King v. Holliday
King v. Holliday
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
“I charge you as matter of law that if a pérson is traveling upon the public highway and sees an object in the highway, especially if he is driving a dangerous machine, it does not make any difference what the object is, he must use caution and care and prudence as a person of ordinary reason and prudence would use, so as to avoid injury either to himself or to the person who is driving the car or to the object upon the highway, if it be capable of being injured.”
We see no error in this, it was a plain statement by his Honor as to the duty of a person driving a car on the public highway to use ordinary reason and prudence to 'avoid injury to himself and others, and is good, sound law, well charged. He charged the law applicable .to the issues and evidence, did not intimate any opinion, but left the facts entirely to the jury for their determination.
Exception 10 is overruled. The Court did all it could under the circumstances developed. Appellants cannot complain; they got all they were entitled to as the result of the medical' examination. His Honor’s ruling was clearly right. Exception 11 is overruled under authorities. Ex parte Hilton, 64 S. C., 206; 41 S. E., 978; 92 Am. St. Rep., 800; State v. Ballew, 83 S. C., 86; 63 S. E., 688; 64 S. E., 1019; 18 Ann. Cas., 569, and State v. Browning, 116 S. C. 252; 108 S. E., 105.
All exceptions are overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- King v. Holliday Et Al.
- Cited By
- 9 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- I. Highways — Instruction as to Automobile Driver's Duty on Seeing Object on Highway Held a Proper Statement of Law. — In an action against an automobile owner and his driver for injuries sustained by a boy of four when struck by the car while on the highway, instruction that a person driving on the public highway, seeing an object thereon, especially if he is driving a dangerous machine, must use caution and care and prudence to avoid injury, either to himself or to the object on the highway, if it be capable of being injured, was a proper statement of the law. 2. Negligence — Child Under Seven Incapable op Being Negligent on Highway. — A child under seven years of age is incapable of committing a trespass or of being negligent, and' in an action by his guardian ad litem for injuries sustained by him when struck by an automobile on tlje highway it was immaterial what use he was making of the highway when struck. 3. Highways_Municipal Corporation. — Duty op Drivers op Automobiles as to Use op Due Care to Avoid Injuries Stated.' — It is the duty of drivers of automobiles on the public streets and highways to observe due care and caution, as a person of ordinary care and caution is required to, to avoid injury to themselves and their property and injury to the persons and property of others.