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  "name": "LUCILLE GLORIA WESLEY v. GREYHOUND LINES, INC.",
  "name_abbreviation": "Wesley v. Greyhound Lines, Inc.",
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    "judges": [
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      "LUCILLE GLORIA WESLEY v. GREYHOUND LINES, INC."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "ERWIN, Judge.\nDefendant\u2019s Appeal\nDefendant\u2019s initial assignment of error is that the trial court erred in permitting testimony concerning the neighborhood surrounding its bus station and the type of individuals who frequented the area. We find no error.\nThe sole basis for defendant\u2019s objection is that the objected to testimony was highly prejudicial. It is the rule of law in our State that all relevant evidence is admissible unless excluded by some specific rule, 1 Stansbury\u2019s N.C. Evidence (Brandis rev. 1973), \u00a7 77, and relevant evidence will not be excluded simply because it may tend to prejudice the opponent for the cause of the party who offers it. 1 Stansbury\u2019s N.C. Evidence (Brandis rev. 1973), \u00a7 80. Here, plaintiff offered the objected to testimony to show that defendant had knowledge or should have had knowledge which would have forewarned it of the imminency of attack or assault on one of its passengers \u2014 the plaintiff. In 1 Stansbury\u2019s N.C. Evidence (Brandis rev. 1973), \u00a7 83, p. 259, it is stated: \u201cKnowledge may be proved by the conduct and statements of the party himself, by statements made to him by other persons, by evidence of reputation which it may be inferred had come to his attention, and by various circumstances from which an inference of knowledge might reasonably be drawn.\u201d (Footnotes omitted.)\nEvidence that defendant\u2019s bus station was located in a high crime area, that bums, prostitutes, and their pimps frequented the bus station, that fights from area night clubs frequently spilled into the streets, that drug arrests were common in the neighborhood, and that some of these very same characters were loiterers-in-residence at defendant\u2019s bus station was clearly admissible and relevant to show defendant\u2019s knowledge of the need for insuring adequate protection of passengers going to, going from, and waiting in the bus station. This is especially the case where a carrier is concerned, for the law imposes upon a carrier a special duty to protect passengers from assault, abuse, or injury at the hands of fellow passengers or third persons, and the carrier is responsible to a passenger for a wrong inflicted by an intruder, as in the instant case, at least, where the carrier or its servants knew or ought to have known that it was threatened. See Pride v. R.R., 176 N.C. 594, 97 S.E. 418 (1918). We are reluctant to state the rule in its entirety, .since we are called on to examine and clarify it at a later point herein. For now, we believe the portion as cited will suffice. Furthermore, we overrule defendant\u2019s contention that the trial court erred in instructing the jury on the foregoing evidence.\nAs its next assignment of error, defendant contends that the trial court erred in stating in its charge to the jury that \u201cit does not deny that the plaintiff was a victim of a criminal assault at its Raleigh terminal, or that she sustained injury and damage.\u201d\nIn a pretrial order signed by respective counsel and approved by Judge Godwin, defendant stipulated that \u201c[plaintiff was sexually assaulted in the lounge of the women\u2019s restroom of the Greyhound Bus Station by Darnell Banks. Darnell Banks was found guilty of this attack.\u201d\nNowhere in the pretrial order or at trial did defendant stipulate that plaintiff sustained injury or damage. Ordinarily, a charge on the law relative to facts not shown in the evidence is prejudicial. 1 Strong\u2019s N.C. Index 3d, Appeal and Error, \u00a7 50.1, p. 320. However, no prejudicial error warranting a new trial occurs where it is clear from the charge, as here, that: (1) the jury could not have been misled by the misstatement; (2) the trial court at a later point in the charge instructed the jury that it was for them to determine whether plaintiff had sustained injury and damage; and (3) the trial court summarized both parties\u2019 contentions arising from the evidence as to the issues of injury and damage. See 1 Strong\u2019s N.C. Index 3d, Appeal and Error, \u00a7 50.2, p. 321.\nDefendant contends that the trial court erred in instructing the jury to ignore its original instructions on the first issue submitted, because the jury could reasonably thereafter have disregarded the previously given instructions on the nature of the lawsuit, proximate cause, greater weight of the evidence, et al.\nWhile the trial court\u2019s instruction might have been more artfully drawn, we do not believe that the jury was misled. Immediately after the contested instruction, the jury\u2019s foreman asked: \u201cYour Honor, this morning there was a question on the word imminent, and I anticipate that the same question will come up again when we go back. Does that refer to time span or likelihood?\u201d This incident would indicate that the jury was very well aware of its continuing duty to consider the court\u2019s earlier instructions as they related to burden of proof, proximate cause, et al., and correctly disregarded the court\u2019s instructions as to the other matters. We find no prejudicial error.\nSimilarly, we reject defendant\u2019s contention that the trial court\u2019s use of the term probable cause instead of proximate cause in one instance was prejudicial error. The trial court had correctly set out and defined the term proximate cause previously. In reiterating its previous instructions to the jury, the trial court committed a mere lapsus linguae in saying probable cause when he meant to say proximate cause. The instruction was altogether correct in all other respects, and we find no prejudicial error, for the trial court\u2019s error was mere inadvertence.