Judges: Connor
Filed Date: 6/3/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
Plaintiff, while testifying as a witness in his own behalf, in response to the direction of his counsel to tell the court and jury how he was injured, said, in part: “Well, when the truck swerved in on me quickly, I slowed up, and when he did that he hit my front wheel and threw it out from under me; this threw me back under the truck and
Defendant did not move to strike from the record the statement objected to nor request the court to instruct the jury that this statement should not be considered by them as evidence. Conceding that the objection to the statement was well taken, the assignment of error cannot be sustained. The court, in effect, sustained defendant’s objection and the jury must have, so understood. If defendant desired a more explicit ruling upon its objection or a more explicit instruction to the jury, it should have moved the court to strike the objectionable statement from the record and requested an instruction to the jury that the statement of the witness as to what somebody said at the time he was thrown under the wheels of the truck should not be considered as evidence. Defendant did neither. The exception is not directed to any action of the court, and is not sufficient to support an assignment of error to be considered in this Court upon appeal.
If defendant deemed the statement of the witness, which was not in response to the question directed to him by his,counsel, but voluntarily made, incompetent and prejudicial, it should have directed its objection to the court, accompanied by a motion to strike the objectionable statement from the record, and by a request for an instruction, if desired, to the jury that the statement had been stricken from the record and should not be considered as evidence. To a ruling upon this motion an exception would lie as basis for an assignment of error upon appeal to this Court; Huffman v. Lumber Co., 169 N. C., 259; Wooten v. Order of Odd Fellows, 176 N. C., 52; S. v. Green, 187 N. C., 466.
I. 0. Eason, witness for defendant, testified that he was the driver of 'defendant’s truck on the occasion of the collision when plaintiff was injured. His testimony on his direct examination tended to contradict the testimony of witnesses for plaintiff and to show the facts to be as contended by defendant. On cross-examination .he testified that he lived in Charlotte at time plaintiff was injured, but at Nicholsville, Kentucky, at time of trial. He further testified that he owed some bills in Charlotte which he had not paid, because he had not had the money with which to pay them. Thereupon the cross-examination proceeded as follows:
Q. Well, who furnished you the money to- come all that long distance, from Nicholsville, Kentucky, back here, if you did not have money enough to pay any of your grocery bills? A. The company.
*787 Q. Which, company? A. The insurance company, I suppose.
Q. How much did they give you to come back and testify? A. They were just going to pay my railroad fare back.
Q. And how much per day were they going to pay you? A. I don’t know; necessary expenses, I suppose.
Q. I will ask you if at one or two other terms of court here , if you did not refuse to come back because they had not made arrangements satisfactory to you? A. No, sir.
Q. Wej.1, you did not come? A. No, sir.
Q. I will ask you if the insurance company had not notified you that the case was on for trial? A. Yes, sir.
Q. And I will ask you if you did not refuse to come back? A. No, sir; I have not.
Q. Why did you not come back? A. I had no way to .come.
Q. In other words, you and they had not agreed on the money? A. No, sir.
Q. And as soon as you did agree on the money, then you came back ? A. No; there has been no agreement on the money.
Q. You got the money, did you? A. They just paid my way from there here.
Q. And you haven’t got anything else? A. No, sir.
Q. Did they send you a railroad ticket or send you cash? A. The fellow come from Cincinnati down there, an insurance man, and got me a ticket.
Q. I will put you on your guard and ask you if you did not tell Colonel Lockhart this morning, one of the insurance company’s lawyers-
By Mr. Jones: If your Honor please, I make a motion that a juror he withdrawn and a mistrial ordered in this case.
Motion denied; defendant excepts.
Mr. Preston: I ask permission of the court to withdraw the word “insurance.” Permission granted.
No objection was made by defendant to questions or answers in this cross-examination until the question was asked involving an implication that Colonel Lockhart, one of defendant’s attorneys appearing at the trial was “one of the insurance company’s lawyers.” Upon objection made to this question, because of the implication, counsel for plaintiff immediately disclaimed the implication and proceeded with the cross-examination without further objection.
