Skinner v. Jernigan

110 S.E.2d 301, 250 N.C. 657, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 486
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 23, 1959
Docket27
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 110 S.E.2d 301 (Skinner v. Jernigan) 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
Skinner v. Jernigan, 110 S.E.2d 301, 250 N.C. 657, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 486 (N.C. 1959).

Opinion

PaekeR, J.

Both defendants assign as error the refusal of the trial court to dismiss both actions upon compulsory nonsuits at the close of all the evidence. G.S. 1-183.

Counsel for the defendants strenuously contend that both actions should have been involuntarily nonsuited in the Superior Court. They made the same contention on the first appeal, and their argument on the second appeal in their brief is merely an elaboration of their argument on the same question in their brief on the first appeal. We are compelled to hold under our decisions that this question is foreclosed against the defendants by our decision on the former appeal adjudging the plaintiffs’ evidence sufficient to carry the case to the jury. This is true for the simple reason that the evidence adduced by the plaintiffs at the second trial is substantially the same as that presented by them at the first trial, and considered by us on the former appeal. Glenn v. Raleigh, 248 N.C. 378, 103 S.E. 2d 482; Jernigan v. Jernigan, 238 N.C. 444, 78 S.E. 2d 179, and the numerous cases there cited. The trial court properly overruled defendants’ motions for compulsory nonsuits of plaintiffs’ actions.

Defendants assign as error the refusal of the trial court to submit to the jury in each case an issue tendered by them as follows: Did the plaintiff by his own negligence contribute to his injuries, as alleged in the answer?

Plaintiffs’ evidence, and the evidence of defendants favorable to them, in the second trial tended to show that around midnight of 22 May 1954 the plaintiffs were at Southern Shores Beach, that they saw the defendant Austin there driving the defendant Jemigan’s motor truck, and he agreed to give them a ride to the Town of Hert-ford. When they left with Austin driving, Austin and two persons were riding in the cab, and two other young men and the plaintiffs were in the bed of the truck. The truck was a %-ton stake body *661 truck, with the stake body built over the bed to make it a little larger. The stakes were above the bed with boards running along them. These boards or rails were as high as the. cab. The wooden boards running across the back of the cab had cracks in them. Per-cell Skinner was standing in the bed of the truck behind the driver, Austin, holding on to the cab, Percy Brothers was standing in the bed of the truck behind Skinner with one hand on the cab and one hand holding on the rail between the stakes. The other two persons in the bed of the truck were also standing up. There was nothing in the bed of the truck, except these four people. Austin was driving along a dirt road with bumps and holes to Harvey Point Road, a hard-surfaced road. He began driving so fast, 55 to 60 miles an hour, that the four persons in the bed of the truck started beating on the cab, and asked Austin to slow down. At that time Skinner and Percy Brothers leaned on the side of the truck. Austin stuck his head out of the cab, and said, “I am going to dust you boys off.” Driving along this dirt road into the Harvey Point Road there is a sharp curve to the right. Austin tried to make this curve at a speed of about 50 miles an hour. The Harvey Point Road, on which the truck was entering, is on a little slant at that point. That slant is lower on the side away from the Southern Shores dirt road, so that a truck coming off this dirt road, and turning to the right, has a slant to its left after it gets to or on the Harvey Point Road. As Austin made his turn, the other persons in the bed of the truck to Skinner’s right, according to his testimony, came over to his side. The truck turned over, and threw both plaintiffs out. The three persons in the cab were not thrown out. Skinner testified he did not know how many times it turned over. Percy Brothers testified that to his knowledge the truck turned over twice. It came to rest in a ditch on the left side of the Harvey Point Road going towards the Town of Hertford, about 40 or 50 feet from the intersection of the two roads. Percell Skinner was pinned under its front fender and running board, and Percy Brothers was pinned under the back of the truck. Thomas Jenkins, a witness for plaintiffs, was riding in the bed of the truck, and also David Skinner. When Jenkins saw that Austin was not going to slow down, as he approached Harvey Point Road, he went to the rear of the truck, took hold of its side, and had his right foot in the truck and his left foot on the bumper. When the truck began to turn over he jumped, and landed on his shoulder on the edge of a cotton field near a ditch. David Skinner was not a witness, and the evidence does not show what happened to him, when the' truck turned over.

Johnny Johnson, a witness for the defendants, was riding in the *662 cab. He testified that when the truck turned into the Harvey Point Road “the truck commenced sloping to the left because of the road slanting. As we were turning the weight felt like it shifted to the left. The truck turned over.”

The defendant Austin testified in part as follows: “Where you go into the Harvey Point Road, it is a sharp turn, almost at right angles. I turned to the right. ... It felt as if the weight shifted in my truck to the left as I made the turn onto the hard-surfaced road. The truck turned over very shortly after that. The truck turned over close by the ditch, about 50 feet from the intersection. The highway at that point slopes to the left as you are coming towards Hertford.” Austin ■admitted as he was getting ready to leave, Skinner asked him for a ride home, and he told him it would be all right.

The defendant Jernigan, as a witness for himself, stated the truck was being driven at the time by Austin without his knowledge or consent, and that Austin then was not acting as his agent or employee.

Jernigan’s allegations of contributory negligence are in substance that plaintiffs contributed to their injuries by their own negligence in that, without any invitation or permission, they voluntarily placed themselves in a position of danger by riding in a part of the truck not intended for the use of passengers, and by their presence in the bed of the truck with other unauthorized persons, made the truck more difficult to manage, and made injury to them more likely in the ■event of a mishap. Austin’s plea of contributory negligence is the same, with this addition, that the persons in the bed of the truck made the truck more top heavy on a curve.

This Court said in Hunt v. Wooten, 238 N.C. 42, 76 S.E. 2d 326, in respect to a plea of the affirmative defense of contributory negligence: “The first requirement is that the defendant must specially plead in his answer an act or omission of the plaintiff constituting contributory negligence in law; and the second requirement is that the defendant must prove on the trial the act or omission of the plaintiff so pleaded. Allegation without proof and proof without allegation are equally unavailing to the defendant.”

The defendants in their pleas of contributory negligence as a defense and also in their answers, make no mention of the weight in the truck shifting to the left as the truck turned into the Harvey Point Road.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.E.2d 301, 250 N.C. 657, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-jernigan-nc-1959.