\nAs a further assignment of error, defendant contends that th\u00a7 trial court erred in permitting testimony by a clinical psychologist as to the permanency of plaintiffs injuries and the indicatory symptoms. We disagree.\nA psychologist in the rendering of professional psychological services may apply psychological principles and procedures for the purposes of understanding, predicting, or influencing the behavior of individuals. G.S. 90-270.2(e). A diagnosis by a psychologist that an external occurrence such as a sexual assault may have permanent psychological effects is clearly within his or her realm of competence. We are aware that G.S. 90-18 generally precludes the practice of medicine by an individual not licensed in accordance with the provisions of Article 1 and that a person is regarded as practicing medicine within the meaning of Article 1 if he \u201cshall diagnose or attempt to diagnose ... or attempt to treat... any human ailment, physical or mental.\u201d G.S. 90-18. While not specifically exempted by G.S. 90-18, a psychologist who limits himself to the practice of psychology and the rendering of professional psychological services as defined in G.S. 90-270.2(d) and (e) is exempt from G.S. 90-18 to that extent, and we so hold. Cf. Maloney v. Hospital Systems, 45 N.C. App. 172, 262 S.E. 2d 680 (1980) (nurse who was an expert in field of intravenous therapy competent to testify, even though she was not licensed to diagnose illness or injury or prescribe treatment).\nDefendant\u2019s exception to Dr. Cogwell\u2019s expert testimony on the permanency of plaintiffs injuries on the ground that it is speculative is meritless. Defendant relies on our decision in Garland v. Shull, 41 N.C. App. 143, 254 S.E. 2d 221 (1979). In Garland, a physician was allowed to testify over defendant\u2019s objection that plaintiffs \u201cheadaches may persist for years at least. An indefinite period of time.\u201d We granted defendant a new trial on the grounds that:\n\u201c \u2018[A] physican testifying as an expert to the consequences of a personal injury should be confined to certain consequences or probable consequences, and should not be permitted to testify as to possible consequences.\u2019 Fisher v. Rogers, 251 N.C. 610, 614, 112 S.E. 2d 76, 79 (1960). See generally, Annot., 75 A.L.R. 3d 9 (1977). Testimony tending to indicate that an event may occur is an indication that the occurrence of the event is certain or probable.\u201d\nId. at 147, 254 S.E. 2d at 223.\nIn the instant case, when asked about the permanency of plaintiffs injuries, Dr. Cogwell stated:\n\u201cMy opinion is that some of the problems are probably not permanent and that others are. The ones that I would guess to be permanent include a generally increased fearfulness, particularly around strangers and particularly around men. A generally decreased level of people in general, but particularly in people that she does not know well. I would expect her to continue to have occasional nightmares, although I would expect those to continue to decrease as time goes on and I would expect there to be a continuing fearfulness in physical situations that are similar to the one in which she was attacked.\u201d\nWhile Dr. Cogwell did use the word, \u201cguess,\u201d in her answer, we do not perceive the same speculativeness or conjecture in her answer as evidenced in Garland. It is clear that Dr. Cog-well\u2019s opinion was not a mere guess, but rather a statement of probability. We find no error in the admission of her testimony. Moreover, Dr. Cogwell\u2019s testimony as to the permanency of some of plaintiffs injuries was sufficient basis for introduction of the mortuary tables, and the trial court\u2019s jury charge as to these matters was not error. See Gillikin v. Burbage, 263 N.C. 317, 139 S.E. 2d 753 (1965), and McCoy v. Dowdy, 16 N.C. App. 242, 192 S.E. 2d 81 (1972).\nAn ancillary argument presented by defendant is that Dr. Cogwell\u2019s contact with plaintiff was so minimal as to provide an insufficient basis for admitting her testimony. Defendant calls to our attention our decision in Ward v. Wentz, 20 N.C. App. 229, 201 S.E. 2d 194 (1973).\nIn Ward v. Wentz, swpra, we upheld the trial court\u2019s exclusion of testimony by a physician that plaintiffs injuries were of a permanent nature where the physician\u2019s prognosis was based upon an examination made of plaintiff the day before the trial; the physician had last treated plaintiff for her injuries nearly four years before her trial; and her visit to the physician on the day before trial was not for the purpose of treatment, but rather to obtain evidence for use at trial. In upholding the exclusion of the physician\u2019s testimony, we held that under the circumstances of the case, plaintiff suffered no prejudicial error. While the facts in the instant case are somewhat similar to those in Ward v. Wentz, supra, we find no prejudicial error in the court\u2019s admission of the testimony in this case.\nDr. Cogwell testified:\n\u201cIt is important that persons involved in crisis intervention counseling see the victim of an assault as often as the victim wants to be seen, which may not be as often as counselor can see them. It is also important for the counselor not to intrude on the victim during periods where the victim does not wish to be seen. In rape and sexual assault situations there usually is a period following the assault when a person attempts to block it all out and does not want counseling for a while.\u201d\nThe record indicates that Dr. Cogwell first saw plaintiff on 7 July 1976, approximately one month after the sexual assault. Subsequent meetings were held on 15 July 1976, on 4 October 1976, around 1 January 1979, and on 2 February 1979. At the times these meetings were held, plaintiff was suffering from severe mental damage, and in keeping with psychological practices in such cases, was being seen only upon request. Unlike the situation in Ward v. Wentz, supra, the trial court did not find that Dr. Cogwell\u2019s examinations were sought solely for trial purposes, not for treatment. We find no prejudicial error in its admission.