Scheffer v. Dalton

777 S.E.2d 534, 243 N.C. App. 548, 2015 N.C. App. LEXIS 876
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 20, 2015
Docket15-264
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 777 S.E.2d 534 (Scheffer v. Dalton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scheffer v. Dalton, 777 S.E.2d 534, 243 N.C. App. 548, 2015 N.C. App. LEXIS 876 (N.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

*537 TYSON, Judge.

*549 John James Scheffer ("Plaintiff") appeals from the trial court's judgment entered after a jury's verdict determined the death of Jeremy Talbot Scheffer ("Scheffer") was caused by the negligence of Nathaniel Eugene Dalton ("Defendant"), but also found Scheffer's contributory negligence contributed to his death. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for a new trial.

I. Background

On 20 November 2012, Plaintiff, as Administrator of Scheffer's estate, filed a complaint against Defendant. Plaintiff alleged Defendant's negligence resulted in the wrongful death of Scheffer. Defendant filed an Answer and alleged Scheffer's negligence contributed to the accident and barred any recovery. Plaintiff filed a Reply to Defendant's Answer and alleged contributory negligence does not bar Plaintiff's recovery and asserted Defendant had the last clear chance to avoid injury to Scheffer.

Scheffer used a "moped," a portmanteau of "motor" and "pedal," as his primary means of transportation. He was employed at The Spirited Cyclist, a bicycle shop located in Huntersville. On 27 November 2010, Scheffer left the bicycle shop just after 6:30 p.m. The factory installed headlight on the front of Scheffer's moped had been broken in a previous accident. Scheffer had attached a bicycle light to the front of the moped. The light Scheffer used was a "Blackburn Flea 2.0." This particular model of bicycle light was sold at The Spirited Cyclist. Scheffer would often charge the batteries for the light at the bicycle shop. No evidence was presented tending to show whether Scheffer charged the bicycle light battery on the day of the accident.

Kathryn Turner ("Turner") was traveling south on North Carolina Highway 115 in Mooresville on 27 November 2010. She testified she saw a "very, very faint little light" on the road ahead. She stated it was not a headlight or a fixed light. Turner first saw the light when it was about two car lengths away. She initially believed it was someone walking because the light was "moving back and forth." Turner "had no idea" what the light was. She looked in her rearview mirror after the light passed her car and saw nothing. Turner also testified it was very dark that evening. The distance from where Turner saw this light to the scene of the accident is 1.15 miles.

The next morning, Turner learned from television news reports that a moped driver had been killed in the area where she had observed the faint light. She told a co-worker, the wife of a Mooresville police officer, about seeing the light while driving on Highway 115. Several weeks later, Officer Bucky Goodale was investigating the accident and called *550 Turner to request a statement about what she had seen that evening on Highway 115.

James Cockrell ("Cockrell") also observed an incident that evening. Cockrell stopped his vehicle at the intersection of Highway 115 and Faith Road and prepared to turn right onto northbound Highway 115. Cockrell looked both ways, saw a northbound car approaching, and waited for the car to pass. He did not see either a moped or a light behind the car.

Cockrell looked left again and began to take his foot of the brake to pull onto Highway 115 when he observed "just a streak went by me, and I thought it was a motorcycle." Cockrell was certain he did not see any lights on the moped. He testified he almost pulled out in front of the "streak" or "motorcycle." Cockrell turned onto Highway 115 after the object passed.

Defendant was traveling south on Highway 115 in his 1993 Honda Accord. He approached the intersection of Steam Engine Drive, where he intended to turn left. This four-way intersection is fully signalized with dedicated right and left turn lanes on Highway 115. Steam Engine Drive is approximately 0.3 mile north of Faith Road, where Cockrell had observed the "streak" pass in front of him. Defendant slowed, turned on his left turn signal, entered into the left turn lane, and waited for an oncoming northbound vehicle to pass. Defendant testified he did not see anything else located or travelling behind the vehicle.

*538 Defendant began turning left from Highway 115 onto Steam Engine Drive after the vehicle passed. He did not come to a complete stop before he began to execute the left turn on the green light. Defendant began to execute the turn early, without driving completely into the intersection. He crossed the double yellow line that delineated his lane of travel, the turn lane, from Scheffer's lane of travel, the northbound lane of Highway 115. Defendant crossed the double yellow line twenty-eight feet before the painted stop line. His car was heading towards the outbound, improper lane of Steam Engine Drive.

Scheffer's moped collided with Defendant's car. The collision occurred within Scheffer's lane of travel as Defendant was turning left. Defendant testified, "as soon as the car passed, I was making the left turn, and there was a collision, and I didn't know-I didn't even know what happened." Defendant testified he did not see Scheffer, a moped, or anything else, prior to the collision.

Cockrell arrived at the intersection and saw Scheffer land on the ground, but did not see the collision. He testified the lighting at *551 the intersection of Steam Engine Road and Highway 115 is "a whole lot better" than the Faith Road intersection where he had observed "the streak" go by him.

Sean Dennis ("Dennis"), an accident reconstructionist, testified as an expert witness on behalf of Plaintiff. Dennis calculated that Defendant had coasted at a speed of slightly less than seven miles per hour for several seconds before turning left on the green light. The investigating officer calculated Defendant's speed prior to the impact as less than six miles per hour. Dennis measured thirty-four feet and nine inches of skid marks left by Scheffer's moped prior to the collision. The left front tire of Defendant's car left two feet of skid marks on the road. Defendant testified he immediately slammed on brakes after the impact and "it scared [him] pretty bad, because [he] didn't know what happened."

The Blackburn Flea 2.0 light was apparently affixed to the left handlebar of Scheffer's moped. Plaintiff's expert, Dennis, testified the light on Scheffer's moped was a bicycle light and was not intended to be used on a motorized vehicle. Scheffer's bicycle light was inoperable following the accident, and Dennis performed his testing and inspection using an "exemplar" light. No physical evidence showed whether Scheffer's light was operating or on at the time of the accident or whether its battery remained charged.

According to Dennis, mounting the light on the left handlebar of a moped causes the light to point fifteen degrees to the left, rather than straight ahead. The four LED bulbs protrude beyond their housing, causing the light to be visible for one-hundred eighty degrees around the light. Dennis testified the "exemplar" light he used for testing was visible at 500 feet and remained visible until the battery died.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
777 S.E.2d 534, 243 N.C. App. 548, 2015 N.C. App. LEXIS 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheffer-v-dalton-ncctapp-2015.