{
  "id": 8627277,
  "name": "MRS. M. E. GODWIN v. MARK NIXON, ISHAM NIXON and W. ED NIXON, Trading as NIXON BROTHERS, and W. C. PRATER",
  "name_abbreviation": "Godwin v. Nixon",
  "decision_date": "1953-01-06",
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  "first_page": "632",
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    "judges": [
      "Parker, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "MRS. M. E. GODWIN v. MARK NIXON, ISHAM NIXON and W. ED NIXON, Trading as NIXON BROTHERS, and W. C. PRATER."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "WiNBOBNE, J.\nThis appeal challenges the ruling of the trial court in sustaining the motions of defendants for judgment as of nonsuit in so far as the appealing plaintiff is concerned. This raises the question as to whether or not the evidence offered upon the trial below, as shown in the case on appeal, taken in the light most favorable to plaintiff, is sufficient to make out a case of actionable negligence against either the defendants, Nixon Brothers, or the defendant Prater. Considering the evidence in such light, this Court agrees with the ruling and judgment of the trial court in so far as the defendants Nixon Brothers are concerned, but holds that there is error in the ruling and judgment as it relates to defendant Prater.\nIn an action for recovery of damages for injury resulting from actionable negligence of defendant, plaintiff must show: (1) That there has been a failure on the part of defendant to exercise proper care in the performance of some legal duty which the defendant owed the plaintiff under the circumstances in which they were placed. And (2) that such negligent breach of duty was the proximate cause of the injury, \u2014 a cause that produced the result in continuous sequence, and without which it would not have occurred, and one from which a man of ordinary prudence could have foreseen that such result was probable under the facts as they existed. Ramsbottom v. R. R., 138 N.C. 38, 50 S.E. 448; Whitt v. Rand, 187 N.C. 805, 123 S.E. 84. See Mintz v. Murphy, 235 N.C. 304, 69 S.E. 2d 849; and Morris v. Transport Co., 235 N.C. 568, 70 S.E. 2d 845, where the authorities are assembled.\nIf the evidence fails to establish either one of the essential elements of actionable negligence, judgment of nonsuit is proper. Thomas v. Motor Lines, 230 N.C. 122, 52 S.E. 2d 377, and Mintz v. Murphy, supra, and cases there cited.\nAnd the principle prevails in this State that what is negligence is a question of law, and when the facts are admitted or established, the court must say whether it does or does not exist. \u201cThis rule extends and applies not only to the question of negligent breach of duty, hut also to the feature of proximate cause,\u201d Hoke, J., in Hicks v. Mfg. Co., 138 N.C. 319, 50 S.E. 703; Russell v. R. R., 118 N.C. 1098, 24 S.E. 512; Lineberry v. R. R., 187 N.C. 786, 123 S.E. 1; Mintz v. Murphy, supra, and cases cited.\nIn Lineberry v. R. R., supra, in opinion by Clarkson, J., this Court said: \u201cIt is well settled that where the facts are all admitted, and only one inference may be drawn from them, the court will declare whether an act was the proximate cause of the injury or not.\u201d See also Nichols v. Goldston, 228 N.C. 514, 46 S.E. 2d 320. Mintz v. Murphy, supra, and cases cited.\nFurthermore, it is proper in negligence cases to sustain a demurrer to the evidence and enter judgment as of nonsuit under the provisions of G-.S. 1-183 when, among other grounds, \u201cit clearly appears from the evidence that the injury complained of was independently and pxoximately produced by the wrongful act, neglect, or default of any outside agency or responsible third person . . .,\u201d Stacy, C. J., in Smith v. Sink, 211 N.C. 725, 192 S.E. 108, and cases cited in respect to such principle. See also Powers v. Sternberg, 213 N.C. 41, 195 S.E. 88; Butner v. Spease, 217 N.C. 82, 6 S.E. 2d 808; Murray v. R. R., 218 N.C. 392, 11 S.E. 2d 326; Luttrell v. Mineral Co., 220 N.C. 782, 18 S.E. 2d 412; Riggs v. Motor Lines, 233 N.C. 160, 63 S.E. 2d 197; Mintz v. Murphy, supra.