\nDefendant\u2019s next assignment of error is that plaintiff did not suffer a compensable injury. We disagree.\nPlaintiff presented evidence that since the sexual assault, she has had difficulty sleeping, has had nightmares, and has awakened at night afraid that some other person was in the room threatening to harm her. Since the assault, she has been unable to participate in or enjoy the sexual pleasures that she had previously experienced. When viewed properly, plaintiffs evidence indicates that she has suffered mental trauma or emotional disturbance.\nIn Williamson v. Bennett, 251 N.C. 498, 503, 112 S.E. 2d 48, 52 (1960), our Supreme Court stated:\n\u201cIt is almost the universal opinion that recovery may be had for mental or emotional disturbance in ordinary negligence cases where, coincident in time and place with the occurrence producing the mental stress, some actual physical impact or genuine physical injury also resulted directly from defendant\u2019s negligence.\u201d\nAlthough the court denied recovery in Williamson, it did so because the plaintiffs injury was thought not to have been the proximate result of defendant\u2019s acts, not because of a disavowal of the universal rule. That that was the case is evidenced by reiteration of the rule in King v. Higgins, 272 N.C. 267, 158 S.E. 2d 67 (1967). It is significant that under the rule, a plaintiff may recover if there is \u201csome actual physical impact or genuine physical injury.\u201d This alternative mode of proof justifying recovery is important because of the difficulty of defining \u201cphysical injury.\u201d See Kimberly v. Howland, 143 N.C. 398, 55 S.E. 778 (1906). Under whichever test used, we have no difficulty in finding that plaintiff has suffered a compensable injury. As a proximate result of the sexual assault by Darnell Banks, allegedly facilitated by defendant\u2019s negligent act, plaintiff has suffered a physical impact resulting in mental distress or emotional disturbance.\nWhen viewed under the test of physical injury, plaintiff has shown such a wrecking of her nervous system as to come within the rule so eloquently stated and explained in Kimberly v. Howland, 143 N.C. 398, 403-04, 55 S.E. 778, 780 (1906):\n\u201cThe nerves are as much a part of the physical system as the limbs, and in some persons are very delicately adjusted, and when \u2018out of tune\u2019 cause excruciating agony. We think the general principles of the law of torts support a right of action for physical injuries resulting from negligence, whether wilful or otherwise, none the less strongly because the physical injury consists of a wrecked nervous system instead of lacerated limbs.\u201d\nDefendant\u2019s assignment of error, that the trial court erred in instructing the jury on loss of wages and reduced capacity to earn because plaintiff was unemployed before the incident, is without merit and is overruled. See Johnson v. Lewis, 251 N.C. 797, 112 S.E. 2d 512 (1960), and Purgason v. Dillon, 9 N.C. App. 529, 176 S.E. 2d 889 (1970).\nWe next consider defendant\u2019s assignment of error that the trial court\u2019s charge to the jury regarding the degree of care owed by a common carrier was erroneous, in that, it held defendant to a higher standard of care than is required by North Carolina law.\nThe trial court instructed the jury in pertinent part:\n\u201cI instruct you that if you find that the plaintiff has satisfied you by the greater weight of the evidence that on and prior to June 6, 1976, Greyhound Lines, Incorporated, its officers, agents, or servants knew or the exercise of the highest degree of care for the safety of its passengers should have known, that a criminal assault on plaintiff or some other of its passengers in its ladies\u2019 restroom at its Raleigh terminal was imminent and that it had or in the exercise of the highest degree of care for the safety of its passenbers [sic], should have had such knowledge long enough in advance of June 6, 1976, to have prevented the assault on plaintiff with the manpower and physical resources at hand;\nAnd further that Greyhound Lines, Incorporated, failed and neglected to exercise the highest degree of care for the safety of plaintiff in [his] Raleigh terminal on June 6,1976 as far as was consistent with the practical operation of its business and that such failure and neglect proximately resulted in the June 6,1976 criminal assault on plaintiff, you will answer the first issue yes in favor of the plaintiff.\nAs we understand it, defendant\u2019s objection is based on the fact that the trial court instructed the jury that a common carrier must exercise the highest degree of care inforeseeing the imminence of a criminal assault on its passengers. Defendant argues that a carrier is only required to exercise ordinary care or due care in foreseeing the imminence of a criminal assault on its passengers.\nWhich standard is applicable is a matter not free from doubt.\nIn Daniel v. R.R., 117 N.C. 592, 602, 23 S.E. 327 (1895), our Supreme Court stated the law in pertinent part, thusly: \u201cCommon carriers are insurers, subject to a few reasonable exceptions. They are held to exercise the greatest practicable care, the highest degree of prudence, and the utmost human skill and foresight which have been demonstrated by experience to be practicable.\u201d Relying on the Court\u2019s decision in Daniel v. R.R., supra, the trial court, in Hollingsworth v. Skelding, 142 N.C. 246, 55 S.E. 212 (1906), charged the jury in the Supreme Court\u2019s language. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court found error. Expressly overruling its decision in Daniel v. R.R., the Supreme Court opined:\n\u201cWe doubt if any better definition of the duty of a carrier owes the passenger can be found than that of Lord Mansfield in Christie v. Griggs, 2 Camp., 29: \u2018As far as human care and foresight could go, he must provide for their safe conveyance.