{
  "id": 8527527,
  "name": "ZELMA R. OXENDINE, Plaintiff v. SARAH BOWERS, aka SARAH BRAYBOY and JANE MARIE MORGAN, Defendants",
  "name_abbreviation": "Oxendine v. Bowers",
  "decision_date": "1990-12-04",
  "docket_number": "No. 8916SC1348",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T14:37:10.855162+00:00",
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [
      "Judge EAGLES concurs and joins in the concurring in the result opinion of Judge LEWIS.",
      "Judge LEWIS concurs in the result."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "ZELMA R. OXENDINE, Plaintiff v. SARAH BOWERS, aka SARAH BRAYBOY and JANE MARIE MORGAN, Defendants"
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "WELLS, Judge.\nWhen a motion for summary judgment is granted, \u201cthe critical questions for determination upon appeal are whether on the basis of the materials presented to the trial court, there is a genuine issue as to any material fact and whether the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.\u201d Oliver v. Roberts, 49 N.C. App. 311, 271 S.E.2d 399 (1980), cert. denied, 276 S.E.2d 283 (1981). By her first assignment of error, plaintiff claims the existence of genuine issues of material fact which would preclude summary judgment. We agree and therefore reverse.\nIn its order granting summary judgment, the court below found:\nOn the morning the motion of the defendant Bowers was set for hearing, the plaintiff filed a voluntary dismissal as to Jane Marie Morgan. However, the plaintiff has not amended her pleadings, and the voluntary dismissal of this action as to the defendant Morgan does not in any way alter the sworn testimony of the plaintiff as set forth in her deposition, nor does it operate to withdraw her sworn statements. Under the law in North Carolina, and in particular, the case of Herne v. Smith, 23 N.C. App. 111, 208 S.E.2d 268 (1974), and Rhodes [sic] v. Bryant, 56 N.C. App. 635, 289 S.E.2d 637 (1982), the plaintiff, an owner/passenger is not, under the doctrine of imputed negligence, entitled to recover against the defendant Bowers for injuries sustained in the collision, where she has stated in her sworn deposition that the facts at a trial would support her allegations of negligence on the part of the driver of her own vehicle.\nWe do not quarrel with the court\u2019s statement of the law of imputed negligence. We fail to see any admission by the plaintiff, in the pleadings or deposition testimony, however, which mandated the application of the doctrine at the summary judgment stage.\nIn Woods v. Smith, 297 N.C. 363, 255 S.E.2d 174 (1979), plaintiff was a passenger in her own automobile, driven by defendant Smith. Her complaint alleged that a car driven by defendant Stallings crossed the center line and struck her car, and that she suffered injuries in the collision. She brought a negligence claim against Stallings and Smith, asserting that her injuries were caused \u201cby the reason of the negligence of either or both.\u201d\nEach defendant answered, denying their own negligence and admitting the negligence of the other. Defendant Stallings moved for summary judgment, relying on the doctrine of imputed contributory negligence. The trial court accepted her contention that her admission of defendant Smith\u2019s negligence established these allegations as conclusive judicial admissions and granted the motion. Defendant Smith then moved for summary judgment, relying on plaintiff\u2019s deposition testimony to the effect that he was not negligent. The trial court granted this motion as well.\nThe Supreme Court reversed on each motion. The Court acknowledged the general rule of Davis v. Rigsby, 261 N.C. 684, 136 S.E.2d 33 (1964), which holds that a party is bound by his pleadings unless withdrawn, amended, or otherwise altered, but declined to apply it to cases where a plaintiff brings a claim in the alternative against two or more defendants:\nInconsistent, alternative, and hypothetical forms of statements of claims, \u201care directed primarily to giving notice and lack the essential nature of an admission. To allow them to operate as admissions would render their use ineffective and frustrate their underlying purpose. . . .\u201d (Citation omitted).