\nIn Smith v. Sinlc, supra, it is also said: \u201cWe had occasion to examine anew this doctrine of insulating the conduct of one, even when it amounts to passive negligence, by the intervention of the active negligence of an independent agency or third party, as applied to various fact situations, in the recent cases of Beach v. Patton, 208 N.C. 134, 179 S.E. 446,\u201d and others cited. Then the opinion continues: \u201cThese decisions are in full support and approval of Mr. Wharton\u2019s statement in his valuable work on Negligence (Sec. 134) : \u2018Supposing that if it had not been for the intervention of a responsible third party the defendant\u2019s negligence would have produced no damage to plaintiff, is the defendant liable to the plaintiff? This question must be answered in the negative for the general reason that causal connection between negligence and damage is broken by the interposition of independent responsible human action. I am negligent on'a particular subject matter. Another person, moving independently, comes in, and either negligently or maliciously so acts as to make my negligence injurious to a third person. If so, the person so intervening acts as a nonconductor, and insulates my negligence, so that I cannot be sued for the mischief which the person so intervening directly produces. He is the one who is liable to the person injured.\u2019 \u201d Then there follows, to like effect, a quotation from R. R. v. Kellogg, 94 U.S. 469. See also Butner v. Spease, supra; Riggs v. Motor Lines, supra; Mintz v. Murphy, supra; Clark v. Lambreth, 235 N.C. 578, 70 S.E. 2d 828.\nIn the light of these principles, applied to the case in hand, if it be conceded that the defendants Nixon Brothers failed in the performance of statutory obligations imposed upon them in any respect alleged in the complaint, the evidence fails to show that such failure was a proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff. On the other hand, it is manifest from the evidence that the injury of which plaintiff complains was \u201cindependently and proximately produced by the wrongful act, neglect, or default of an outside agency or responsible third person.\u201d In so far as Nixon Brothers are concerned, there would have been no injury to plaintiff but for the intervening wrongful act, neglect or default of the driver of the automobile in which she was riding, in failing either to keep a proper lookout for hazards of tbe road, such as disabled vehicles, or, in the exercise of due care, to keep his automobile under such control as to be able to stop within the range of his lights. In this respect the case comes within the principle applied in Weston v. R. R., 194 N.C. 210, 139 S.E. 237, and numerous other cases cited in Morris v. Transport Co., supra. This exculpates Nixon Brothers. Powers v. Sternberg, supra.\nNow as to defendant Prater: The evidence shown in'the record appears to be sufficient to take the case to the jury on an issue of actionable negligence. Therefore, since there must be a retrial between plaintiff and defendant Prater, and the evidence then may not be the same as it now is, the Court declines to pass upon the question as to whither or not plaintiff and Prater were engaged in a joint enterprise at the time of the collision in question. This subject has been recently treated in James v. R. R., 233 N.C. 591, 65 S.E. 2d 214.\nHence the judgment below :\nAs to defendants Nixon Brothers is\nAffirmed.\nAs to defendant Prater is\nReversed.\nParker, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "WiNBOBNE, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Leon 6r. Stevens and E. Craig Jones, Jr., for plaintiff, appellant.",
      "Wellons, Martin & Wellons for defendant Prater, appellee.",
      "Uoolcs r& Spence for Nixon Brothers, defendants, appellees."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "MRS. M. E. GODWIN v. MARK NIXON, ISHAM NIXON and W. ED NIXON, Trading as NIXON BROTHERS, and W. C. PRATER.\n(Filed 6 January, 1953.)\n1. Negligence \u00a7\u00a7 17, 19b (1)\u2014\nPlaintiff in an action to recover for negligent injury must show failure on the part of defendant to exercise due care in the performance of some legal duty which defendant owed plaintiff under the circumstances, and that such negligent breach of duty, acting in continuous sequence, produced the injury, and that such result could have been reasonably foreseen by a man of ordinary prudence under the existing conditions. Nonsuit is proper if plaintiff\u2019s evidence fails to establish any one of these essential elements.\n2. Negligence \u00a7 19a\u2014\nWhat is negligence is a question of law, and when the facts are admitted or established, the court may say whether negligence does or does not exist and, if so, whether it was the proximate cause of the injury.\n3. Negligence \u00a7 19d\u2014\nWhere it clearly appears from the evidence that the injury complained of was independently and proximately produced by the wrongful act, neglect, or default of any outside agency or responsible third person, defendant\u2019s motion to nonsuit is properly sustained.\n4. Automobiles \u00a7\u00a7 8d, 18d, 18h (4) \u2014 Evidence held to disclose intervening negligence insulating any negligence in parking on highway.