Judges: Aveky
Filed Date: 9/5/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff testified that she had already passed over a portion of the plank sidewalk that was obviously bad, and over a portion of the street where it was entirely gone, when at a point directly in front of West's front door, where the sidewalk, "as far as she could see," was good, a strip gave way and let her foot between the boards, so as to throw her down. In this fall she received the injury complained of. The Court charged the jury that if the sidewalk was in the condition testified to by the witnesses, and was allowed to remain so for any considerable length of time, which would raise a presumption of (608) notice on the part of the city, or if the authorities had actual notice of its state, the first issue (involving the question whether *Page 377 the injury was caused by the defendant's negligence) should be answered in the affirmative. This instruction was excepted to as a misdirection. The plaintiff had also testified that the plank which gave way and caused her to fall was in the proper place and apparently nailed down. The defendant contended that the testimony of one Henderson, a witness for the city, was in conflict with that of the plaintiff as to the condition of the sidewalk in front of West's house, and that the jury was therefore misdirected, in that it was their province to pass upon the conflicting evidence under proper instruction. It is conceded to be the general rule that the judge is not at liberty to single out a particular witness and predicate his charge to the jury upon the theory that the testimony of that witness is to be taken as true when it is in conflict with that of another witness. Did the witness Henderson contradict the plaintiff as to that particular question? After stating that in some places not far from West's gate the plank sidewalk was entirely gone, and in other places its condition was bad, Henderson testified, in response to one question, that the sidewalk "right in front of Mr. West's house" was "in pretty fair condition," and in answer to other questions, that he "didnot see any defective stringer or planks there," and that the stringers were good and the planks "seemed good." The gravamen of the plaintiff's complaint was that the plank "seemed" safe, when in fact it was in such bad condition that it would not sustain her weight. The defendant seems, from the questions asked, to have embarked upon the examination of this witness, and to have conducted the defense in other respects, upon a theory widely different from that adopted in the argument here, though the exceptions raise the question discussed. Henderson (609) testified that much of the sidewalk over which the plaintiff passed on the occasion when she sustained the injury complained of was in obviously unsafe condition, but when his attention was directed to the precise locality where she fell he admitted that the plank "seemed good" at that point. The statement that it was the best part of the plank sidewalk, some of which had been worn out and removed and other portions of which were obviously unsafe, was not a contradiction of the plaintiff's statement, which tended to show that, while apparently in good condition, the plank was left unfastened, and was therefore in fact unsafe by reason of the neglect of the defendant's servants to secure it by nails driven into the end of it.
If there was anything in the testimony of either of the witnesses, from which the jury could have inferred that there was contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, the question was properly left to the jury under the rule of "the prudent man." She had a right to assume that the municipal authorities had done their duty, and it was not obvious *Page 378
in any aspect presented by the testimony of either witness that she could not safely proceed on that assumption in relying upon the soundness of the portion of the sidewalk that seemed secure. Willis v. New Bern,
The question whether the provisions of section 757 of The Code apply to actions arising ex delicto was settled upon a full discussion of the authorities by the well-considered opinion of Justice Furches in Shields v.Durham,
AFFIRMED.
Cited: Frisby v. Marshall, ante, 571; Nicholson v. Comrs.,
(611)
Shields v. Town of Durham ( 1896 )
Russell v. Carolina Central R. R. ( 1896 )
Styles v. Receivers of Richmond & Danville Railroad ( 1896 )
Nathan v. Charlotte Street Railway Co. ( 1896 )
Tankard v. Roanoke Railroad & Lumber Co. ( 1895 )
Thompson v. City of Winston ( 1896 )
Lloyd v. Albemarle & Raleigh R. R. ( 1896 )
Ellerbe v. Carolina Central R. R. ( 1896 )
Willis v. City of Newbern ( 1896 )