\nThe Court also set forth the effect of a party\u2019s deposition testimony which is adverse to her case:\n[W]hen a party gives adverse testimony in a deposition or at trial, that testimony should not, in most instances, be conclusively binding on him to the extent that his opponent may obtain either summary judgment or a directed verdict. Two exceptions to this general rule should be noted, however. First, when a party gives unequivocal, adverse testimony under factual circumstances such as were present in Cogdill, his statements should be treated as binding judicial admissions rather than as evidential admissions. Second, when a party gives adverse testimony, and there is insufficient evidence to the contrary presented . . . summary judgment or a directed verdict would in most instances be properly granted against him.\nPlaintiff\u2019s testimony was held not to fit into either exception.\nWe first apply Woods to the pleadings. Plaintiff\u2019s complaint does not explicitly state that her claims against the named defendants are alternative allegations, but that does not preclude application of Woods. \u201cAll persons may be joined in one action as defendants if there is asserted against them jointly, severally, or in the alternative, any right to relief in respect of or arising out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences and if any question of law or fact common to all parties will arise in the action.\u201d N.C. Gen. Stat. \u00a7 1A-1, Rule 20(a). \u201cA party may set forth two or more statements of a claim or defense alternatively or hypothetically, either in one count or defense or in separate counts or defenses.\u201d N.C. Gen. Stat. \u00a7 1A-1, Rule 8(e)(2). Neither rule provides for any particular form of phrasing alternative claims.\nThe complaint sets forth separate counts against each defendant. Each count contains a paragraph where it avers that plaintiff was damaged by \u201cfAe Defendant\u201d (emphasis added) and lists the same damages claims in nearly identical language. The prayer for relief lists a damage claim against each, and a separate prayer for judgment of joint and several liability. Plaintiff\u2019s attorney also made it clear during plaintiff\u2019s deposition and at the summary judgment hearing that he was attempting to plead the claims in the alternative. While the better practice would be to use specific language to the effect that such claims are brought in the alternative, we hold that on these facts, plaintiff\u2019s complaint is not so inartfully drafted as to preclude application of the Woods rule.\nWe next apply Woods to plaintiff\u2019s deposition testimony in this case. Neither exception to the general rule of nonconclusiveness of adverse deposition testimony applies here. In Cogdill v. Scates, 290 N.C. 31, 224 S.E.2d 604 (1976), relied on in Woods, the party \u201ctestified to concrete facts, not matters of opinion, estimate, appearance, inference, or uncertain memory. Her testimony was deliberate, unequivocal and repeated.\u201d Plaintiff in this case adopted a statement of her attorney that the \u201cfacts do support what has been pled,\u201d i.e., that her driver was negligent, but she also testified in the same deposition that her driver was not negligent, and stated \u201cI really am not a lawyer, and I don\u2019t understand when you come talking about who\u2019s at fault and who\u2019s to blame. I can\u2019t say because I don\u2019t know, other than Jane moved over.\u201d Such a statement is not such deliberate, unequivocal, and repeated testimony as would defeat plaintiff\u2019s claim as a matter of law. Plaintiff\u2019s deposition, which defendant Bowers submitted with her motion for summary judgment, also contained a forecast of evidence sufficient from which it could reasonably be inferred that plaintiff\u2019s driver was not negligent. The resolution of this issue should have been left to a jury.\nDefendant Bowers failed to show that there were no genuine issues of material fact in this case, and that she was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Summary judgment, therefore, was inappropriate. Having found for plaintiff on her first assignment of error, we do not consider her second or third assignments.\nReversed.\nJudge EAGLES concurs and joins in the concurring in the result opinion of Judge LEWIS.\nJudge LEWIS concurs in the result.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "WELLS, Judge."
