Pardue v. Charlotte Motor Speedway, Inc., 441
Decision Date | 20 March 1968 |
Docket Number | No. 441,441 |
Citation | 273 N.C. 314,159 S.E.2d 857 |
Parties | Mrs. Betty S. PARDUE, Administratrix of the Estate of James M. Pardue, Deceased, v. CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY, INC. |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Jordan, Wright, Henson & Nichols, Greensboro, and McElwee & Hall, North Wilkesboro, by Welch Jordan, and Edward L. Murrelle, Greensboro, for plaintiff appellant.
John H. Small, Sanders, Walker & London, by Robert G. Sanders, Charlotte, Moore & Rousseau, by Larry S. Moore, North Wilkesboro, for defendant appellee.
The instant case does not involve an injury to a spectator. We have here the death of a voluntary participant who was killed on defendant's race track while conducting high-speed tests of Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company tires at a speed of about 150 miles per hour, when the right front tire on the automobile he was operating ruptured and the automobile crashed through a guard rail on the outside edge of the race track, fell approximately 50 feet to the ground, and struck a steel post which came through the left side window of the automobile killing the driver. Do the facts of this case disclose the breach of any duty owed to plaintiff's intestate by the race track owner?
The general rule is that the owner or operator of an automobile race track is charged with the duty of exercising reasonable care, under the circumstances present, for the safety of patrons and participants in the racing; that is, a care commensurate with any known or reasonably foreseeable danger. William v. Strickland, 251 N.C. 767, 112 SE.2d 533; Lane v. Eastern Carolina Drivers Association, 253 N.C. 764, 117 S.E.2d 737; 37 A.L.R.2d 391, where many cases are cited; 4 Am.Jur.2d, Amusements and Exhibitions § 81.
This is said in Annot. 37 A.L.R.2d 391 at 394, and quoted with approval in the Williams and Lane cases: 'If the need is obvious or experience shows that an automobile race of the character and in the place proposed requires, in order to afford reasonable protection to spectators, the erection of fences or similar barriers between the track and the places assigned to them, it becomes a part of the duty in exercising reasonable care for their safety to provide fences or barriers, the adequacy of which is dependent on the circumstances present, principally the custom of the business.' At page 395 of this same annotation will be found a number of cases in respect to the absence or inadequacy of fences, barricades, or other protective devices, where, under the circumstances of individual cases, a recovery has been upheld or denied.
G.S. § 1--122 provides that 'the complaint must contain * * * (2) a plain and Concise statement of the facts constituting a cause of action. * * *' (Italics added.) The cardinal requirement of this statute, as emphasized in numerous decisions of this Court, is that the facts constituting a cause of action rather than the conclusions of the pleader must be set forth in the complaint so as to disclose the issuable facts determinative of the plaintiff's right to relief. Shives v. Sample, 238 N.C. 724, 79 S.E.2d 193; Griggs v. Griggs, 213 N.C. 624, 197 S.E. 165; Gillis v. Transit Corp., 193 N.C. 346, 137 S.E. 153; Lassiter v. Roper, 114 N.C. 17, 18 S.E. 946; Moore v. Hobbs, 79 N.C. 535.
It is hornbook law that on a demurrer a pleading will be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties giving the pleader the benefit of every reasonable intendment in his favor; and a demurrer admits, for the purpose of testing the legal sufficiency of the pleading, the truth of factual averments well stated and relevant inferences of fact reasonably deducible therefrom, but legal inferences and conclusions of the pleader will be disregarded. 3 Strong, N.C. Index, Pleadings § 12.
This is said by Johnson, J., in Shives v. Sample, supra:
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