\nIn this action by a passenger in an automobile to recover for injuries received when the car in which she was riding collided with the rear of \u00e1 tractor-trailer which was standing because of a disabled motor and blocking the right-hand traffic lane at a street intersection, held the evidence discloses that the negligence of the driver of the car in failing either to keep a proper lookout or to keep his automobile under such control as to be able to stop within the range of his lights was such intervening negligence on the part of the driver of the car as to insulate any negligence in parking the tractor-trailer in violation of statute, or in failing to put out flares, and therefore motion to nonsuit by the owner and operator of, the tractor-trailer was properly allowed.\n5. Automobiles \u00a7\u00a7 8d, 18h (2) \u2014\nIn this action by a passenger in an automobile to recover for injuries received when the car in which she was riding collided with the rear of a tractor-trailer which was standing and blocking the right-hand traffic lane at a street intersection, held the evidence is sufficient to be submitted to the jury as to the negligence of the driver of the car in failing to keep a proper lookout or in failing to keep his car under such control as to be able to stop within the range of his lights, and motion to nonsuit by the owner and operator of the car was improvidently granted.\nPamcer, .1., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.\nAppeal by plaintiff from Godwin, Special Judge, at February Term, 1952, of Johnston.\nCivil action for recovery of damages for personal injuries allegedly suffered and resulting to plaintiff from actionable negligence of defendants when automobile owned and operated by defendant ~W. C. Prater, in wbicb plaintiff was riding, as it traveled south along Pollock Street on U. S. Highway 301, in a residential district in the town of Selma, North Carolina, came into collision with the rear end of a tractor-trailer of defendants Nixon Brothers, standing on right or west side of said street and highway at the intersection thereof with Preston Street.\n(Note: This action was consolidated for purpose of trial with two others against Nixon Brothers, \u2014 one by Jane Prater and the other by W. C. Prater. Motions of defendants Nixon Brothers for judgment as of nonsuit made at close of evidence for plaintiffs were allowed. And motion of W. C. Prater for judgment as of nonsuit made at same tim\u00e9 in the present action was allowed. Only the plaintiff, Mrs. M. E. Godwin, appeals. Tbe case on appeal apparently contains all tbe evidence \u25a0 offered by each of tbe three plaintiffs, including tbe separate testimony of eacb.)\nGodwin v. Nixon.\nTbe acts of negligence alleged against defendants Mark Nixon and Nixon Brothers as tbe proximate cause'or. one of tbe proximate causes of tbe injuries sustained by plaintiff in the collision are these: That tbe said Mark Nixon parked tbe tractor-trailer and semi-trailer (a) \u201cupon a public highway where it was expressly forbidden to park by tbe rules and regulations of tbe State Highway and Public Works Commission\u201d;\n(b) \u201cin a manner contrary to tbe laws and statutes of North Carolina as set out in tbe General Statutes in that be parked tbe said truck and trailer with tbe right front wheel of tbe cab about two (2) feet from the curbing and left tbe trailer parked in a diagonal direction with tbe rear of said trailer in tbe middle of tbe highway, failing to leave room for tbe passage of traffic on tbe left side of said highway\u201d;\n(c) \u201cin tbe night time on a public highway without flares or lights showing that said tractor truck and semi-trailer was so parked\u201d;\n(d) \u201cin an unlawful and illegal manner for more than an hour on a public highway, as she is informed and believes, and hence alleges, after having been ordered by a State Highway Patrolman and a peace officer of tbe County of Johnston to move said truck and trailer, and . .\u2022 . failed and refused to move tbe same or to take any precaution to save tbe traveling public from barm\u201d;\n(e) \u201cin direct violation of tbe statutes by failing to set tbe brake on tbe said truck so that tbe \u2018Stop\u2019 light on said truck would be illuminated and would thus show that said truck and trailer was parked and was not moving\u201d; and\n(f) \u201cwith no lights of any kind on tbe rear of said trailer except two small clearance lights, one on eacb of tbe extreme outside edges, and said lights were barely visible at a very short distance and tbe said lights being below tbe dark load of cotton, and tbe said trailer being parked diagonally in said street, tbe said lights merely appeared as tbe rear lights of a moving vehicle\u201d; and\n(g) \u201cwilfully, wantonly and negligently and with a total disregard for tbe rights of tbe traveling public, refused and failed to move tbe truck and trailer from its dangerous position and failed and refused to put out any warning signals or flares so that tbe traveling public could protect itself.