Modern Electric Company v. Dennis

130 S.E.2d 547, 259 N.C. 354, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 556
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 1, 1963
Docket665
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 130 S.E.2d 547 (Modern Electric Company v. Dennis) 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
Modern Electric Company v. Dennis, 130 S.E.2d 547, 259 N.C. 354, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 556 (N.C. 1963).

Opinion

Sharp, J.

This is the second appeal in this case. The first is reported in 255 N.C. 64, 120 S.E. 2d 533. The evidence in the two trials was substantially the same, and reference is made to the former opinion for a full resume of both the pleadings and the evidence. Briefly, the controversy revolves around this question: Did plaintiff employ defendant as an independant contractor to unload and hoist the switchboard to the second floor of the building or did plaintiff merely lease'defendant’s servant and equipment in order to do the job himself? If, in the hoisting operation, the operator of the crane, Thomas A. Gooch, was subject to the 'Control of plaintiff as a lent or *356 hired servant, defendant would not be liable to the plaintiff for Gooch’s negligence. Hodge v. McGuire, 235 N.C. 132, 69 S.E. 2d 227. For a full discussion of the law applicable to the loaned-servant situation, see the opinion of Bobbitt, J., in Weaver v. Bennett, 259 N.C. 16, 129 S.E. 2d 610. While this principle formed the background of the case, it was not brought into sharp focus either by the issues or in the charge.

Defendant assigns as error the italicized portion of the following excerpt from the charge:

“Now, if you find from the evidence and ‘by its greater weight that the defendant through its employee failed to use due care, or that the defendant either himself or through his employee failed to properly supervise the hoisting operation and that he further had the duty to supervise it and you are satisfied by the greater weight of the evidence of those facts, and you 'are satisfied that this was negligence, that he was negligent in one of these respects, or negligent in any other way which the Court may not have specifically mentioned, and if you further are satisfied by the greater weight of the evidence that such negligence was a proximate cause of the damage suffered by the plaintiff, it would be your duty to answer Issue #1, YES.”

G.S. 1-180 requires the trial judge to “declare and explain the law arising on the evidence given in the case.” We have repeatedly held that it is error for the judge to charge the jury as to matters materially affecting the issues but not raised in the pleadings or supported by the evidence in the case. William v. Dowdy, 248 N.C. 683, 104 S.E. 2d 884; Carswell v. Lackey, 253 N.C. 387, 117 S.E. 2d 51; Farrow v. White, 212 N.C. 376, 193 S.E. 386; McGinnis v. Robinson, 252 N.C. 574, 114 S.E. 2d 365. A fortiori, it is error to give the jury carte blanche to speculate and apply to the ease their individual notions as to what might constitute negligence “in any other way which the court might not have specifically mentioned.” An identical instruction was specifically disapproved in Rudd v. Stewart, 255 N.C. 90, 120 S.E. 2d 601. To borrow the phrase used by Justice Higgins in Utilities Commission v. Public Service Company, 257 N.C. 233, 125 S.E. 2d 457, this instruction was “a grant to roam at large in an unfenced field.” It would have been potentially hazardous even in the vacuous pre-television era. Today, as all trial judges know, on every panel there are jurors who have never before been to court but who have become arm-chair courtroom buffs as the result of regular attendance upon television trials which can be counted on to provide a dramatic *357 solution to the issues in the case within the time allotted to the program. Frequently the denouement has not been supported by any visible evidence, but it is always calculated to satisfy the audience.

In Louisville & N.R. Co. v. Loesch, 215 Ky. 452, 284 S.W. 1097, the plaintiff sued for damages sustained when the car in which she was riding struck a guardrail at defendant’s toll bridge. Her only allegation of negligence was that the defendant failed to adequately light the guardrail. The judge charged the jury that it was defendant’s duty “to use ordinary care to protect vehicular traffic using said bridge at said place .at nighttime, by giving such notice, by the use of lights or other means as was reasonably sufficient to give timely warning to the traveling public of the presence of said timber guard referred to.” (Italics ours) The court said:

“(W)e are impelled to the conclusion that the insertion of the words ‘or other means’ was not only erroneous but prejudicial to •appellant’s substantial rights. That such an instruction might have been misleading to the jury is obvious, for they might have assumed under that language it was the duty of the defendant to have had posted at or near the timber guards an employee to especially warn and notify each traveler of the existence of that timber guard, or they might have considered it to be the duty of defendant to use other means of an undefined nature for the furnishing of protection.”

Since this case must go back for a new trial because of the error in the charge, we deem it expedient to discuss one other question raised by defendant’s assignments of error on this .appeal. For the purpose of showing that he was not acting as an independent contractor on the occasion in question, defendant attempted to testify that he carried no liability insurance on this particular job; that when he assumed responsibility, it was his custom in all such instances to carry liability insurance; that on a previous job for the plaintiff, plaintiff had stopped the work when he learned defendant had no liability insurance and had procured the insurance himself. Upon plaintiff’s objection this evidence was excluded from the jury. It is noted that the excluded evidence did not tend to show that the parties ever discussed liability insurance with reference to this job.

Evidence that the defendant carried liability insurance is clearly irrelevant on the issue of negligence. 20 Am. Jur., Evidence, Section 388. The converse, a showing that the defendant had no insurance, is equally immaterial and erroneous for it amounts to nothing more than a plea of poverty. Piechuck v. Magusiak, 82 N.H. 431, 135 A 534; *358 King v. Starr (Wash. S. Ct.-1953), 260 P 2d 361; Rojas v. Vuocolo, 142 Tex. 152, 177 S.W. 2d 962; Graham v. Wriston (W. Va. S. Ct. of App.-1961), 120 S.E. 2d 713.

However, as this Court has held, circumstances may render the fact •of insurance competent upon other issues. Stansbury, North Carolina Evidence, Section 88; Davis v. Shipbuilding Co., 180 N.C. 74, 104 S.E. 82. In a suit for damages growing out of the operation of a vehicle, it may tend to prove the relationship of the defendant to the operator or his ownership thereof since persons do not ordinarily provide insurance on property which they do not own or control. Anno: Showing as to Liability Insurance, 4 A.L.R. 2d 761, 765,; 20 Am. Jur., Evidence, Section 390. It does not necessarily follow, however that the reverse is true.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.E.2d 547, 259 N.C. 354, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/modern-electric-company-v-dennis-nc-1963.