Queen City Coach Co. v. Lee

218 N.C. 320
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 30, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 218 N.C. 320 (Queen City Coach Co. v. Lee) 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
Queen City Coach Co. v. Lee, 218 N.C. 320 (N.C. 1940).

Opinions

ClaeKsoN, J.

At the close of defendants’ evidence and at the close of all the evidence, the plaintiff made motions for judgment as in case of nonsuit. C. S., 567. The court below refused these motions and in this we can see no error.

On a motion to nonsuit,-the evidence is to be taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, and he is entitled to the benefit of every reasonable intendment upon the evidence and every reasonable inference drawn therefrom. The competency, admissibility, and sufficiency of the evidence is a matter for the court to determine. The credibility, probative force, and weight is a matter for the jury. This principle is so well settled we do not think it necessary to cite authorities.

[324]*324Tbe record is voluminous, but tbe facts are simple. Tbe plaintiff’s evidence is discarded, as tbe jury believed tbe evidence of tbe defendants. Tbis evidence is to tbe effect tbat B. T. Mullís, tbe driver of plaintiff’s bus, left Asbeville, N. C., at 6:55 o’clock p.m., on bis run to Charlotte, N. C. He was 25 minutes late, having bad to wait on tbe Knoxville, Tenn., bus. Tbe defendants’ intestate, Andrew Freeman, was driving a 1931 model Ford automobile. Tbe bus was traveling in an eastward direction, tbe Ford was going in a westward direction. Tbe collision occurred about 4 miles north of Shelby, on Thursday, 27 July, 1939, at about 9 :15 p.m. Tbe place where tbe collision occurred was on a curve, tbe bus going uphill and tbe Ford coming downhill. Tbe bus, according to witnesses, was running 55, 60 and 65 miles an hour. It was in evidence tbat tbe Ford was equipped with proper brakes, steering apparatus and all its important parts were in good condition. Tbe car bad oil and gasoline in it. Witnesses who were at tbe wreck 10 or 15 minutes after tbe collision said tbe Ford was torn all to pieces and tbat Andrew Freeman was under tbe floor boards dead. Tbe left wheel was off. Tbe body of tbe car where tbe driver would sit under tbe wheel, or under tbe steering post, was mashed in. Tbe whole left side was all smashed in on tbe car. One witness testified: “In tbe cement near tbis car I saw some scratched places dug out. Tbe car was eight or ten feet from tbe scratched places. At tbe time I saw it tbe Ford car was kind of crossways of tbe road, a little more so back towards Shelby than toward Rutherfordton. I examined tbe bus some. It was off tbe bard surface. Tbe front of tbe car was beaded sort of across tbe road, a sort of an angle more toward Shelby than Forest City. There was an embankment near where tbe Ford car was. I would say tbe embankment was four feet high. Tbe Ford car was up on tbe bank. Tbe right rear wheel was bind of dug out, sitting in tbe bank. About 12 to 18 inches from the scratches were little oil martes, and there was a stream right up the highway I guess 60 or 70 feet. Commencing at where the scratches appear, I observed an oil marie, leading toward Shelby. Tbe bus was over on tbe right-band side, over beyond these marks. I did not measure it but it loolced to me Ulce this oil mark was 18 or 20 inches from the north side of the black line, or on the Freeman side of the road.” Another witness testified: “Where tbe cement was torn up, leading in tbe direction of tbe bus, a black mark started about 10 inches to tbe south of tbe bole in tbe pavement and about 6 inches south of tbe bole in tbe pavement there was another black mark. Tbe small black mark was oil and tbe center one bad been scraped with metal. Tbat black line was 11¡., 16 or 18 inches north of the center line of the highway. I followed tbat black line to tbe bus. Going in tbe direction of where tbe bus was located, that black line continued on the north side of the center mark [325]*32588 steps. I stepped it. Then it crossed tbe black line and this fresh scratched mark, then crossed the center line; it didn’t make much of a curve and did not have to as the road was turned. They went practically straight. I followed that to the bus. The mark I have described followed continuously from the place where the hole was dug out to the bus. The steel mark was plain. When it got to the dirt, the steel mark plowed in the dirt 3 or 4 inches and the oil line was right along with it. The left front spindle on the bus was broken off and the left-hand front wheel back a little, and the left front axle was down in the dirt. It was plowing all the way along and when it run into this gulley it went deep into the bank.” Numerous witnesses testified to like effect as the above. The center of the highway had a black line to guide traffic. The defendants’ contention was that the bus going up hill on a curve at a rapid rate swerved to the left, crossed the black line and struck the left wheel of the Ford coming down. The bus weighed 12,000 pounds and the Ford 3,350 pounds.

Clarence Greer testified, in part: “On or about July 27, 1939, about 9 :00 or 9 :15, three or four miles west of Shelby, I observed a collision between a Queen City Coach Company bus and a Ford automobile. The bus was traveling toward Charlotte and Shelby and the Ford was coming this way. They collided on a kind of curve, on the bend of the curve. I was behind the bus about as far as from here to those gentlemen sitting there. The bus had passed me some time prior to that. Brice Mullís was driving the bus. I have known him for about a year. I was driving a 1932 model Pontiac coupe. A lady friend, Oma Ledbetter, was with me. She is in Sweetwater, Tennessee, now. At the time I saw the bus and the Ford collide, the bus was over the black line around a foot or two feet. On that curve the bus was making fifty miles an hour, and starting down hill he came by me I would say anywhere from the neighborhood of fifty-five, sixty or sixty-five miles an hour. From my position on the curve I could see the oncoming car. At the time of the collision the Ford was on the northerly side of the road. After the bus passed me, it had to gain on me.”

Plaintiff’s evidence was in conflict with the defendants’, and the evidence in the record showed Greer to be a disreputable man. The plaintiff’s evidence on appeal is eliminated as the defendants’ evidence only is considered. The questions as to the weight, probative force and credibility was for the jury to determine, not for us.

The plaintiff contends: “From the above, it will be seen that there was only one vital question of fact in the ease: Upon which side of the center line did the collision occur?” The jury has decided against plaintiff’s contentions. The plaintiff requested the following instructions : “At the conclusion of the evidence the plaintiff, in apt time, by [326]*326duly signed and written requests therefor, duly requested the court to charge the jury in part as follows: ‘1. If you find that the collision in question occurred on the right of the center of the highway in the direction in which the plaintiff’s bus was going, you should answer the first issue Yes, the third issue No, and the fourth issue No. 2. If you find as facts from the evidence that as the bus and the automobile were approaching each other, the automobile ran to its left into the path of the bus at a time when the bus was on its right of the center of the highway, you should answer the first issue Yes, and the third issue No, and the fourth issue No.’ ”

These two instructions are so drawn as to peremptorily instruct the jury to find against the defendants and in favor of plaintiff. They do not even suggest that “If the jury should find by the greater weight of the evidence.”

The burden of proof is a substantial right omitted from the requests.

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Bluebook (online)
218 N.C. 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/queen-city-coach-co-v-lee-nc-1940.