\u201d\nTbe acts of negligence alleged against defendant Prater as tbe proximate, or one of tbe proximate causes of tbe injury sustained by plaintiff in tbe collision are these: That tbe said W. C. Prater failed \u201c(a) . . . to keep bis ear under proper control so that be was unable to stop when be bad placed himself in a dangerous position by passing a truck traveling in tbe same direction and found himself at or near tbe parked truck and trailer of Nixon Brothers, and as a result collided with the rear of the trailer so parked;\n\u201c(b) . . . to keep a proper lookout when passing an overtaken vehicle and thereby failed to see that he could not pass the same in safety and as a result collided with the rear of the parked truck and trailer belonging to Nixon Brothers; and\n\u201c(c) ... to slow down and ascertain that he could safely pass a truck traveling in front of him in the same direction, and as a result collided with the rear of the trailer belonging to Nixon Brothers as set out before,\u201d although he knew the dangerous conditions which existed on Highway 301 because of the heavy and continuous traffic through the town of Selma, particularly at the point of the collision, and (d) that W. C. Prater \u201cdrove his automobile in a careless and reckless manner, without due regard to the condition of the traffic and traveling public on a highly congested and dangerous highway, attempting to pass an overtaken vehicle without taking proper and due precaution, and failing to keep his car under proper control and thereby collided with the rear of said truck and trailer as set out before.\u201d\nThe defendants Nixon Brothers, answering the complaint, deny in material aspect the allegations thereof, except as to those uncontradicted facts hereinafter recited. They particularly deny the allegations charging them with acts of negligence. And they aver that such injuries as plaintiff sustained are the sole and proximate result of the negligence of th\u00e9defendant W. C. Prater in specific detail; that the acts of negligence of defendant W. C. Prater superseded any negligence on the part of defendants Nixon Brothers, if any they committed, and without which negligence plaintiff\u2019s injuries would not have occurred; that plaintiff was a co-adventurer in the risks of W. 0. Prater; and that by her own negligence she contributed to her injuries in manner specified.\nAnd the defendant W. C. Prater, answering the complaint of plaintiff, denies all allegations charging him with negligence and liability therefor, but admits or does not deny other allegations.\nThese facts appear to be uncontroverted: About 8 :10 o\u2019clock on night of 16 February, 1950, W. 0. Prater and his wife, Jane Prater, and the plaintiff, Mrs. M. E. Godwin, entered his automobile and started from his home on Anderson Street in the town of Selma, North Carolina, on a trip to- some point beyond Smithfield on the Smithfield-Angier highway No. 210, where a friend of Mrs. Godwin lived. The route of the proposed trip was easterly about two blocks along Anderson Street to U. S. Highway No. 301, which is the same as Pollock Street in said town, then southerly along this highway through a residential section within the corporate limit of the town and on to, and through the town of Smithfield, and tben on beyond, and along the SmithfieldrAngier highway No. 210 .to the destination \u2014 which was known only to Mrs. Godwin. : . ;\nEn route, traveling southly from the Anderson-Pollock Street intersection, the Southern Railway line is crossed at end one block, and Wilson Mill Road at end two blocks, and Preston Street at end four blocks. There was a stop light at the intersection with Wilson Mill road, and another at Preston Street intersection.\nPollock Street is straight approximately one-half mile each way from Preston Street. It is paved and approximately 30 feet 8 inches wide from curb to curb at Preston Street.\nThe truck-trailer of the Nixon Brothers was standing headed in southerly direction, and the Prater automobile was traveling in same direction. The collision occurred at the Preston Street intersection.