Smith Ex Rel. Estate of Smith v. Winningham

166 S.E.2d 825, 252 S.C. 462, 1969 S.C. LEXIS 257
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 7, 1969
Docket18900
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 166 S.E.2d 825 (Smith Ex Rel. Estate of Smith v. Winningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith Ex Rel. Estate of Smith v. Winningham, 166 S.E.2d 825, 252 S.C. 462, 1969 S.C. LEXIS 257 (S.C. 1969).

Opinion

Moss, Chief Justice.

This action was instituted by J. D. Smith, Sr., as administrator of the estate of J. D. Smith, Jr., deceased, the-appellant herein, against Maxine A. Salisbury Winningham, the respondent herein, to recover damages for the wrongful death of J. D. Smith, Jr. The action was brought pursuant to Section 10-1951 et seq., 1962 Code of Laws of South Carolina, for the benefit of the parents of the intestate.

J. D. Smith, Jr. came to his death on July 12, 1964, as a result of being struck and run over by an automobile operated by the respondent. It is alleged that his death was due to and proximately caused by the negligence, carelessness, willfulness and wantonness of the respondent. The answer of the respondent was a general denial and that the death of J. D. Smith, Jr. was the proximate result of the contributory negligence and willfulness of the parents, the intestate being a child of tender years, in permitting him to play without proper and adequate supervision on or near a roadway where there was a likelihood of imminent danger to a child.

The case came on for trial before The Honorable E. Harry Agnew, Presiding Judge, and a jury, at the 1968 April term of the Court of Common Pleas for Dorchester County, and resulted in a verdict, by the jury, in favor of the respondent. The appellant unsuccessfully moved for a new trial upon the grounds hereinafter stated. It is from this order that this appeal is prosecuted.

*465 The appellant asserts that on July 12, 1964, at approximately 2:00 P.M., that J. D. Smith, Jr., a child six years of age, was playing in the children’s wading pool of the Water Wheel Recreation Center in Dorchester County; that he left the said pool and while attempting to cross a dirt road separating the wading pool from the picnic area of the recreation center, he was struck and run over by the automobile driven by the respondent, his death resulting from the injuries sustained.

It appears from the record that the dirt road separating the wading pool from the picnic area, and on which the respondent was driving her automobile, was approximately 12 feet in width. As the respondent was driving on this dirt road, the pool area was to her left and 6 feet from the edge of the road, and to her right was the parking and picnic area with trees and underbrush adjacent to the road.

The respondent testified that she was driving her car at a speed of about five miles per hour on the right-hand side of the road and that she was looking in the direction in which she was driving. She stated that she did not see the child, or any other children, in or near the road. She stated that something hit her car and she felt the bump and stopped the car within a few feet. She said she saw the child for the first time after the impact when he was over on the left side of the road going towards a tree. It was at that point the child collapsed.

The appellant called as a witness Mrs. Pansy Reeves Prell. She stated that she arrived several minutes after the accident occurred and saw the child’s body lying on the edge of the road by the men’s locker room near the pool. She testified that she could see water marks from where his feet had been “drugged” on the road and other water marks “in the dirt where it had been dripping and where his body was and where he was when I saw it.” The record then shows the following:

“Q. Did the drippings come from any direction?
*466 “Mr. Cabaniss: Your Honor, I think she would have to testify what made the drippings. The ones around the body but I think that that would be a conclusion that they would come from the child. Unless she saw them made, saw any other marks made on the roadway, that would be speculation.
“Mr. Lever: She said they led up to the body.
“The Court: Well, unless she saw the drippings made or unless she knows of her own knowledge that they were made by the deceased body, I could not permit her to answer that question.
“By Mr. Hunter:
“Q. Mrs. Prell, was the ground dry on the road?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Was there any evidence of any water on the road?
“A. Well, you could see the water from the bare feet on the ground where his feet were drugged on the road there was water.
“Q. Was it puddle or in drops?
“A. It was drops.
“Q. Drops disbursed about?
“A. Drops along the road.
“Q. Did they point in any direction?
“Mr. Cabaniss: Your Honor, again I object. I don’t think she could state that. I think she could describe what she saw.
“The Court: Descrbe what you saw. That is as far as she could go.
“By Mr. Hunter:
“Q. Mrs. Prell, what did the water drippings on the dry road look like?
“A. Well, just water spots where, you see his feet were drugged and when the body had landed, there was water all around that.”

It is the posiiton of the appellant that the trial judge was in error in refusing to allow the witness, Mrs. Pansy Reeves Prell, to testify whether or not the water drippings *467 near the deceased’s body came from or pointed in any direction.

Assuming, without deciding, that the trial judge was in error in sustaining the objection made to the question “Did the drippings come from any direction?”, we think such error was harmless, in view of the other evidence subsequently submitted and hereinafter quoted. Alleged error in the exclusion of offered testimony is of no avail if the same testimony or testimony to the same effect had been or was afterwards allowed to be given by the witness. Strickland v. Phillips, 75 S. C. 264, 55 S. E. 453; Robertson v. Fraternal Union of America, 85 S. C. 221, 67 S. E. 247; McCown v. Muldrow, 91 S. C. 523, 74 S. E. 386; Leonard v. Atkinson, 133 S. C. 249, 130 S. E. 755; Crouch v. Cudd, 158 S. C. 1, 155 S. E. 136; La Count v. General Asbestos & Rubber Company, 184 S. C. 232, 192 S. E. 262; and Nelson v. Coleman Company, 249 S. C. 652, 155 S. E. (2d) 917.

The following testimony is substantially the same as that objected to and excluded and was elicited from the same witness on both cross and direct examination. We quote the following from the record:

“Q. Where were the water marks that you say you saw in the road? You may if you want to get up and show us.
“A. (The witness walks to the blackboard.) This is the swimming pool. Some steps right in here and that right there is where I saw the water marks. Here is where his feet were drugged. (Indicating on blackboard.)
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E.2d 825, 252 S.C. 462, 1969 S.C. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-ex-rel-estate-of-smith-v-winningham-sc-1969.