Judges: Stacy
Filed Date: 4/30/1930
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Civil action to recover damages for an alleged negligent injury caused by a Chevrolet truck, owned by John A. McKay Manufacturing Company, and operated at the time by D. R. McDonald, striking the plaintiff, knocking her down and inflicting serious injury, while she was walking diagonally across the main public thoroughfare in the residential section of the village of Walnut Cove.
The plaintiff relies upon the following evidence of S.C. Lewellyn, driver of the school bus, for a reversal of the judgment of nonsuit entered at the close of all the evidence:
"I saw the car approaching that struck Virginia Bailey. I saw it coming down the road here (indicating on map point at cross-road). I have an opinion satisfactory to myself as to how fast the car was going. It was going about forty-five miles an hour. It was going south along the road about forty-five miles an hour. I did not hear the car hit Virginia. I stopped at the filling station to get some gas. Mr. Nelson said there was some one hurt over there."
The evidence for the defendant, that offered directly as well as that elicited on cross-examination, tends to show that the plaintiff, while looking backward or sidewise, stepped on the hard surface, five or six feet in front of the truck, when it was running not more than fifteen miles per hour, and that the accident was unavoidable.
From the judgment of nonsuit plaintiff appeals, assigning errors.
after stating the case: The testimony of S.C. Lewellyn, the only evidence upon which the plaintiff relies for a reversal of the judgment of nonsuit, falls short of the desired purpose on appeal, because of its indefiniteness and uncertainty. The distance of the car from the scene of the accident, when the witness saw it and observed its speed, is not stated, nor is it determinable from the record. The plaintiff *Page 640
says, however, that the testimony of this witness, with its reasonable inferences and intendments, is sufficient to carry the case to the jury under the principle announced in Ledbetter v. English,
The burden is on appellant to show error; it is not presumed. Foresterv. Vyne,
Affirmed.