      },
      {
        "text": "Judge LEWIS\nconcurring in the result.\nI concur in the result: Where a plaintiff sues two or more defendants, the plaintiff should clearly state that the actions are in the alternative, if they are. In the event that the plaintiff takes a voluntary dismissal as to one or more defendants, the plaintiff should move to strike those sections of the complaint no longer applicable. Otherwise, do the allegations remain viable, lurking in various counts, waiting to spring upon unsuspecting parties, lawyers or judges? Or alternatively, are these lines redacted by some unnamed, unseen entity and if so, just which lines?\nHowever, the present state of the law does not seem to require either.",
        "type": "concurrence",
        "author": "Judge LEWIS"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Bruce Allen for plaintiff-appellant.",
      "Etheridge, Moser, Gamer and Bruner, P.A., by Terry R. Gamer, for defendant-appellee Sarah Bowers."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "ZELMA R. OXENDINE, Plaintiff v. SARAH BOWERS, aka SARAH BRAYBOY and JANE MARIE MORGAN, Defendants\nNo. 8916SC1348\n(Filed 4 December 1990)\n1. Evidence \u00a7 34.1 (NCI3d)\u2014 claim against two or more defendants \u2014 plaintiff not bound by pleadings\nThe trial court erred by granting summary judgment for defendant Bowers in an action arising from an automobile accident where plaintiff was a passenger in a car driven by defendant Morgan and owned by plaintiff; defendant Bowers was the driver of the other car; and defendant Bowers moved for summary judgment based on plaintiff\u2019s allegation of negligence by Morgan and by her adoption in deposition testimony of a statement by her counsel that the facts would support Morgan\u2019s negligence. Plaintiff\u2019s complaint does not explicitly state that her claims against the named defendants are alternative allegations, but that does not preclude the application of Woods v. Smith, 297 N.C. 363, which declined to apply the rule that a party is bound by his pleadings to cases where a plaintiff brings a claim in the alternative against two or more defendants.\nAm Jur 2d, Evidence \u00a7 696.\n2. Evidence \u00a7 34.1 (NCI3d)\u2014 adverse deposition testimony\u2014 nonconclusive\nThe trial court erred by granting summary judgment for defendant Bowers in an automobile accident case where plaintiff adopted a statement of her attorney during her deposition that the facts supported the allegation that plaintiff\u2019s driver was negligent. Plaintiff also testified in the same deposition that her driver was not negligent and her statement was not such deliberate, unequivocal, and repeated testimony as would defeat plaintiff\u2019s claim as a matter of law. Plaintiff\u2019s deposition contained a forecast of evidence from which it could reasonably be inferred that plaintiff\u2019s driver was not negligent and the resolution of this issue should have been left to a jury.\nAm Jur 2d, Depositions and Discovery \u00a7 178.\nJudge LEWIS concurring in the result.\nAPPEAL by plaintiff from order entered 21 September 1989 in SCOTLAND County Superior Court by Judge Howard E. Manning, Jr. Heard in the Court of Appeals 21 August 1990.\nPlaintiff filed this negligence action on 12 December 1988 claiming injuries arising out of a collision between a vehicle driven by defendant Morgan in which plaintiff was a passenger and a vehicle driven by defendant Bowers. Defendant Bowers answered, denying her own negligence, admitting defendant Morgan\u2019s negligence, and affirmatively alleging that plaintiff was the owner of the vehicle driven by Morgan and that Morgan\u2019s negligence operated as a matter of law to bar plaintiff\u2019s claim. Defendant Bowers moved for summary judgment on 21 August 1989 based on plaintiff\u2019s allegation of negligence on the part of her own driver, and her adoption in deposition testimony of a statement of her counsel that the facts of the case would support Morgan\u2019s negligence. On 11 September 1989, plaintiff voluntarily dismissed her claim against defendant Morgan.\nAn order granting defendant Bowers\u2019 motion for summary judgment was entered 21 September 1989. Plaintiff appeals.\nBruce Allen for plaintiff-appellant.\nEtheridge, Moser, Gamer and Bruner, P.A., by Terry R. Gamer, for defendant-appellee Sarah Bowers."
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  "file_name": "0712-01",
  "first_page_order": 744,
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}
