Smith v. Ferguson

158 F. Supp. 487, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2758
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 27, 1958
DocketCiv. No. 1621
StatusPublished

This text of 158 F. Supp. 487 (Smith v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Ferguson, 158 F. Supp. 487, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2758 (W.D.N.C. 1958).

Opinion

WARLICK, District Judge.

This is an action in which plaintiff seeks a recovery for injuries suffered and sustained through the alleged negligence of the defendants. Plaintiff is a resident of Jacksonville, Florida. The defendants reside in Sylva, Jackson County, in the Western District of North Carolina. The action was filed originally in this court and under the diversity of citizenship statute. 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1332. The hearing was had by the Court, a jury trial having been waived.

The facts are not greatly in dispute.

The defendants, Harry E. Ferguson and Juanita Ferguson are husband and wife; Thomas Ferguson is a son born of said marriage.

The defendant Thomas Ferguson and the plaintiff were close friends, each having attended the University of North Carolina for four years, and roomed together their last year; they belonged to the same Greek letter fraternity, and both were members of the Naval R. O. T. C. which was located at the University. Both graduated in the same class and were awarded their diplomas at Commencement on June 4,1956.

Plaintiff’s parents came to North Carolina from their home in Florida to attend the graduating exercises of their son; and the defendants Harry E. Ferguson and wife, Juanita Ferguson also came to Chapel Hill to be present at the Commencement exercises. Miss Eva Hargrave, the fiancee of the plaintiff had finished at Duke at its 1956 Commencement, and came over to Chapel Hill to attend the Carolina exercises.

Some time during the Commencement period plaintiff, his parents, and his fiancee had accepted an invitation from the defendants-to visit in their home in Jackson County, and on the same day following graduation all went there so that they might be together for several days before the time when plaintiff and the defendant Tommy Ferguson were to report under orders for their assignment in the Armed Forces, as each held a commission received at the time of graduating from ,the University.

After their arrival at the home of the defendants, and on June 7, plaintiff and the other guests in the home of the defendants were invited to go on a trip to Lake Thorpe, a large body of water near Highlands, 'where defendants had a cabin. Plaintiff’s parents, together with Harry E. Ferguson and Juanita Ferguson left Sylva around noon, going to the cabin at that time so that all needed arrangements could be made for the overnight visit, — it being agreed that plaintiff, Miss Hargrave, and the defendant, Tommy Ferguson, would come later, [489]*489bringing to the lake the Ferguson’s boat, which was owned and maintained by them for their convenience and pleasure, including that of their guests. The boat was towed on a trailer by a Chevrolet pickup truck, the property of the defendants, Harry E. Ferguson and his wife, Juanita Ferguson. The Ferguson boat was of an inboard motor type. The trailer was a specially designed one, and when used would be attached to the rear of the truck through the medium of a ball and socket trailer hitch. The trailer was made of a metal frame, welded together, resting upon a single axle with a large rubber-tired wheel located at each end and with a tongue protruding from the front of the trailer, on the end of which was attached the trailer hitch. A small rubber-tired wheel was located directly under the front. The trailer was triangular in shape, and is comparable to those commonly used as a means for transporting boats on trips to watering places. The boat contained a Ford inboard motor, weighed 1,800 pounds, and was approximately 17% feet long. The trailer weighed 400 pounds, a combined weight of 2,200 pounds. Following the attachment of the trailer to the Chevrolet pickup truck, and with the defendant Tommy Ferguson driving, and plaintiff and Miss Hargrave riding with him in the seat of the pickup, the trip was made from Sylva to Lake Thorpe in about one hour, arriving around 5:00 p. m.

The defendants frequently visited their cabin on Lake Thorpe and were entirely familiar with the need and methods involved in launching the boat, as such was necessary on each occasion when it was used, as the boat was invariably kept in a safe place at defendant’s home in Sylva.

Arriving at the lake, defendant Tommy Ferguson, on leaving the highway, turned the truck around so that he was in a position to back the trailer down into the lake and by that means float the boat from the trailer. This was necessary in view of its excessive weight, and when it had been floated the trailer and truck would then be moved from the water’s edge. He had launched it in this manner on many other occasions. Following this movement it was discovered that due to the. slope of the banks at this place, the trailer could not be gotten far enough out into the lake so that the boat could be floated and that it had bogged down in the mud. Thereupon the trailer was disconnected from the pickup truck by the defendant Tommy Ferguson, who with plaintiff, undertook to push the trailer and the boat further out into the lake. This they were unable to do, but resulting from their efforts, the distance between the pickup and the trailer had widened to approximately 8-9 feet. The defendant Tommy Ferguson then got a 12 ft. woven wire cable, 3/16 of an inch in diameter, and consisting of seven strands, with a hook and chain at each end thereof from the truck, and attached one end thereof to the middle of the rear bumper of the truck, and the other end to the front hitch of the trailer, and directed plaintiff to push the truck, hoping by that means to free the trailer from the sand. After several trials this was not successful, Defendant Tommy Ferguson then suggested that Miss Hargrave drive the truck while he and the plaintiff pushed from the rear, — explaining to her in detail the operation of the gear shift on said truck and how to rock it back and forth. Her efforts proved unsuccessful. Then as a last resort defendant Tommy Ferguson told plaintiff that he would drive the truck and directed that plaintiff should push from the right rear of the truck; that he would rock the truck back and forth, by quick and violent movements, first to the rear and then to the front, and vice versa, hoping thereby to free the truck from the sand in which its rear wheels had become imbedded, and likewise remove the trailer and the boat from the lake. Miss Hargrave remained in the truck cab with Tommy. Plaintiff pushed as was ini, strueted to do, and following several sustained efforts to bring about the result desired, the cable snapped and was completely severed, one end thereof violently [490]*490striking the plaintiff's right leg at about the ankle joint, and completely severing it in guillotine fashion. A tourniquet was made of such things as were available and applied and plaintiff was hurriedly carried to the Highlands Community Hospital where first aid was administered, but due to a lack of facilities was shortly thereafter carried to the C. J. Harris Community Hospital in Sylva where he was immediately admitted to surgery and the leg re-amputated a few inches higher. He was there approximately one week. Thereafter plaintiff was removed to the Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Florida, where he remained for approximately five weeks, being later transferred to the United States Naval Hospital in Philadelphia for orthopedic treatment which brought about another operation to improve the condition of the end of his leg. Plaintiff remained in said Hospital in Philadelphia until February 9,1957, when he was discharged on convalescent leave, returning to his home in Jacksonville, and later was medically retired from the Navy as an Ensign.

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Bluebook (online)
158 F. Supp. 487, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-ferguson-ncwd-1958.