Judges: DeNNy
Filed Date: 4/14/1948
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Civil action to recover for personal injury and property damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff, in a collision of plaintiff's automobile with an oil truck owned by the corporate defendant and operated by its servant. *Page 775
The plaintiff alleges that John Thomas Matthews was operating the truck owned by the defendant corporation, about 5:15 a.m., on 26 January, 1945, on Vernon Avenue, in the City of Kinston; that the driver of said truck parked the same on the right-hand side of the paved and traveled portion of said street, without lights on said truck and without flares or any other warning signal, warning the public generally, and particularly the plaintiff, of the presence of the truck upon said street. It is alleged there was a heavy fog or mist in the area, lessening the visibility of objects on or near the paved portion of the street; and that while plaintiff was driving his automobile in a lawful and prudent manner along said street, it collided with the rear end of the truck of the corporate defendant, resulting in serious physical injuries to the plaintiff and substantial damage to his automobile.
The defendant, Gulf Oil Corporation, filed an answer, admitting ownership of the truck and that John Thomas Matthews was driving it on 26 January, 1945. All other material allegations of the complaint are denied, but the corporate defendant alleges that if the defendants were guilty of negligence, the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.
The plaintiff testified that he had been employed at the Post Office in Kinston for about 17 years; that he went on duty at five o'clock in the morning; that he lived about a mile and a half from the Post Office, and about five o'clock on the morning of 26 January, 1945, he was driving his car along Vernon Avenue in the City of Kinston, which Street is a part of the U.S. Highway No. 70; that he was traveling "not exceeding 25 miles an hour" after he got in town; that he did not meet any other vehicles on the trip; that the truck of the Gulf Oil Corporation was parked directly on the highway, which had his half of the highway completely blocked; the truck had no lights on it. The weather was foggy, with rain and mist, and low-hanging fog. Under the conditions existing that morning, he could have seen an object right down the highway for about 200 feet. "What happened, my lights — the beams were shining down and under the truck and it prevented me from seeing it until I saw the bulk of the truck. I was too close to attempt to put on brakes. It was parked in the dark and fog. I didn't have time to pick my feet up and put them on the brakes, let alone put on the brakes. I could have seen a light on the highway that morning, a long ways for that matter, five or six hundred yards, if there had been a light to see. I don't know the color of the truck; I didn't have time to see that. I seen it and the next instant I hit it. I struck the rear end, I guess; I was traveling on my right-hand side of the road. I was knocked unconscious by the impact." On cross-examination, the plaintiff further testified: "I could not see very high up in the fog and darkness. The tanker was parked up *Page 776 there in the dark without any lights . . . at all. I could see at least 200 feet up ahead, 2 feet from the ground. I could not see that far, 5 feet up. I could not have seen 5 feet ahead of me 5 feet above the ground, as dark as it was and the mist. I could see to the front of my car, but my lights were dimmed down. I could see better that way than up. I could see practically nothing right in front of me beyond 200 feet. I doubt if I could have seen 200 feet four feet above the ground. It was foggy and pretty dark. . . . I could have stopped the car in from 4 to 5 feet; I had perfect brakes. If I had seen the truck 4 or 5 feet before I got there I could have stopped. It had not been raining that night; I didn't notice any water on the highway."
E. H. Tyndale testified the collision occurred in front of his home. He was awakened by the collision. He was sleeping in a room about 20 feet from where the truck was parked. When he first looked towards the street he could only see the bulk of the truck, but before he got off the bed the lights were switched on.
At the close of plaintiff's evidence, the corporate defendant moved for judgment as of nonsuit. The motion was allowed, and the plaintiff appealed, assigning error.
The provisions of our statute making it unlawful for any person to park or leave standing any vehicle, whether attended or unattended, upon any highway, is subject to certain exceptions. G.S.,
Whether the corporate defendant's truck was temporarily disabled and came within the above exception, is not disclosed. However, the corporate defendant alleges in its answer, that at the time of the collision, its truck was properly lighted and was proceeding eastwardly on Vernon Avenue, in the City of Kinston, at a speed between 10 and 15 miles per hour. No evidence was offered in support of these allegations, since the motion for judgment of nonsuit was granted at the close of plaintiff's evidence. Nevertheless, if it be conceded the defendants were guilty of negligence, we think the plaintiff's evidence established contributory negligence as a matter of law.
The appellant is relying on the case of Cummins v. Fruit Co.,
The evidence discloses a failure on the part of the plaintiff to exercise reasonable care for his own safety. He was operating his car in such manner and at such speed as to make it impossible for him to stop within the range of his lights. As a matter of fact, according to the plaintiff's own testimony, when he came sufficiently close to the corporate defendant's parked truck for it to be within the range of his headlights, he was too close to it to even attempt to stop. His negligence was at least one of the proximate causes of his injury, and that is sufficient to defeat a recovery. Weston v. R. R.,
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed. *Page 778
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