Rosser v. Smith

133 S.E.2d 499, 260 N.C. 647, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 786
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 11, 1963
Docket531
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 133 S.E.2d 499 (Rosser v. Smith) 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
Rosser v. Smith, 133 S.E.2d 499, 260 N.C. 647, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 786 (N.C. 1963).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

Plaintiff’s sole -assignment of error is to the judgment of compulsory nonsuit.

Plaintiff’s intestate was struck by defendant’s automobile about 7:55 a.m. on 14 November 1961 on -rural road #1415, known as the Colon road, in Lee County. This -is a ‘hard-surfaced road running generally north and- south, with pavement twenty feet wide and with shoulders five feet wide on each side. At the point plaintiff’s intestate was struck, the road is straight -and level with clear visibility 500 to 600 feet north of -this point and with -clear visibility -about the same distance to the south of this point. At this point the posted- speed limit was 55 miles an hour. It had been raining that day and the road was wet. Plaintiff and his intestate, who- was his wife, lived -about 1,000 feet west of this road, and there was a mail box on the -east side of the road. A lane or driveway or -side road ran from this road to their home.

Plaintiff’s evidence, considered in the light most favorable to him, shows the following: His sole eye witness to the -collision was H. G. *650 Daurity, who was 'driving a truck in a imrtherly direction on the Colon road, and who testified in substance: He was traveling about 30 or 36 miles an hour. About 250 feet ahead of him he saw plaintiff’s intestate coming out of a side road leading to her house, about 10 or 12 feet from ■the pavement of the Colon road -and walking “kind of fast.” She was walking partly with her head down, and she walked on out into the Colon road iamd started across the Ooil'on road to a mail box. He did not notice whether she looked up or not. She went on .into ithe Colon road without stopping. She did not look up and down the highway before she entered that he could tell. She walked right on out into the highway. At that time he saw .an automobile driven by the defendant in a southerly direction on the Colon road at a speed of about 30 or 35 miles an hour about 250 feet from the woman 'and approaching her*. Defendant’s automobile pulled sharply across the Colon road to. the left, struck the woman about the middle of the road, and then went probably three or four car lengths and stopped. When defendant’s automobile struck Mms. Rosser, it was going about 15 miles an hour. When Mrs. Rosser was struck she sort of hung on the front of the car* until it stopped and then slid off on the road. The windows on Ids ear were up, his winidlshield wipers were working. He .heard no horn. There was no other traffic on the road at the time. He stopped his automobile about 150 feet from where the defendant’s automobile stopped. Mrs. Rosser was carried from the scene to the Lee County Hospital where she died that night about 11:00 p.m.

R. E. Chester, a state .patrolman, who went to. the scene testified in substance: There were 56 feet of skid mark® on 'the right-hand side of the road to the center of the highway, 'and from where these ended ■there were “skivered” marks 40 feet in length leading to. the rear of defendant’is automobile. These “skivered” marks are light, bum marks or the marks, but he could not say for sure they were skid marks. He examined defendant’s 'automobile at the scene. It had a slight dent in the hood and grille bar to the right of its center as you sit in the driver’s seat. The iskidi marks came down the right-hiand side of the road to the right of the center line, and as they -approached the place where the driveway to the Rosser -home intersected the highway, they broke sharply across to- the left.

Inez Rosser, daughter-in-law .of plaintiff, testified that she had the following conversation with defendant that night in tire Lee County Hospital: “She told me she wiais riding along; she saw this woman in the road and said She thought, ‘Why don’t that woman get out of the road?’ She said, T iblow-ed my horn,’ 'and said, ‘She kept right on coming in the road.’ She said, ‘-the next thing I knew I had hit her.’ She told me she caught her on the bumper. That is all she told me.”

*651 At ithe close of plaintiff’s evidence, the count 'denied defendant’s motion for judgment of compulsory nonsuit, 'and defendant then introduced evidence.

Defendant testified in substance: She was traveling south on the highway at a speed of about 40 or 45 miles an hour. When she was aibout 150 or 200 feet from the road leading to Mm Martha C. Roissetr’s home, she saw Mrs. Rosser on the road leading to her house ten or «twelve feet from .the edge of the pavement, walking towards the highway with her head kind of tilted down. She “let up” on her accelerator. When she saw Mrs. Rosser wais not going to look and kept on walking, she blew -her horn and applied her brakes just as Mrs. Rosser stepped ion the -highway. When she applied her brakes, her oar skidded. Mrs. Rosser kept walking across the highway with her head down. She did not look to the ¡right or to the left. When her car skidded, she turned to the left to try to avoid hitting Mrs. Rosser. The right hood and grille o-f her car struck Mrs. Rosser about two or three feet from the center line of the road and in her lane of traffic. Her car traveled aib-out two and a half car lengths after it struck Mrs. Rosser. After Mrs. Rosser wTas struck, she “kind of rested up” on the -hood of the car, and when it stopped, she fell off.

Defendant testified in substance on cross-examination: She could tell Mrs. Rosser was -an elderly woman when she came into- the road. South of the driveway leading to- the Rosser house is -a curve. After she got around the curve good, she .could see Mrs. Rosser. “I suppose that’s about 500 feet; I don’t know. After I got around -the curve good, I saw her, she continued to go into- the road. I continued to drive down the road. When I first applied my brakes, that is where I skidded my wheels.” She had slowed down to 10 or 15 miles an hour -when she hit Mrs. Rosser. Mrs. Rosser was in her lane of traffic when she turned to her left in an endeavor to. avoid .striking her. With her 'brakes applied, her car skidded 56 feet before it struck Mrs. Rosser. At that time her child was down on the floorboard.

Plaintiff J. W. Rosser testified before defendant introduced any evidence that his intestate was slightly hard of hearing, that two- months before her death a hearing aid was bought for her, that she did not like to wear it, 'that she did not have it on at the time she wa.s struck, ■and that he found it afterwards at home.

At the close of all the evidence, the court allowed defendant’s motion for judgment of compulsory nonsuit.

Defendant offered evidence. The only motion for judgment of compulsory nonsuit to be considered is that made at the close of all the evidence. G.S. 1-183; Murray v. Wyatt, 245 N.C. 123, 95 S.E. 2d 541. *652 Consequently, in passing on the motion; plaintiff is entitled to have hits evidence -taken in the light most favorable to- him and to- the benefit o.f every -reasonable inference to- be drawn therefrom, and to- have considered iso -much o-f defendant’s evidence, -if -any, a® iis favorable to- Mm or which tends to- explain or make clear that w-hi-ch has -been -offered 'by him. However, so much -of defendant’s evidence as tends to establish a different -state of facts or which tends to iciomtnadiict or impeach plaintiff’s evidence is to be disregarded. Singletary v. Nixon, 239 N.C. 634, 80 S.E. 2d 676; Atkins v. Transportation Co., 224 N.C.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E.2d 499, 260 N.C. 647, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosser-v-smith-nc-1963.