\u2019 In commenting upon this case Mr. Barrow says: \u2018It must not be supposed, however, that the law requires the carrier to exercise every device that the ingenuity of man can conceive. Such interpretation would act as an effectual bar to the business of transporting people for hire.\u2019 \u201d\nHollingsworth v. Skelding, 142 N.C. 246, 248-49, 55 S.E. 212, 213 (1906). Based on the Court\u2019s decision in Hollingsworth, a new trial was ordered in Perry v. Sykes, 215 N.C. 39, 200 S.E. 923 (1939), when the trial court instructed the jury as in Daniel v. R.R., supra; yet when presented with the same charge in Horton v. Coach Co., 216 N.C. 567, 5 S.E. 2d 828 (1939), the Supreme Court found no error. Thus, two rules of law were recognized. A third rule was established in a line of cases beginning with Britton v. R.R., 88 N.C. 536, where our Supreme Court established a converse proposition that:\n\u201cAccording to the uniform tendency of these adjudications which we admit as authorities, the carrier owes to the passenger the duty of protecting him from the violence and assaults of his fellow-passengers or intruders, and will be held responsible for his own or his servant\u2019s neglect in this particular, when, by the exercise of proper care, the acts of violence might have been foreseen and prevented; and while not required to furnish a police force sufficient to overcome all force, when unexpectedly and suddenly offered, it is his duty to provide ready help sufficient to protect the passenger against assaults from every quarter which might reasonably be expected to occur under the circumstances of the case and the condition of the parties.\u201d (Citations ommitted.)\nId. at 544. See also Leake v. Coach Co., 270 N.C. 669, 155 S.E. 2d 161 (1967); Harris v. Greyhound Corporation, 243 N.C. 346, 90 S.E. 2d 710 (1956); Smith v. Cab Co., 227 N.C. 572, 42 S.E. 2d 657 (1947); Pride v. R.R., 176 N.C. 594, 97 S.E. 418 (1918); Mills v. R.R., 172 N.C. 266, 90 S.E. 221 (1916); Pruett v. R.R., 164 N.C. 3, 80 S.E. 65 (1913); Stanley v. R.R., 160 N.C. 323, 76 S.E. 221 (1912) (Brown, J. dissenting opinion); Seawell v. R.R., 132 N.C. 856, 44 S.E. 610 (1903). In fact, many of these cases also espouse, in part, the standard set forth in Hollingsworth v. Skelding, supra, requiring a carrier to provide for the safe conveyance of its passengers as far as human care and foresight can go, consistent with practical operation of the business, e.g., Leake v. Coach Co., supra, and Smith v. Cab Co., supra; while other cases simultaneously embrace the standard approved in Daniel v. R.R., supra, that a carrier must exercise the utmost human skill and foresight in providing for the safe conveyance of its passengers. See, e.g., Mills v. R.R., supra. That a conflict exists between the various rules of law as stated by the Supreme Court was recognized in Torts \u2014 Negligence \u2014 Common Carriers \u2014 Degree of Care owed Passengers, 17 N.C.L. Rev. 453, 457-58 (1939), where it is stated:\n\u201cIn Pruett v. Southern Ry. the court seems to apply both the \u2018high degree of care\u2019 rule and the \u2018reasonable care\u2019 rule. It uses this language, \u2018A common carrier ... is required only to exercise proper care to guard them [its passengers] against injuries which may reasonably be anticipated.\u2019 On page five of the official report the court quotes with approval as follows, \u2018 \u201cThe rule that it is the duty of a carrier to use the highest degree of care to protect the passenger from wrong or injury by a fellow-passenger applies only when the carrier has knowledge of the existence of the danger, or of facts and circumstances from which the danger may be responsibly anticipated.\u201d \u2019 This language indicates that a carrier must use the highest degree of care to guard against known dangers and those of which he reasonably should know but is only required to use reasonable care to foresee danger. In a later case, Mills v. Atlantic Coast Line Ry., the court holds that the following language, which seems to be squarely contra to that set out above, correctly describes the duty owed by a common carrier to its passengers, \u2018Railroad companies ... are held to a high degree of care in looking after the safety of passengers on their trains ... and the company is responsible for actionable wrongs committed upon them by other passengers or third persons which could have been provided against or prevented by the utmost vigilance and foresight ... these companies are not insurers of the safety of passengers and are not liable for injuries which in the exercise of such care [this must refer to the italicized language set out above] their ... employees ... could not reasonably have prevented.\u2019 \u201d\nIn conclusion, the author states:\n\u201cIn view of the fact that jury verdicts may go one way or the other depending on the language used to describe the degree of care owed by common carriers to their passengers and the fact that the North Carolina court has used so many different phrases to designate this degree of care it seems that we would secure more uniform verdicts, and have fewer appeals, if the supreme court would definitely and finally put its stamp of approval on one consistent group of words which could be confidently used by trial courts in cases involving this question.\u201d\nWhere there is a conflict of rules of law and no factual distinctions can be made, as here, it is for the Supreme Court to determine which rule will govern. 