Parker v. Wilson

100 S.E.2d 258, 247 N.C. 47, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 548
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 30, 1957
Docket391
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 100 S.E.2d 258 (Parker v. Wilson) 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
Parker v. Wilson, 100 S.E.2d 258, 247 N.C. 47, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 548 (N.C. 1957).

Opinions

Parker, J.

For the sake of brevity plaintiff’s intestate will be called Bonnie Patrick, and Robert Donald Wilson will be called Donald Wilson.

Donald Wilson owned a 1952 Oldsmobile automobile. He and Bonnie Patrick had been dating regularly. Between 9:00 and 10:00 p.m. on 23 December 1954 W. C. Campbell saw them leave his home in Donald Wilson’s automobile. He did not testify who drove the automobile away.

Just after midnight on the morning of 24 December 1954, about 12:15 a.m., H. W. Holton was at Sheet’s Barbecue Place adjacent to U. S. Highway 158. Just beyond this barbecue place there is a curve in the road. He saw an automobile approaching the curve travelling on the highway at a speed of approximately 65 or 70 miles an hour. Just as the automobile rounded the curve it cut across the road into the woods. He heard a crash, and went to the automobile. He found the automobile against a tree, and two people inside it, a man and a woman. The woman was Bonnie Patrick and the man was Donald Wilson. They were in the front seat, and the back seat was thrown up against the windshield on top of them. The biggest portion of the upper part of the woman’s face on the right side was torn off, and her head was lying on the switch key and on the steering column, right between them. The switch key on the automobile was just a few inches to the right of the steering column, low on the dash. The man was on the right side with his head partially out of the windshield. He took the back seat off of them, and the man slid down until his head was lying on the dash, and he stayed there until he was moved to an ambulance. After he was moved, Holton saw a dent just above the glove compartment. On cross-examination Holton testified as follows: He was the first one at the scene. “When I saw them, the girl’s left arm was up over the steering wheel, hanging onto it, and she was down sort of with her head against the rod of the steering wheel, and her left hand was over the steering wheel.” He noticed a pool of blood directly under the switch key where her head was resting. He opened the left door of the [49]*49automobile, which is the door next to the steering wheel. There was a woman’s shoulder bag hanging on the window latch of the left door, when he opened it. The woman’s right foot was under the gas pedal from the right side. On redirect examination Holton testified that he found a liquor bottle in the automobile with the seal unbroken, and that when he arrived, the woman’s left foot was to the left of the steering column.

About 12:30 a.m. R. L. Ellis was driving on U. S. Highway 158. When he arrived at Sheet’s Barbecue Place, he stopped and went to the wreck. At the wreck, he saw a woman and a man in an Oldsmobile automobile. The woman was about the center of the car, and someone was holding her head up. The man was on the extreme right of the car with his head lying on the dash. As best he could tell, the man was not breathing, the woman was breathing hard, and he thought she was unconscious. “The right of the windshield was busted out, I believe.” The steering wheel of the car was on the left side. The woman was bleeding pretty bad. When the ambulance came to get the people, he pulled the seat back from the right-hand side of the car to get the man and woman out of the car. R. L. Ellis was recalled for cross-examination and testified as follows: “In my direct testimony I testified that I was present when the girl and boy were taken out of the car. At that time I testified that they were taken out on the right side of the car.”

Tony Barney testified that he arrived at the scene of the wreck between 12:15 and 12:30 a.m. When he arrived, between three and six people were there. A man and a woman were in the car. The man was lying all the way against the right corner of the windshield with his head on the dash. The woman was over near the steering wheel, with her head lying on top of the steering wheel. He testified: “Laying up on top of the steering wheel. The bottom was bent down, and she was laying in the top of it. I don’t know where her feet were exactly but they were somewhere in the floorboard. She was sitting on the seat near the steering wheel. She wasn’t under the steering wheel.” The right-hand side of the windshield was broken out in the bottom.

Plaintiff saw this car about 5:00 a.m. after it had been moved. He saw some brown hair and blood on the dash. Bonnie Patrick had brown hair, and Donald Wilson black. Bonnie Patrick never regained consciousness.

Bonnie Patrick’s mother saw the wrecked Oldsmobile automobile. She testified that she saw a terrible dent place in the dashboard, and some of Bonnie Patrick’s hair on the right-hand side of the dashboard.

[50]*50Bonnie Patrick had severe facial lacerations extending from the right cheek across the base of the nose to the left forehead, and also extending down on the right side of the nose to the tip of the nose, with multiple fractures of the underlying bones, and a rupture of the right eye, with an open wound extending into the front part of the brain. Dr. L. C. Smith testified that she did, to his knowledge, have no chest injuries. She died on 26 December 1954. There is no evidence that she ever spoke after the wreck.

During the early morning of 24 December 1954 the coroner of the county, Dr. V. M. Long, examined the dead body of Donald Wilson. His examination showed that Donald Wilson had a broken neck, a crushed chest, a broken right femur and a. dislocation of the left hip joint, and in his opinion these injuries caused Donald Wilson’s death.

State Highway Patrolman C. N. Jones examined the Oldsmobile automobile about 1:00 a.m. on 24 December 1954. The front end was completely demolished. The tree made a half-moon of the front bumper, and went back in the motor and in between the right front wheel. The motor was pushed back some. The back seat was pulled loose, and brought forward, and the front seat was brought forward almost as far as it could possibly go. The dash on the right side was considerably bent in. The right half of the windshield was gone, and the lower half of the steering wheel was bent downward. In this car the glove compartment was on the extreme right-hand side of the dash. The dent in the dash was from the center to the right side. There was a portion of fine glass and blood and some hair in the dent, but the Patrolman did not know whose hair it was. When the Patrolman reached the wreck no one was in the car.

Plaintiff alleges in his complaint that Donald Wilson was driving his automobile at the time it crashed into the tree, causing the death of Bonnie Patrick and himself. The defendant denies this in his answer, and alleges, upon information and belief, that at such time Bonnie Patrick was driving the automobile.

Plaintiff’s counsel states in his brief that he is relying on the rule “that an owner present in his automobile at the time of a collision is presumed to be in control of his automobile by himself or through some other person, and, if there be no direct proof as to the driver of the automobile, the owner will be presumed to have been driving.” The brief immediately thereafter states, “lamentably, this Court has not heretofore adopted the foregoing rule, and no case has been found wherein this Court has considered the rule.”

[51]*51Plaintiff relies on this language in Rodney v. Staman, 371 Pa. 1, 89 A. 2d 313, 32 A.L.R. 2d 976: “As to the appellant’s contention that there is no evidence that the husband was driving the automobile at the time of the accident, there is evidence that he was the owner of the car.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E.2d 258, 247 N.C. 47, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-wilson-nc-1957.