Huff v. Northampton County Board of Education
Huff v. Northampton County Board of Education
Opinion of the Court
The appellant assigns as error the finding of fact to the effect that the attack and injuries inflicted on Cleo Huff by Odessie Sykes were not reasonably foreseeable by either the principal or the Board of Education operating the bus in question nor were the damages suffered by the plaintiff on the occasion in question proximately caused by any negligent act or omission of the principal or Board of Education.
An award against a county board of education under the provisions of the Tort Claims Act may not be predicated on the negligent act or omission of a school principal or the county board of education, but if an award is made it must be based on the negligent act or omission of the driver of a public school bus who was employed at the time by the county or city administrative unit of which such board was the governing body. G.S. 143-300.1.
The General Assembly of North Carolina relieved the State Board of Education from all responsibility in connection with the operation and control of school buses in this State by the enactment of Chapter 1372 of the North Carolina Session Laws of 1955, which Act authorizes
It it provided in G.S. 143-300.1,1961 cummulative supplement, inter alia: “Claims against county and city boards of education for accidents involving school buses or school transportation service vehicles. — (a) The North Carolina Industrial Commission shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine tort claims against any county board of education or any city board of education, which claims arise as a result of any alleged negligent act or omission of the driver of a public school bus or school transportation service vehicle when the salary of such driver is paid from the State Nine Months School Fund who is an employee of the county or city administrative unit of which such board is the governing board, and which driver was at the time of such alleged negligent act or omission operating a public school bus or school transportation service vehicle in the course of his employment by such administrative unit or such board.”
The evidence on this record is insufficient to establish that any negligent act or omission in the operation of the school bus by the driver thereof was the proximate cause or one of the proximate causes of plaintiff’s injuries. The evidence does not disclose any misconduct on the part of -any student riding the bus driven by James Broadnax after 15 October 1959, until 25 May 1960 while the bus was being driven by George Vincent, more than seven months after the first occurrence, that would give any one any reason to suspect a second fight between the parties involved. Moreover, there is no evidence tending to show any negligent act .or omission on the part of the driver of the bus on 25 May 1960 that could by any stretch of the imagination be construed as a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.
On the other hand, the Tort Claims Act does not authorize recovery unless the claimant is free from contributory negligence. G.S. 143-291. We think the plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that she moved from the rear of the bus immediately before the fight occurred and while the bus was in motion and voluntarily entered into the fight that resulted in her injuries.
In the case of Smith v. Board of Education, 241 N.C. 305, 84 S.E. 2d 903, a 14-year-old pupil on a school bus was assaulted by another pupil. The 14-year-old pupil rushed to the front of the bus, jerked the door open and jumped to her death. The driver did not see anything that happened until she was going out of the door of the bus. The hearing commissioner held that it was the duty of the bus driver to
The appellant herein assigns as error the failure of the court below to find that the school principal was negligent in not having a monitor >on said bus at the time the plaintiff sustained her injuries.
As a matter of fact, according to the evidence, the driver of the bus at the time complained of was the regular monitor. However, he had been assigned on 25 May 1960 as a substitute driver for James Broad-nax, the regular bus driver. Furthermore, whether or not the principal should have appointed a monitor as a substitute for Vincent since he was driving the bus, was a matter in the discretion of the principal.
G.S. 115-185 (d) provides: “The principal of a school, to which a school bus has been assigned, may in his discretion, appoint a monitor for any bus so assigned to snc-h school. It shall be the duty of such monitor, subject to the direction of the driver of the bus, to preserve order upon the bus and do such other things as may be appropriate for the safety of the pupils and employees assigned to such bus while boarding such bus, alighting therefrom or being transported thereon, and to require such pupils and employees to conform to the rules and regulations established by the county or city board of education for the safety of pupils and employees upon school buses.”
However, as heretofore pointed out, the Tort Claims Act does not authorize a recovery against a county board of education for the negligent act or omissions of its agents, servants and employees except for a claim based upon a negligent act or omission of a driver of a school bus employed by the board from which recovery is sought.
A county board of education, “unless it has duly waived immunity from tort liability, as authorized in G.S. 115-53, is not liable in a tort action or proceeding involving a tort except such liability as may be established under our Tort Claims Act. G.S. 143-291 through 143-300.1 * * Fields v. Board of Education, 251 N.C. 699, 111 S.E. 2d 910.
In our opinion, the evidence in this proceeding is insufficient to support a finding that the negligent acts or .omissions of James Broad-nax or George Vincent, the drivers of the school bus involved, on the occasions complained of, were the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries. Therefore, the result reached by the Industrial Commission and affirmed by the Superior Court will be upheld for the reasons set out in this opinion.
Affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
concurring in the result. The claimant, Cleo Huff, testified before the deputy hearing commissioner as follows:
“On the day in question, October 15, 1959, that afternoon we were almost at the church, me and Brenda, we were talking. So this Molly Sykes she said something. . .That is Odessie’s sister. We weren’t far from the church so I got off at the church. The next morning when I got on the bus she came up and told me that -she was fussing at Brenda. By then, the bus hadn’t even gotten to Brenda. After then she left and she and Brenda started fighting and then Odessie Sykes, she was arguing at me .and said she was going to make -some rules to go by on the bus. So Molly started fighting and we fought -until James stopped .the bus, -and came back and stopped us. That afternoon, after we got to Brenda’s turn, the bus stopped to put Brenda off, Brenda got to the door and I heard Odessie say, “Ain’t you going to do something?" Then Molly came over to where I was. She jumped on me and ■started fighting. Yes, this was in the bus when she jumped on me and started fighting. I saw Odessie up and she out me. This was ■on or about the 15th of October 1959. On the way home in the -afternoon, the occasion I was cut. I was cut right here on the left arm. Brenda told James, the driver of the bus, that she had a knife. When he got back there she bad cut me then. There was never any monitor on the bus at all during the year that I know of.
“Later in the school year, the day before school ended, we were going home that afternoon, and I was up there so me and her we hit at each other about the same time, and Thurman Paytiller stood in between us and then she cut me. That is all I know. She stabbed me, right here, and here.”
In my opinion, the injuries received on 25 May 1960 by the claimant, Cleo Huff, could have been reasonably foreseeable by the Nort
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Cleo Huff v. Northampton County Board of Education and North Carolina Board of Education
- Cited By
- 24 cases
- Status
- Published