1 Strong\u2019s N.C. Index 3d, Appeal and Error, \u00a7 2, pp. 180-81. Since the trial court\u2019s instruction here was in accord with at least the two rules of law imposing a high degree of care in foreseeing the imminence of an assault on a carrier\u2019s passenger, we affirm it and find no prejudicial error. We note, however, that in instructing the jury, the trial court stated that defendant Greyhound must have been able to foresee the likelihood of an assault on plaintiff or some other passenger in the ladies\u2019 restroom before liability could be imposed. This portion of the instruction was erroneous, since all that any of the standards enumerated require is the foreseeability of the imminence of an assault anywhere within the terminal. This error was favorable to the defendant, and it cannot now complain.\nDefendant assigns as error the trial court\u2019s permitting the plaintiff to testify concerning future plans, feelings about sex, and relations with other individuals. In view of our previous holding that plaintiff sustained a compensable injury, this assignment of error is overruled. See also Loss of Enjoyment of Life \u2014 Should It be a Compensable Element of Personal Injury Damages?, 11 Wake Forest L. Rev. 459 (1975).\nSimilarly, we find defendant\u2019s assignment of error relating to the testimony of witness Cherry to be meritless.\nMr. Franklin Cherry, a newspaper salesman at defendant\u2019s bus station, testified that he was present on the night of 6 June 1976 and had seen Darnell Banks after the time they had gone to school together. Defendant\u2019s Exception No. 21 is based on relevancy. We glean from the question asked that plaintiff was seeking to prove that Darnell Banks habitually frequented the bus station, inclusive of the night of 6 June 1976. His answer and the question were relevant and admissible.\nDefendant\u2019s Exception No. 22 is based on the following:\n\u201cQ. Can you tell us between the period of time from three a.m. to five or six a.m. during the years 1975 to June \u201976, can you tell us what people you saw there?\nMr. Johnson: Objection.\nA. Yes.\nCourt: He may say what people he saw, if he knows.\nQ. Go ahead, sir.\nDEFENDANT APPELLANT\u2019S EXCEPTION NO. 22\nA. I saw different types of people hanging around, messing around, just panhandling and doing different types of things; just observed people, you know, upset and disturbing people passing through the terminal.\u201d\nWe find no error in the admission of this testimony, since it relates to the issue of notice and knowledge of the imminency of an assault discussed previously herein. Exception Nos. 23 and 24 are of the same import, and we find no prejudicial error in the court\u2019s rulings. Mr. Cherry\u2019s use of the terms, bums, winos, panhandlers, and disturbing people, was a shorthand statement of facts. See State v. Hunter, 299 N.C. 29, 261 S.E. 2d 189 (1980). Consequently, defendant\u2019s Exception No. 25 assigning as error the trial court\u2019s failure to exclude the testimony and denial of his motion to strike the testimony is overruled.\nDefendant assigns as error the trial court\u2019s allowing Dr. Bopp, an expert witness in the field of law enforcement and security, to testify. The basis of this assignment of error is that Dr. Bopp\u2019s testimony invaded the province of the jury in giving his opinion as to the adequacy of defendant\u2019s security measures.\n\u201cIt has been said that expert testimony to be admissible must relate to some trade or pursuit requiring special skill or knowledge, but the wide range of subject matter to which expert opinion has been directed in North Carolina disproves the existence of any such limitation and demonstrates that the only question is whether the particular matter under investigation is one on which the witness can be helpful to the jury because of his superior knowledge.\u201d (Footnotes omitted.)\n1 Stansbury\u2019s N.C. Evidence (Brandis rev. 1973), \u00a7 134, p. 433. It is further stated: \u201cIt seems abundantly clear that, despite occasional technical roadblocks erected by the \u2018rule\u2019 against invading the jury\u2019s province and by notions about the jury\u2019s sublime capacity to draw its own inferences, there can be expert testimony upon practically any facet of human knowledge and experience.\u201d Id. at 438. We overrule this assignment of error.\nDefendant assigns as error the trial court\u2019s permitting the witness Womble to testify in regard to the availability of security guards. This assignment is likewise without merit. The testimony was competent to prove notice to and knowledge of the need for adequate security measures by defendant. Here, the witness is merely reporting his actions, and his testimony was competent for that purpose.\nDefendant\u2019s assignment of error relating to the testimony of the witness Olsen regarding the availability of security devices is overruled, since the testimony was relevant to the issue of negligence, i.e., the standard of care imposed by law upon a carrier in the protection of its passengers and the breach thereof.\nNext, defendant assigns as error the trial court\u2019s permitting evidence concerning plaintiffs character.\nA civil action for assault and battery is not a proceeding where character is in issue. Smithwick v. Ward, 52 N.C. (7 Jones) 64. The general rule in civil suits is that unless the character of a party be put directly in issue by the nature of the proceeding, evidence of his character is not admissible. McRae v. Lilly, 23 N.C. (1 Ired.) 118. An exception to the general rule precluding the introduction of character evidence in a civil action exists after the credibility of the party seeking to offer it has been impeached, see 1 Stansbury\u2019s N.C. Evidence (Brandis rev. 1973), \u00a7 50, and cross-examination is one form of impeachment. Id. At trial, defendant cross-examined plaintiff. Once this was done, plaintiff was free to prove her good character, although there was no direct attack upon it. Id. at 145. This assignment of error is overruled.\nThe final assignment of error which we need to consider on defendant\u2019s appeal is whether the trial court erred in denying defendant\u2019s motion for a directed verdict.