\nUpon the trial in Superior Court the testimony of plaintiff and the Praters,' \u2014 in respect to the purpose of the trip, tends to show these facts: Plaintiff, a widow, was a guest in the Prater home on 16 February, 1950. And the subject of going to see a man friend of hers, who lived on Highway No. 210, was discussed among the three of them. Mrs. Prater testified : \u201cI know I didn\u2019t ask to go to see him first and I don\u2019t recall who mentioned it first . . . My husband was told the man we were going to see lived beyond Smithfield. Mrs. Godwin said he lived out on 210 highway. I don\u2019t know her exact words. The truth is that Mrs. Godwin wanted my husband to take her to see the man and he was going to be her friend. We took her because she was a guest at our home and she asked me to go . . . This was Mrs. Godwin\u2019s first visit to our home . . . After supper on this night we all were going out for a ride to see a friend of Mrs. Godwin\u2019s who lived south of Selma.\u201d\nAnd in same connection plaintiff testified: \u201cAfter supper Mr. and Mrs. Prater and I talked it over and decided to go to ride and we got into the car, \u2014 decided to see a man who lived out on the Angier highway west of Smithfield ... I had no particular reason for going out there, but I had known back in the past he was sick and I was down there visiting and we just decided to ride around and we would ride out to see if he was at home. I do not recall who suggested it. At the time of the collision I . . . had been going around with him. I did not especially want to see him, but I thought we would ride out and see how he was getting along . . . I went to see if he was sick or had gotten well . . . Well, I had no purpose whatever to go to see. him ... no reason ... I do not know how the Praters found out I wanted to go for I did not tell them. The Praters did not know the name of the man until yesterday. I talked about going out there . . .\u201d\nAnd the evidence shown in the record on this appeal tends to show in summary the following: They, Prater, his wife, and plaintiff, started on tbe trip. Prater was driving tbe automobile, Mrs. Prater was sitting in tbe middle on front seat, and plaintiff, Mrs. Godwin, on tbe right on front seat. They traveled along Anderson Street to, and turned south on Pollock Street \u2014 Highway 301, crossed tbe railroad at one block, and came to tbe stop light at intersection of Wilson Mill Eoad and Pollock Street\u2014 Highway 301, at end of two blocks, and two blocks north of tbe Preston Street intersection. Tbe traffic light there was on red and a large tractor-trailer (not tbe one involved in tbe collision) bad stopped. Tbe Prater automobile also stopped. Then when tbe light changed to green tbe traffic moved forward. Prater pulled bis automobile out, and ran around tbe tractor-trailer, and turned back into tbe right lane about tbe middle of tbe first block at a point \u201cabout a block and a half,\u201d or \u201cabout 510 feet,\u201d or \u201csome over 500 feet\u201d from and north of tbe Preston Street intersection. Tbe Prater automobile was then and there leading tbe southbound traffic. No other vehicle was between it and tbe Nixon truck. It proceeded along its right-hand side of tbe street to, and collided with tbe Nixon truck at Preston Street.\nBut, after passing tbe tractor-trailer and pulling back in line, as above stated, tbe Prater automobile was meeting traffic \u2014 several cars \u201cthat bad bright lights\u201d going north. Mrs. Prater testified: \u201cTbe cars that we were meeting were on tbe south side of tbe truck when we first saw them. Tbe Nixon truck was setting there between us and at least three other cars which bad their lights on and meeting us . . . Two of those three cars met us and tbe third was passing when I saw tbe red light.\u201d\nAnd in this connection Prater testified: \u201cJust before I saw tbe reflectors on that truck (Nixon\u2019s) I met a car which blinded me and as quick as that car went by there was another car coming up there opposite tbe Nixon truck ... I said I saw tbe reflectors . . . when I met tbe last car. All three of those cars were in line. There was one even with tbe truck at tbe time I bit tbe truck, \u2014 that was tbe third one. I bad already passed two. I was blinded by tbe last car that met me before I bit tbe truck. I said all three cars bad bright lights ... I saw tbe lights of three ears coming down tbe road and saw two pass tbe truck. I saw tbe light of these coming right straight down tbe street meeting me and I dimmed my lights when I passed tbe truck at tbe stoplight. At tbe time I passed these cars tbey were beyond tbe parked truck I bit. I could see them approaching after I crossed tbe Southern Eailroad tracks, a distance of 400 or 500 yards for tbe road is straight and level. After I pulled back in line ... I was blinded by tbe lights of tbe oncoming traffic when I was close enough on tbe parked truck . . . All I know is that I was blinded until I didn\u2019t have time to go around tbe truck, \u2014 I would say 25 or 30 feet. After I became blinded by tbe glare of tbe lights I was blinded until after tbe cars went by.