State v. Massey

157 S.E.2d 150, 271 N.C. 555, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 1239
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 11, 1967
Docket255
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 157 S.E.2d 150 (State v. Massey) 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
State v. Massey, 157 S.E.2d 150, 271 N.C. 555, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 1239 (N.C. 1967).

Opinion

SHARP, J.

Both the State and defendant offered evidence. The State’s evidence, considered in the light most favorable to it, shows the following facts: Gibbs Street in Charlotte is a 2-lane, 18-foot-wide roadway without curbing. On 26 October 1966, a few minutes before 7:00 p.m., defendant backed his 1959 red-and-white Ford out of a driveway between Persons and Oaklawn on Gibbs Street. He “took off . . . running about thirty miles per hour up the street” toward Oaklawn. In addition to the driver, there were five people in the automobile. It was drizzling, and the weather was foggy. The glass in the back was also “foggy.” A group of children, which included Michael Frazier, were playing on the right side of the street on the sidewalk. As defendant’s car approached the children, Michael, looking backward, ran out into the street in front of the automobile. James Stover, one of the occupants of the front seat, said to defendant, “Look out, you are going to hit the child.” Stover then threw his arm over his face. Defendant applied his brakes, but the car hit the child with a “bump.” Stover told defendant he had hit the child. Defendant replied that he knew it but, disregarding the pleas of two of his passengers that he stop, he kept going. The reason he gave was that he had no insurance on his car. Defendant then began to drive crazily, beat on his steering wheel, and to say “maybe he had killed somebody.” His speed and manner of driving so alarmed his passengers that they made a concerted effort to get him to stop. After he had driven about four miles, they did prevail upon him to stop and let Stover do the driving. Stover returned three of the passengers to their home, where an inspection of the automobile revealed a dent on the right side of the hood or fender and a crack in the windshield on the right side. Stover then drove defendant to South Carolina. There, after taking the license plate off the car and dropping it into a well, defendant left the automobile in a pasture about 2 miles from Lancaster. Later that night, one of defendant’s relatives drove them back to Charlotte.

*557 When the police arrived at the scene of the accident on Gibbs Street at 7:00 p.m., they found Michael 150-200 feet from the intersection of Persons Street. “It was not on the hard surface.” The boy was bleeding from his nose and mouth. His teeth were knocked out, and he had injuries on the back of his head. He died about midnight in the hospital.

James Stover, who was riding in the front seat of defendant’s automobile at the time it hit the child, testified that defendant was on his right side of the road and that the boy came into the street from the right. John Ford, a pedestrian, who testified that he saw the accident, said that the car was on the left side of the street at the time it struck the boy. Ford said that he was walking on the left side of Gibbs Street, going toward Oaklawn, and that he was almost hit as defendant passed. He said: “I saw the child standing on the side of the street. I didn’t see him enter the street. I saw this automobile strike that child. After the automobile struck the child it slowed down, but it didn’t come to a complete stop, and then it pulled off again.”

Defendant’s only evidence was his testimony, which tended to show:

Defendant had no driver’s license and no insurance on his car. For that reason, he never drove it when he could obtain a driver. James Stover, and not defendant, was driving the automobile which struck the child. Stover was driving about 25-30 MPH on the right-hand side of the road when the boy, one of a group of 5-6 children, ran into the road in front of defendant’s automobile at a time when it “couldn’t possibly be stopped.” After he hit the child, Stover stopped the car but pulled off immediately. Later that evening they took the automobile to South Carolina.

“The common-law definition of involuntary manslaughter includes unintentional homicide resulting from the performance of an unlawful act, from the performance of a lawful act done in a culpably negligent manner, and from the negligent failure to perform a legal duty.” State v. Stansell, 203 N.C. 69, 71, 164 S.E. 580, 581. In State v. Cope, 204 N.C. 28, 167 S.E. 456, Stacy, C.J., laid down the criteria for determining criminal responsibility in automobile-accident cases. Criminal negligence is something more than actionable negligence in the law of torts; it is such recklessness, “proximately resulting in injury or death, as imports a thoughtless disregard of consequences or a heedless indifference to the safety and rights of others.” Id. at 30, 167 S.E. at 458. Under this definition “[a]n intentional, wilful or wanton violation of a statute or ordinance, designed for the protection of human life or limb, which proximately *558 results in injury or death, is culpable negligence. . . . But an unintentional violation of a prohibitory statute or ordinance, unaccompanied by recklessness or probable consequences of a dangerous nature, when tested by the rule of reasonable prevision, is not such negligence as imports criminal responsibility.” Id. at 31, 167 S.E. at 458; accord, State v. Tingen, 247 N.C. 384, 100 S.E. 2d 874.

Measured by the gauge of State v. Cope, supra, does the evidence in the case support the jury’s verdict of manslaughter? As defendant drove along Gibbs Street, it was his duty to drive on his right half of the street, G.S. 20-146, to drive at a speed which was reasonable and prudent under the existing conditions, and to operate his vehicle at a speed within the maximum permitted by law in a residential area. G.S. 20-141. It was also his duty to keep a careful lookout in the direction of his travel. When he saw — or should have seen — the children beside the street, he had a duty to warn them of his approach, to reduce his speed, and to bring his car under such control that he could stop if one of the children darted into the street. State v. Gash, 177 N.C. 595, 99 S.E. 337. Did defendant fail to perform these duties? If so, in what manner did he fail, and was such failure the proximate cause of Michael Frazier’s death? To answer these questions, we must first answer others.

At the time he struck the decedent, how far was defendant from the driveway from which he started? How far was the child’s body thrown from the hard-surface by the impact? When should defendant, in the exercise of a proper lookout, have seen the children on the sidewalk? Was the street lighted? How old were the children? How old was the deceased? Was it an area in which children should have been expected to be playing on the street at 7:00 on a rainy, foggy night in the latter part of October? Was there anything to obstruct the driver’s view of the children as he approached them? Was the center of the street marked by a white line or some other indicium? Where was the impact in relation to the center of the street? The record provides no answers to these questions.

The mere fact that a pedestrian (child or adult) is killed when run over by an automobile in a public street does not make out a prima facie case of civil negligence. Tysinger v. Dairy Products, 225 N.C. 717, 36 S.E. 2d 246; Mills v. Moore, 219 N.C. 25, 12 S.E. 2d 661. A fortiori, it does not give rise to an inference of culpable negligence. State v. Reddish, 269 N.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.E.2d 150, 271 N.C. 555, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 1239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-massey-nc-1967.