\n\u201c \u2018On a motion by a defendant for a directed verdict in a jury case, the court must consider all the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff and may grant the motion only if, as a matter of law, the evidence is insufficient to justify a verdict for the plaintiff.\u2019 \u201d (Citations omitted.)\nKelly v. Harvester Co., 278 N.C. 153, 158, 179 S.E. 2d 396, 398 (1971). When plaintiffs evidence is viewed in this light, it was clearly sufficient to withstand the motion for a directed verdict.\nPlaintiffs evidence tended to show: On 6 June 1976, plaintiff left Bishopville, South Carolina by Greyhound bus arriving at the Raleigh terminal in the early morning hours of 7 June 1976. Upon arrival, she telephoned her cousin for a ride and waited for the ride in the ladies\u2019 lounge. While sitting in the lounge (restroom) reading, plaintiff was accosted by one Darnell Banks, a known loiterer at the bus station, who pulled a knife on her and forcibly compelled her, at knife point and against her will, to submit to his sexual advances, including the act of fellatio. Only after he had ejaculated did Banks flee.\nSince the assault, plaintiff has difficulty sleeping; she has nightmares; she is unable to interact with people; she takes valium to calm her nerves; and she is unable to enjoy a normal sex life or affectionate embraces from male suitors because of the frightening sexual assault. Her injury has been psychological in nature, resulting in irreparable damage, for which she is entitled to compensation. Defendant\u2019s former employee, Wayne Braswell, testified that Banks, on prior occasions, had bothered female passengers as they waited in the bus terminal and had pulled a gun on him when he sought to intervene on one occasion. Braswell had run Banks out of the station approximately 50 times, and on several occasions prior to the incident on 6 June 1976, Mr. Fred Mock, defendant\u2019s district manager of the Raleigh Division, and Mr. Shirley Gresham, defendant\u2019s Raleigh terminal manager, had asked Banks to leave. Indicative of Banks\u2019 activities is the testimony related by Wayne Braswell in the record:\n\u201cA. Right. The reason that I would ask him to leave, more so than anything, in one instance I had walked up to the baggage area where you set the baggage right beside the ticket counter. A girl got up and walked towards me at the same time and he started towards the front door and told me that he told her if she didn\u2019t leave with him he was going to cut her. So from then on, I more or less watched him. I heard several of the other employees say that, you know, they had heard \u2014\nMr. Kaylor: Objection to what anyone else has said.\nMr. Thorp: Goes to notice, Your Honor.\nCourt: Overruled.\nDEFENDANT APPELLANT\u2019S EXCEPTION NO. 151\nA. The other employees had told me from time to time that on different shifts when we would come in and discuss what had happened, that he would leave during the night and sometime with a girl and the girl would come back crying. They would ask her why she was crying and they would say he told me if I didn\u2019t leave with him he was going to shoot me or cut me, he had a gun. They said why didn\u2019t you sign a warrant. They always lived out of town, didn\u2019t have time for court and would rather forget it, just leave.\u201d\nDefendant\u2019s terminal was structured so that the entrance to the ladies\u2019 restroom where the lounge was located was not observable by any of Greyhound\u2019s employees, even though technological means were available to do so. Pimps, prostitutes, transvestites, bums, winos, and loiterers, like Banks, were allowed to linger in the bus station where they frequently pestered defendant\u2019s passengers and were out of view of defendant\u2019s employees. Fights, narcotics arrests, as well as other criminal activities abounded in the neighborhood, and persons committing these crimes were free to enter, to linger, and to leave the bus terminal at their discretion.\nA police officer, Officer Womble, called to the premises to remove these persons, had talked with defendant\u2019s agents about the provision and need for security guards, but defendant had not instituted such measures. Defendant\u2019s national security director had not issued any directives pertaining to securing the bus terminal, and defendant\u2019s local agents had in many instances failed to report incidents such as assaults in the bus station.\nThis evidence was more than sufficient to show defendant\u2019s negligent breach of its duty to protect its passengers from assaults by intruders, regardless to which standard of care in foreseeing harm defendant is held, i.e., \u201cthe utmost human skill and foresight,\u201d see Daniel v. R.R., 117 N.C. 592, 23 S.E. 327 (1895); \u201cas far as human care and foresight could go,\u201d Hollingsworth v. Skelding, 142 N.C. 246, 55 S.E. 212 (1906); or \u201cwith the proper [reasonable] care.\u201d See Pride v. R.R., 176 N.C. 594, 97 S.E. 418 (1918).\nDefendant\u2019s other assignments of error have been reviewed and are without merit.\nPlaintiff\u2019s Appeal\nPlaintiff contends the trial court erred in failing to submit to the jury the issues of (1) whether the plaintiff was injured by the willful and wanton conduct of the defendant and (2) whether plaintiff was entitled to punitive damages. We disagree.\nPlaintiff\u2019s evidence as set forth in the foregoing portion of our opinion was insufficient for the submission to the jury of the issues of willful and wanton negligence and punitive damages.\nConclusion\nThe judgment entered below is\nAffirmed.\nJudges Martin (Robert M.) and Clark concur.\n164 N.C. 3, 4, 80 S.E. 65, 66 (1913).\n172 N.C. 266, 267, 90 S.E. 221 (1916).",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "ERWIN, Judge."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Thorp, Anderson & Slifkin, by WilliamL. Thorp and Anne R. Slifkin, for plaintiff.",
