Court Opinion

ID: 3664789
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:15:10.268139+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:40.884278
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff's chief assignment of error urged in the oral argument and discussed in the brief, is to the following charge of the trial judge: "The court charges you as a matter of law that in order that a party may be liable for negligence, it is not necessary that he could have contemplated, or even been able to anticipate the particular consequences which ensued, or the precise injuries sustained by the plaintiff. It is sufficient if by the exercise of reasonable care the defendant might have foreseen that some injury would result from his act or omission, or that consequences of a generally injurious nature might have been expected."
This part of the charge is taken from Drum v. Miller, 135 N.C. 215.
The defendant contends that the correct rule should be whether or not a reasonably prudent man in a similar situation to that of the defendant, could, under all the facts and circumstances, reasonably have foreseen that some person who was in a similar or analogous situation to that of plaintiff at the time of setting off the blast, would probably be injured thereby; or, in other words, that a reasonably prudent man, under the circumstances, could have foreseen the particular injury complained of. But the rule as stated in Drum v. Miller has been approved many times by this Court, as will appear by an examination of Shepard's Annotations.
In Hudson v. R. R., 142 N.C. 203, Justice Hoke says: "The doctrine is that consequences which follow in unbroken sequence without an intervening efficient cause from the original wrong are natural, and for such consequences the original wrongdoer must be held responsible, even though he could not have foreseen the particular result, provided that in the exercise of ordinary care he might have foreseen that some injury would likely follow from his negligence." (Citing Drum v. Miller, supra.) *Page 708 
In Hudson v. R. R., 176 N.C. 492, Allen, J., says: "In support of the first two positions the defendant relies on the definition of proximate cause, in Ramsbottom v. R. R., 138 N.C. 41, approved in Bowers v. R. R.,144 N.C. 686, and in Chancey v. R. R., 174 N.C. 351, as "A cause that produces the result in continuous sequence, and without which it would not have occurred, and one from which any man of ordinary prudence could have foreseen that such a result was probable under all the facts as they existed," to which we adhere, with the modification contained in Drum v.Miller, 135 N.C. 204, and many other cases, that it is not required that the particular injury should be foreseen, and is sufficient if it could be reasonably anticipated that injury or harm might follow the wrongful act."
An examination of the cases in which Drum v. Miller has been cited and approved, will disclose that the principle has never been questioned nor modified, and is therefore the law of the State.
There are other exceptions in the record, but they present no reversible error, and the judgment is affirmed.
No error.