Defendant’s assignments of error all relate to the sufficiency of the evidence to take the case to the jury. He contends that the State failed to offer evidence that he caused the collision and that the State also failed to show that deceased died as a result of the collision. We conclude that the evidence, when considered in the light most favorable to the State, disclosed circumstances from which the jury could infer that defendant died as a result of the collision caused by defendant while defendant was operating his vehicle at a speed in excess of that permitted by law. That evidence was as follows.
*65Charles Wampler, the deceased, was 35 years old and in excellent health when he left his home at about 8:15 p.m. on 17 January 1977. He was driving a Ford Pinto automobile and was headed for church. After proceeding along North Main Street in Mount Airy, he stopped and then started to execute a left turn. Defendant approached him from the opposite direction driving a Chevrolet Camaro. The speed limit on that residential street was 35 miles per hour. Defendant had been drinking. He came around a curve about 200 yards in front of deceased at a speed of in excess of ninety miles an hour. His car struck deceased’s Pinto broadside on the passenger side and knocked it for a considerable distance. It was damaged on both sides, the front and the rear. The body of the Pinto automobile was so crushed together that deceased’s body touched both sides of the interior of the vehicle. The steering wheel was broken. Deceased’s hands were stuck through the steering wheel, and his head was tilted to the left. A medical technician with the emergency squad arrived on the scene at 8:25 p.m. (about ten minutes after deceased had left home on his way to church) and determined that he was dead. A power tool was used to pry the car door away from deceased so that his body could be removed from the vehicle.
The evidence that defendant caused the accident while engaged in a violation of the speed law is direct and abundant. The evidence is also sufficient to permit the jury to find that Wampler was alive and well when he started to make a left turn and was dead just a few seconds later after being struck by defendant’s vehicle. From these facts, we hold that the jury could reasonably infer that he was killed in the collision. It is not always necessary to have an expert testify as to the cause of death where, as here, all of the facts disclose a set of circumstances from which any person of average intelligence could be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the fatality occurred in the collision. See e.g. Branch v. Dempsey, 265 N.C. 733, 145 S.E. 2d 395 (1965). We have not ignored the majority opinion in State v. Cheek, 19 N.C. App. 308, 198 S.E. 2d 460 (1973). We respectfully conclude, however, that the facts in the case now before us raise a jury question as to whether the death was the result of the collision.
*66No error.
Judges Parker and Webb concur.