      "Johnson, Patterson, Dilthey & Clay, by I. Edward Johnson, Robert W. Kaylor, and Alene M. Mercer, for defendant."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "LUCILLE GLORIA WESLEY v. GREYHOUND LINES, INC.\nNo. 7910SC733\n(Filed 5 August 1980)\n1. Carriers \u00a7 19.2- sexual assault on bus passenger - action against carrier - type of area surrounding station\nIn an action against a bus company to recover damages allegedly resulting from defendant\u2019s negligent failure to protect plaintiff passenger from sexual assault in the women\u2019s restroom of defendant\u2019s bus station, testimony that defendant\u2019s station was located in a high crime area, that bums, prostitutes, and their pimps frequented the bus station, that fights from area night clubs frequently spilled into the streets, that drug arrests were common in the neighborhood, and that some of these very same characters were loiterers-in-residence at defendant\u2019s bus station was competent to show defendant\u2019s knowledge of the need for insuring adequate protection of passengers going to, going from, and waiting in the bus station.\n2. Carriers \u00a7 19.2- sexual assault on bus passenger \u2014 action against carrier \u2014 instruction on absence of denial that plaintiff sustained injury - harmless error\nIn an action against a bus company to recover damages allegedly resulting from defendant\u2019s negligent failure to protect plaintiff passenger from sexual assault in the women\u2019s restroom of defendant\u2019s bus station, the trial court erred in instructing the jury that defendant did not deny that the plaintiff was a victim of a criminal assault at its Raleigh terminal \u201cor that she sustained injury or damage\u201d where defendant did not stipulate or admit that plaintiff sustained injury or damage from the assault. However, defendant was not prejudiced by such error where (1) the jury could not have been misled by the misstatement; (2) the trial court thereafter instructed that it was for the jury to determine whether plaintiff sustained injury or damage; and (3) the trial court summarized the contentions of both parties as to the issue of injury and damage.\n3. Trial \u00a7 32.2- instruction to ignore previous charge on negligence issue\nThere is no merit in defendant\u2019s contention that the trial court erred in instructing the jury to ignore its original instructions on the first issue of negligence because the jury could have disregarded the previously given instructions on the nature of the lawsuit, proximate cause, and the burden of proof.\n4. Appeal and Error \u00a7 50.2; Negligence \u00a7 40- instructions on proximate cause - use of \u201cprobable cause\u201d\nThe trial court\u2019s lapsus linguae in using the term \u201cprobable cause\u201d instead of \u201cproximate cause\u201d in one instance in the charge was not prejudicial error.\n5. Evidence \u00a7 48; Damages \u00a7 3.4- permanency of psychological effects of sexual assault - testimony by clinical psychologist\nA clinical psychologist was not prohibited by the statute precluding the practice of medicine without a license, G.S. 90-18, from testifying as to the permanency of psychological effects on plaintiff resulting from a sexual assault. Furthermore, the psychologist\u2019s testimony was not too speculative for admission, although she used the word \u201cguess\u201d in stating her opinion, where her opinion was not a mere guess but was a statement of probability.\n6. Damages \u00a7 3.4; Evidence \u00a748- expert testimony by psychologist - sufficient contact with plaintiff to provide basis for opinion\nA clinical psychologist\u2019s contact with plaintiff was not so minimal as to provide an insufficient basis for her opinion testimony as to the permanency of psychological effects on plaintiff from a sexual assault where the psychologist first saw plaintiff on 7 July 1976 approximately one month after the assault; subsequent meetings were held on 15 July 1976, 4 October 1976, 1 January 1979 and 2 February 1979; at the time of these meetings, plaintiff was suffering from severe mental damage and, in keeping with psychological practices in such cases, was being seen only upon request; and the trial court did not find that the psychologist\u2019s examinations of plaintiff were solely for trial purposes and not for treatment.\n7. Carriers \u00a7 19.2; Damages \u00a7 3.4- psychological and physical effects from sexual assault - compensable injury\nIn an action against a bus company to recover damages allegedly resulting from defendant\u2019s negligent failure to protect plaintiff passenger from sexual assault in the women\u2019s restroom of defendant\u2019s bus station, plaintiff suffered a compensable injury where her evidence tended to show that, since the sexual assault on her, she has had difficulty sleeping, has had nightmares, has awakened at night afraid that some other person was in the room threating to harm her, and has been unable to participate in or enjoy the sexual pleasures which she had previously experienced, since plaintiff has suffered a physical impact resulting in mental distress or emotional disturbance.\n8. Damages \u00a7\u00a7 3.5, 17.5- lost wages and reduced earning capacity - unemployed plaintiff\nIn an action to recover for damages allegedly resulting from defendant bus company\u2019s negligent failure to protect plaintiff passenger from sexual assault in the women\u2019s restroom of defendant\u2019s station, the trial court did not err in instructing the jury on loss of wages and reduced capacity to earn because plaintiff was unemployed before the incident.\n9. Carriers \u00a7 19.2- sexual assault on bus passenger- liability of carrier - standard of care\nThe trial court\u2019s instruction that a common carrier must exercise the highest degree of care in foreseeing the imminence of a criminal assault on its passengers will not be held erroneous where such instruction is in accord with the rule stated in one line of prior N.C. cases, although another line of cases states that a carrier is only required to exercise ordinary or due care in foreseeing the imminence of a criminal assault on its passengers, since it is for the Supreme Court to determine which rule of law will govern when there \u2022 is a conflict of rules.