the indemnity policy, as this is expressly required by the terms.” Killian v. Hanna, ante, p. 20. It has been repeatedly held that the fact that a defendant in an actionable negligence action carried indemnity insurance could not be shown on the trial. Such evidence is incompetent. Lytton v. Mfg. Co., 157 N. C., 331; Featherstone v. Cotton Mills, 159 N. C., 429; Hensley v. Furniture Co., 164 N. C., 148; Starr v. Oil Co., 165 N. C., 587; Holt v. Mfg. Co., 177 N. C., 170; Stanley v. Lumber Co., 184 N. C., 302; Bryant v. Furniture Co., 186 N. C., 441; Allen v. Garibaldi, 187 N. C., 798; Fulcher v. Lumber Co., 191 N. C., 408.

The following question was asked defendant: “What rate of speed were you traveling ?” To which he answered: “I couldn’t say. I was driving moderately. I was not going over fifteen miles an hour. I don’t know that I was going that much. I just don’t know exactly, but I was not going over 15 miles. I was going at what I thought was a safe speed relative to the road.”

Conceding, but not deciding that defendant’s answer, “What I thought was a safe speed relative to the road,” was incompetent. The question propounded witness was competent, and defendant should have asked that the incompetent part of the answer be stricken out. This he did not do.

In Gilland v. Stone Co., 189 N. C., at p. 786, it is said: “If defendant deemed the statement of the witness, which was not in response to the question directed to him by counsel, but voluntarily made, incompetent and prejudicial, it should have directed its objection to the court, accompanied by a motion to strike the objectionable statement from the record, and by a request for an instruction, if desired, to the jury that the statement had been stricken from the record and should not be considered as evidence. To a ruling upon this motion an exception *270 would lie as a basis for an assignment of error upon appeal to this Court. Huffman v. Lumber Co., 169 N. C., 259; Wooten v. Order of Odd Fellows, 176 N. C., 52; S. v. Green, 187 N. C., 466.” Hodges v. Wilson, 165 N. C., 323; Young v. Stewart, 191 N. C., p. 302.

We come now to tbe main controversy below. Plaintiff claiming actionable negligence' — defendant claiming ‘ sudden emergency or accident. E. M. Luttrell, Dr. R. H. Hardin and Mrs. Bettie Bradley, tbe latter who was working at Grace Hospital at Banners Elk, were in a Buick roadster, six cylinder car, driven by Dr. Hardin, going from Shull’s Mills, via Yalle Orucis, to Banners Elk. Plaintiff was going to see a sick brother who Dr. Hardin was to give medical attention next morning. The car went off the road about 9:00 o’clock p.m., 27 November, 1924. Plaintiff testified, in part: “Before we arrived on this turn where the wreck happened, I noticed Doctor was running too close to the left hand side of the road, and I told him he had better hanl his car in, and he made no reply, and when we got up two or two and a half car lengths of where we went over the bank, I said, ‘My God, Doctor, hold your car; we will go off the road,’ and he made an attempt to hold the car in the road, and he made an attempt to back his car. There was a sharp elbow curve in the road at that point. It was between twenty and thirty feet from the break of the ditch bank to the break of the road.. We were traveling at about eighteen miles an hour. The car went over the bank and I got smashed np. . . . The accident took place between Ed. Shoemaker’s home and Banners Elk. There was a winding curve and a very high bank and looked like a straight road from that curve to the next place. We had not entered the curve when I again called Dr. Hardin’s attention that his car was too close to the edge of the road, about 200 feet or more and within two and one-half car lengths when I again called his attention to haul his car in. He was acquainted with the road and went over it at all times of the night. He was driving a Buick roadster. The’ curve was from .20 to 30 feet wide. There was a bank on the right and the road was so constructed it was 'on a level to where the car swerved I would say sixteen feet. The car left the road about the center of the curve. Dr. Hardin had time enough to stop his car the first time and sufficient time to stop it the second. At the rate of speed he was running he would not have run over four feet until he could have stopped his car dead still. I have never driven a Buick, but I know the distance it would take to stop a Buick of that type, and at fifteen miles an hour he could have brought his car to a dead stop in four feet.” Luttrell testified further that the lights were on and had been all the way up. Dr. Hardin had had no trouble with the lights before that.

*271 The following witnesses testified for defendant:

Mrs. Bettie Bradley: “We saw the lights of the hospital, and we went around this turn, and lights went off and we were off of the bank. The lights went out and we went off. Dr. Hardin tried to stop the car.”

Dr. R. H. Hardin: “Luttrell got in my car in front of his home (Shull’s Mills), and my car was at that time, as far as I know, in good shape. I had had it inspected by the garage man, and so far as I knew it was all right. We started off to Banners Elk. ... We were going up the Bowers Mountain, and we noticed the lights flickered down right around the curve, and I jarred the switch on and off, and worked with it, and they came back strong, and we went on, and all at once the lights dimmed off again, and I put my foot on the brakes and tried to stop and could not, and went off of the curve. I was about the center of the road when the lights went off. There is a sharp curved I was just approaching this curve when the lights went off. . . . When the lights went off Mr. Luttrell said, 'Can’t you put it in,’ and he said, 'Dock, we are gone.’ He said that just as we went off.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.E. 726, 193 N.C. 266, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luttrell-v-hardin-nc-1927.