after stating the case: No motion to nonsuit was made and no assignment of error challenges the sufficiency of the evidence upon the issue of negligence. So we have to con*443sider only tbe correctness of tbe portions of tbe charge excepted to in view of tbe evidence adduced on tbe trial.
In tbe brief tbe defendant abandons tbe first assignment of error and confines bis criticisms to tbe second and third paragraphs of tbe charge.
Tbe evidence introduced by tbe plaintiff tends to prove that tbe defendant was driving bis automobile on tbe streets of Winston-Salem and stopped it for purposes of examination within a few feet of where plaintiff’s team of horses were standing harnessed to a surrey and in charge pf a competent driver; that tbe machine could not be seen by tbe horses, but could be beard by them; that when tbe machine was being cranked for tbe purpose of starting, one horse began to prance and show symptoms of fright; that tbe cranking kept on and did not stop, causing tbe horses to run away and injure themselves and tbe vehicle; that tbe driver when the cranking commenced, called to defendant to ‘Wait a minute,’ but whether tbe call was beard or not does not appear. This evidence also tends to prove that tbe defendant’s automobile made a most unusual and loud noise while being cranked up; that “tbe gear-wheels were loose and made a terrible noise”; that no other machine makes such a fearful noise; that it could have been avoided by using rawhide gearing, but defendant said tbe price was too high.
Upon t]jis phase of the evidence we think bis Honor’s charge is supported by generally recognized principles of law.
Negligence is essentially relative and comparative. Tbe legal duty we owe to others is the accepted standard, and that duty is measured by tbe exigencies of the occasion.
A want of caution to avoid injury, where the duty to exercise caution is incumbent, and a reckless or heedless use of a dangerous agency in a locality where tbe peril from its use is obvious, constitute breaches of duty which may become, when causing injury, actionable negligence. As has been said, “the term covers all those shades of inadvertence which range between deliberate intention on the one hand and total absence of responsible consciousness on the other.” Cook v. Traction Co., 80 Md., 554; Railway Co. v. Jones, 95 U. S., 439. The existence of negligence is, therefore, to be sought for in the facts and surroundings of each particular case.
Although the use of automobiles began in recent years, it seems to have caused much litigation, though not in this State. It is the consensus of judicial opinion that it is the duty of the operator of an automobile upon highways and public streets to use every reasonable precaution to avoid causing injury, and this duty requires him to take into consideration “the character *444 of his machine and its tendency to frighten horses.” Hannigan v. Wright, 63 Atl. Rep., 234; Souse v. Cramer, 13 Am. and Eng. Annotated Cases, p. 463, note, and cases cited.
The possession of a powerful or dangerous vehicle imposes upon the chauffer the duty of employing a degree of care commensurate with the risk of danger to others engendered by the use of such a machine on a public thoroughfare.
Upon the case as made out by plaintiff we think the defendant is liable for the damage done, upon two phases of the evidence :
1. The proximity of the auto to plaintiff’s team when it stopped was such that defendant must have seen the horses and vehicle unless he was either blind or guilty of gross carelessness.
There is evidence, sufficient to go to the jury, that when the defendant began to “crank up,” the animals manifested fright, and that defendant, if at all observant, must have seen it, but, instead of stopping his cranking, he continued until his machine started.
It is well settled that it is the duty of an autoist to stop his machine, or to do whatever is reasonably required to relieve persons of peril when he s$es a horse is becoming frightened by his machine. Ind. Springs Co. v. Brown, 6 Anno. Cases, 656; Shinkle v. McCullough, 116 Ky., 960; House v. Cramer, supra, and cases cited in notes. This duty is imposed by statutes in many States regulating the use of automobiles, but we think it is easily deducible from elementary principles of the common law. Long v. Warwich, 148 N. C., 32.
It was the duty of this defendant, assuming that his machine was a normal one, when he began to “crank up,” to keep a watchful eye on the horses standing so close by. • It was his duty, when he saw that they were manifesting symptoms of' fright, to stop at once, until the horses could be removed. There is evidence that in this respect the defendant failed.in his duty. •
2. The plaintiff shows by evidence that defendant’s machine was not a normal, but a most abnormal, one; that the noise it made when cranking up was something “terrible,” to use the expression of one witness. That defendant was fully aware of this, and refused to correct it because of the incidental expense, is testified to by the machinist Hamlin.
His Honor might well have told the jury that to crank up such a defective and abnormal machine in close proximity to a pair of horses, without giving the driver notice to remove them, is per se negligence.
This imposes no great burden upon those who use the public *445highways even with the best equipped and safest machines. To require less would rénder the highways of the country dangerous to the lives and property of those who daily use them.
We are of opinion that his Honor correctly and fairly submitted the case to the jury in a charge free from error.
No error.