\u201d And to these questions Prater answered as shown: \u201cQ. Were you blinded after the car (you were meeting) went by? A. I was before it went by. Q. . . . How far did you travel while you were blinded ? A. Long enough to pass the car. I cannot say what distance I traveled. I don\u2019t know just how short a distance but all the time he was passing me. There were two cars coming and one even with the truck about the time I hit the truck. Q. So you were blinded by the bright lights of three cars? A. Yes, sir. I was a little farther away from the parked truck than 30 feet. I was so close to it that I picked up the reflectors on the back of the truck. I was 25 or 30 feet away then. I applied my brakes and skidded my wheels. The skid marks were not 55 feet long. I didn\u2019t put on my brakes until I saw the truck . . . .\u201d\nAnd, in this connection, plaintiff testified: \u201cI don\u2019t remember any lights blinding me or any automobile meeting us.\u201d And again, \u201cMr. Prater says he was meeting traffic ... I said we were 40 or 50 feet away from the parked truck when Prater applied his brakes.\u201d\nAnd Mrs. Prater testified: \u201cMy husband applied his brakes before the truck was struck . . . The tires skidded and they squealed all the way into the back of the truck. We were not more than 50 feet away when that squealing noise began.\u201d\nAs to speed of the Prater automobile: Prater testified that he was driving his automobile at 25 miles per hour. Mrs. Prater testified to like effect. And plaintiff puts the speed at 25 or 30 miles per hour. But she testified: \u201cI say he failed to slow down, he must have or he would not have hit that truck.\u201d And then she concluded by saying: \u201cI can\u2019t understand why I allege that \u2018Mr. Prater failed to keep a \u201cproper lookout.\u201d \u2019 I must have meant that he was driving too fast, the only thing I can think of ... I just don\u2019t know. I can\u2019t answer anything else.\u201d\nAs to skid marks: The evidence is that the skid marks on the pavement immediately behind the Prater automobile measured fifty-five feet in length \u2014 from where the marks started to where the front wheels stopped under the truck; and that they were in the right-hand lane of the highway going south at estimated distance of 3% or 4 or 5 feet from the curb,\u2014 nearly straight down the highway, as one witness testified, until about 10 or 15 feet behind the truck, where they turned left, as another testified. This is borne out by the testimony of Deputy Sheriff Lamm, Policeman Ryal and Highway Patrolman Carter- \u2014 who state that they saw the skid marks, and measured, or saw them measured.\nAs to brakes on the Prater automobile: Prater testified: \u201cI put on my brakes but my car didn\u2019t stop before it struck Nixon\u2019s truck. I was running 25 miles per hour with perfect brakes \u2014 hydromatic brakes. All I had to do was to hit my brakes and my car responded immediately to the brake.\u201d\nAs to damage to Prater automobile: Prater testified: \u201cMy car went under the truck body so far that the truck body was against the cowl of my car. The right-hand side of the hood, right-hand fender and front part of my automobile was rammed up under the truck body and the left side wasn\u2019t under the truck.\u201d And there is testimony of officers, in this respect, and to the effect that the automobile was smashed up in front and the windshield broken, \u2014 that the whole front of it Avas damaged\u2014 hood, grill and radiator.\nAnd the evidence shows that plaintiff was thrown out the front door of the Prater car, and sustained severe and serious injuries to her face and other parts of her person.\nAs to the location and disablement of the Nixon tractor-trailer : There is testimony of officers to the effect: That the Nixon Brothers truck became disabled, and was pulled over against the curb at the southwest corner of the intersection between Pollock Street \u2014 Highway 301, and Preston Street; that before the collision the tractor portion of it was against the curb, and the back end of trailer was setting out some; that the front of it was near the curb at some angle; that the back \u201ccould have been 3 or 4 feet\u201d from the curbing that turned back at Pollock Street; and that the trailer was eight feet wide. Patrolman Carter testified : \u201cWhen I came up behind the Nixon truck, I pulled along side it. So I was about the middle of the street when I was talking to Nixon\u201d the driver.