\n10. Carriers \u00a7 19.2; Evidence \u00a7 42- sexual assault on bus passenger - action against carrier \u2014 characterizations of persons observed around bus station - shorthand statements of fact - relevancy to show notice\nA witness\u2019s testimony that over a period of time he observed bums, winos and panhandlers hanging around a bus station and disturbing people was competent as a shorthand statement of fact and was relevant to show notice and knowledge by the bus company of the imminence of a sexual assault on a passenger in its station.\n11.Carriers \u00a7 19.2; Evidence \u00a7 48- expert in security - adequacy of carrier\u2019s security measures\nIn an action to recover for damages allegedly resulting from defendant bus company\u2019s negligent failure to protect plaintiff passenger from sexual assault in the women\u2019s restroom of defendant\u2019s station, opinion testimony by an expert witness in the field of law enforcement and security as to the adequacy of defendant\u2019s security measures on the date of the sexual assault did not invade the province of the jury and was properly admitted.\n12. Carriers \u00a7 19.2- sexual assault on bus passenger - action against carrier - evidence of need and availability of security guards and devices\nIn an action to recover damages allegedly resulting from defendant bus company\u2019s negligent failure to protect plaintiff passenger from sexual assault in the women\u2019s restroom of defendant\u2019s station, testimony that an officer had talked to defendant\u2019s agents about the need for and the availability of security guards was competent to prove notice to and knowledge of the need for adequate security measures by defendant, and testimony concerning the availability of security devices was relevant to the issue of negligence.\n13. Witnesses \u00a7 5.2- cross-examination of plaintiff - subsequent evidence of good character\nPlaintiff could properly present evidence of her good character after her credibility had been impeached by defendant\u2019s cross-examination of her.\n14. Carriers \u00a7 19.2- sexual assault on bus passenger - negligence by bus company - sufficiency of evidence\nPlaintiffs evidence was sufficient for the jury on the issue of defendant bus company\u2019s negligence in failing to protect plaintiff passenger from sexual assault in defendant\u2019s station where it tended to show that plaintiff arrived at defendant\u2019s station by bus at 3:00 a.m.; while waiting in the women\u2019s restroom for her cousin to pick her up, she was forcibly compelled at knife point and against her will to submit to the sexual advances of a loiterer in the station; the assailant had bothered female passengers on other occasions as they waited in the bus terminal and had pulled a gun on defendant\u2019s employee when he sought to intervene on one occasion; the employee had run the assailant out of the station about fifty times prior to the assault on plaintiff; the assailant had also been asked to leave the station on other occasions by defendant\u2019s district manager and by its terminal manager; the entrance to the women\u2019s restroom was not observable by any of defendant\u2019s employees although technological means were available to permit such observations; pimps, prostitutes, transvestites, bums, winos and loiterers were allowed to linger in the bus station where they frequently pestered defendant\u2019s passengers and were out of view of defendant\u2019s employees; fights, narcotics arrests and criminal activities abounded in the neighborhood, and persons committing the crimes were free to enter and to leave the bus station at their discretion; a police officer had talked with defendant\u2019s agents about the need for and availability of security guards, but defendant had not instituted such measures; defendant\u2019s national security director had not issued any directive pertaining to securing the bus station, and defendant\u2019s local agents had in many instances failed to report incidents such as assaults in the bus station; since the assault plaintiff has difficulty sleeping, has nightmares, is unable to interact with people, takes valium to calm her nerves, and is unable to enjoy a normal sex life or affectionate embraces from male suitors; and plaintiff will suffer permanent psychological effects from the assault. However, such evidence was insufficient for submission to the jury of issues of willful and wanton negligence and punitive damages.\nAppeal by plaintiff and defendant from Godwin, Judge. Judgment entered 16 March 1979 in Superior Court, Wake County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 21 March 1980.\nOn 6 June 1976, plaintiff, a resident of Bishopville, South Carolina, purchased a bus ticket from defendant, Greyhound Lines, Inc. (hereinafter Greyhound), to travel from Bishopville to Raleigh. The bus on which she was traveling pulled into defendant\u2019s Raleigh bus station at approximately 3:00 a.m. on 7 June 1976. While sitting in the lounge of the ladies\u2019 restroom in the Raleigh terminal awaiting her ride, plaintiff was sexually assaulted by one Darnell Banks, a loiterer in the bus station. Plaintiff sued defendant Greyhound for negligence in not protecting her from the assault.\nAt trial, plaintiff asked the trial court to submit an issue as to punitive damages. The trial court refused. The jury returned a verdict of $150,000 in plaintiffs favor.\nPlaintiff and defendant appealed. Other facts pertinent to this appeal are set out in the opinion.\nThorp, Anderson & Slifkin, by WilliamL. Thorp and Anne R. Slifkin, for plaintiff.\nJohnson, Patterson, Dilthey & Clay, by I. Edward Johnson, Robert W. Kaylor, and Alene M. Mercer, for defendant."
  },
  "file_name": "0680-01",
  "first_page_order": 716,
  "last_page_order": 737
}