The learned and conscientious judge-presiding at this trial declined to order a mistrial upon defendant’s motion. The motion was addressed to his legal discretion; no facts appear upon which we are called upon to review his denial of the motion. We do not, however, approve the
In Allen v. Garibaldi, 187 N. C., 798, it was held tbat a motion for a new trial, after verdict, upon tbe ground tbat questions asked defendant and bis son on cross-examination by plaintiff assumed tbat defendant bad a contract with an indemnity company relative to plaintiff’s claim for damages was properly overruled. Justice Stacy, writing tbe opinion for tbe Court, says: “Tbe court sustained tbe defendant’s objection to tbe questions, and tbis was all be was asked to do at tbe time. There was no motion for a mistrial or venire de novo because of these alleged improper questions. Defendant elected to proceed with tbe trial and to take bis chances with tbe jury as then impaneled.” Objections to tbe questions were sustained upon tbe authority of Starr v. Oil Co., 165 N. C., 587; Lytton v. Mfg. Co., 157 N. C., 333. In tbe instant case tbe question containing tbe objectionable implication followed a series of questions, unobjected to, all of which were for tbe purpose of impeaching tbe witness. Tbe motion for mistrial in tbis case was made in apt time, but these questions are easily distinguishable from those in Allen v. Garibaldi, supra.
In Bryant v. Furniture Co., 186 N. C., 441, Chief Justice Hoke states tbe rule applicable to tbis exception and says tbat where tbe fact tbat defendant charged with negligent injury held a policy of indemnity insurance against liability for such injury is brought out merely as an incident on cross-examination or otherwise, it will not always or necessarily constitute reversible error. See Davis v. Shipbuilding Co., 180 N. C., 74. Assignment of error based upon defendant’s fourth exception is not sustained.
Tbe third and fifth exceptions are to tbe refusal of tbe court to sustain defendant’s motions for judgment of nonsuit, tbe first made at tbe close of plaintiff’s evidence and tbe second at tbe close of all tbe evidence. Tbe first exception was waived by the introduction of evidence by defendant, C. S., 567. There was evidence tending to support tbe allegations of tbe complaint. Tbis evidence construed in accordance with tbe well-settled1 rulé apiDÜcable on consideration of motion for nonsuit is sufficient to be submitted to tbe jury as sustaining tbe contention of plaintiff, and tbe assignments of error based upon these exceptions are not sustained.
His Honor charged the jury as follows: “It was the duty of plaintiff to use reasonable care for his own safety in driving or riding his bicycle along the street; that is, he is required, gentlemen, to use the same care that a boy of his age and experience and knowledge would have used under the same or similar circumstances.” “If you find from the greater weight of the evidence, gentlemen of the jury, that the plaintiff was riding along at the time of the accident by this truck and holding on to the truck with only one hand on the handlebars of his bicycle, the court instructs you that it would be negligence upon the part of the plaintiff, and if you find that he was injured, either as a direct result of the manner in which he was riding or if the manner in which he was riding and holding to the rod of the truck with only one hand on his bicycle, provided he was doing that way, if that contributed proximately in producing his injury, then in either event it would be your duty to answer the second issue ‘Yes,’ provided defendant has shown this by the greater weight of the evidence. Or if he was not in the exercise of care which an ordinarily prudent person of his age and experience and observation would exercise, and in consequence of that he was injured, or such failure upon his part contributed proximately in producing his injury, in either event it would be your duty to answer the second issue ‘Yes,’ and defendant contends that this is what you ought to find.”
~JVe find no error in these instructions. His Honor did not instruct the jury here or elsewhere in his charge that plaintiff, a boy of 14 years of age, as a matter of law, was not responsible for his conduct or that he could not be held, on account of his age, guilty of contributory negligence. These instructions are supported by Baker v. R. R., 150 N. C., 563; Burnett v. Mills, 152 N. C., 37; Alexander v. Statesville, 165 N. C., 527; Fry v. Utilities Co., 183 N. C., 281, and cases cited in the opinions in these cases.
¥e have considered the other assignments of error and do not find that they are sustained. There was evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury. We find no error. The amount assessed as damages is large. His Honor did not think it excessive, and the judgment upon the verdict must be affirmed.
No error.