\nAnd there is evidence that the trailer was loaded with cotton; that the cotton was \u201cof a dark color,\u201d the top of the bales were \u201c8 to 10 feet from the ground,\u201d in opinion of one witness, and \u201capproximately 11 feet high from the truck body and 15 feet from the ground,\u201d as estimated by another; and that a large street light, 200, 300 or 400 watts, with reflector, suspended over the intersection, was burning over the cotton, \u2014 casting its rays fifty feet around over the entire intersection; Mrs. Prater testified that \u201cthe street light was burning over the tractor part of the truck but not over the trailer part.\u201d\nAlso there is testimony that the man in charge of the truck told officers he hoped to get the motor started and soon to be on the move; that it was not many minutes thereafter that the collision in question took place; and that the officer asked the man about putting out some flares, and \u201che said he was only going to be there a minute because he had called ahead and someone from the shop was coming either to pull him in or help fix the truck . . . He said the truck had just knocked off on him.\u201d\nAnd there is testimony that after the collision the tractor-trailer was in substantially the same position as before, except that the front wheel of the tractor was up on the curb; that the rear wheels of the trailer were 18 to 20 inches from the curb had it been extended; that the left rear wheel would have been ten feet from the curb, if the truck was 8 feet wide; and that there would remain 20 feet from the left-hand edge of the truck to the curb on the opposite side of the street.\nAs to lights on the Nixon trailer: There is testimony from \"W. C. Prater, Mrs. Prater and plaintiff that they saw no lights on the trailer until they had gotten within distances, variously estimated to be 20, 30, 40 or 50 feet from it, when the lights of the Prater car picked up two red reflector lights on the rear of the trailer. There is also testimony of an officer traveling north who stopped at the tractor-trailer about 8 o\u2019clock to the effect that he did not see any lights on the rear of the trailer, but that he had no occasion to look back to see. And there is testimony of the State Highway Patrolman Carter to the effect that he traveling south approached the rear of the Nixon trailer around 8 o\u2019clock; that he stopped and talked a minute with the driver, and left; that he had not gone from the scene more than five minutes when he had information as to the collision here in question. He testified: \u201cI am definite when I say I saw lights on the truck when I first went there. I saw two reflectors on the back of the truck . . . There were, I know, four or five lights burning on the back of the truck, all in a row, and two reflectors. There were six or seven lights in all burning including the reflectors . . . There was a clearance light on the side of the truck, indicating the right rear, and there was a clearance light here indicating the left rear, but reflectors were on this location (indicating). I am sure there were three lights together in the center of the truck and that they were burning red. There were red clearance lights. I could see the truck and the lights on the rear of the truck visible 600-700 feet from the rear ... I saw two red lights burning. They were visible for 500 feet to the rear of the truck. I saw the truck a long ways down the street as I approached it from the rear. The lights were burning on it.\u201d\nThe weather: Prater testified that the weather on this occasion was misty \u2014 but not raining. Patrolman Carter testified that the weather was dry and fair \u2014 and the hard-surface dry.\nNo parking signs: Deputy Sheriff Lamm testified: That while there were two or three signs put up by the State Highway Commission about a half block south of the point of collision in front of a tavern, there was no sign prohibiting parking along the street where the collision occurred and never had been so far as he knew; and that there were no \u201cNo parking\u201d signs north of the point of the collision.\nPlaintiff, Mrs. M. E. Godwin, appeals to the Supreme Court and assigns error.\nLeon 6r. Stevens and E. Craig Jones, Jr., for plaintiff, appellant.\nWellons, Martin & Wellons for defendant Prater, appellee.\nUoolcs r& Spence for Nixon Brothers, defendants, appellees."
  },
  "file_name": "0632-01",
  "first_page_order": 684,
  "last_page_order": 695
}
