Acuff v. Vinsant

443 S.W.2d 669, 59 Tenn. App. 727, 1969 Tenn. App. LEXIS 363
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 20, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 443 S.W.2d 669 (Acuff v. Vinsant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acuff v. Vinsant, 443 S.W.2d 669, 59 Tenn. App. 727, 1969 Tenn. App. LEXIS 363 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

MATHERNE, J.

Plaintiff, Mary A. Acuff, sued for personal injuries due to the negligent, careless, unskilled and unprofessional manne¡r in which Dr. Robert Sherman Vinsant, a dentist, permitted a broken portion of plaintiff’s tooth which was being extracted to fall into *731 and pass through, plaintiff’s trachea and to become lodged in plaintiff’s lung while plaintiff was unconscious under a general anesthesia. Dr. Vinsant is now deceased, and this suit is brought against the executrix of his estate. In the Trial Court plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for $10,000.00. Defendant does not appeal in error.

' Plaintiff by two assignments of error presents the following issues before this Court: (1) The Trial Court erred in excluding certain testimony which would tend to prove the amount of profits plaintiff’s business lost due to plaintiff’s absence therefrom while suffering from these injuries, and (2) The plaintiff seeks a remand for a new trial on the issue of damages only.

At the outset we must dispose of a motion to amend assignments of error as filed by the plaintiff after the case was argued before this Court. At the hearing one member of this Court inquired of plaintiff’s attorney whether there was an assignment of error before this Court based upon the inadequacy of the verdict. There was no such error specifically assigned, and plaintiff now seeks to amend so as to add an assignment of error based upon inadequacy of the verdict. This motion must be overruled for the reason that no ground of the Motion for New Trial specifically asserting the inadequacy of the verdict was presented to the Trial Judge; and this motion fails to comply with Rule 12(4) and (5) of this Court. However, we hold it not necessary that the plaintiff have an assignment of error based upon the inadequacy of the verdict in order to obtain a review on the issues raised as- above noted.

Plaintiff is the owner of a business in Memphis, Tennessee, known as Crosstown Storage and Transfer Com *732 pany. The business is generally operated in three parts, the local household moving business, the storage and connecting intercity moving operations, and the heavy hauling business. Plaintiff’s husband operates the heavy hauling business under the name of Acuff Crane Service. Plaintiff largely operates the storage and warehousing phase of the business and completely operates the local household moving operations. "We will hereinafter discuss only the household moving operations as plaintiff’s business.

In this business plaintiff owns nine moving vans and employs on average about twenty-five employees. The business is obtained by telephone calls from prospective customers. Plaintiff receives these calls at her office, establishes a price or charge with the customer, prepares the order for the job' and dispatches a van thereto. Plaintiff attends to all personnel problems, makes arrangements for the servicing and repair of the vans and handles all claims against the business. We conclude from the record that plaintiff was the predominate and moving force responsible for this business as well as being the owner thereof. Plaintiff has been in this business for over twenty years.

The record reveals that the tooth extraction which resulted in the injuries suffered occurred on October 1, 1966; that plaintiff immediately began having fever and experiencing other physical difficulties. The broken portion of the tooth was located in plaintiff’s lung by x-ray, and plaintiff underwent lung surgery on October 26,1966, for the removal of this object. Plaintiff remained in the hospital for about eighteen days. Upon returning home plaintiff experienced rather severe suffering and was unable to properly move her right arm and shoulder. *733 For several weeks she made regular visits to a specialist concerning this arm and shoulder difficulty. Plaintiff and her husband testified that plaintiff was unable to perform her work for a period of from six to seven months after the surgery. On cross examination it appears that plaintiff did, to some extent at least, perform some of her work during this period. Plaintiff and her husband testified that she could not now put in a full day’s work; that she tired easily and was physically unable to perform at her job in the manner she did prior to the injuries. We conclude from the record that there was material evidence introduced from which the jury could have found the plaintiff suffered a loss of earning capacity in some degree due to the injuries received.

One of the elements of plaintiff’s damages was her loss in her earning capacity, measured by the value of that part of which she was deprived. The principle is the same whether the deprivation be permanent or only temporary. It is not loss of time or earnings, but loss of the power to earn that constitutes this element of damages. Southern Coach Lines, Inc. v. Wilson (1948) 31 Tenn.App. 240, 214 S.W.2d 55, and cases cited.

Plaintiff submitted as evidence of the value of her earnings the testimony of the certified public accountant who had kept the books and records of her business for about ten years. The substance of this evidence was to show the gross profits of the household moving operations of plaintiff’s business for that period of seven months from November 1, 1965, through May 31, 1966, to be $14,962.35 as against $1,606.49 gross profits of said business for that period of seven months from November 1,1966, through May 31,1967, during which latter period plaintiff had introduced evidence that she was totally *734 disabled, or substantially so, to work at said business. Defendant objected to this evidence as being based upon speculation and conjecture, which objection was sustained by the Trial Judge, and the evidence was excluded.

This accountant began keeping the books and records of plaintiff’s business in 1959. He had been present in plaintiff’s office on numerous occasions during this time and had observed her operating the business. His testimony was that plaintiff made initial contact with customers by telephone; that plaintiff would by telephone determine the type of moving job at hand, learn all details as to the nature of the job to be done, and would quote a figure to the prospective customer at that time; that to be able to do this required quite a bit of skill and experience in this type of business. This testimony corroborated that of the plaintiff and her husband as to the importance of plaintiff’s presence at the office.

This accountant further testified that his firm handled many accounts of businesses in the moving industry; that fifty per cent of the volume of his firm was in this type of business. This witness had made and tendered in evidence a complete analysis of the household moving phase of plaintiff’s business during the two periods above mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
443 S.W.2d 669, 59 Tenn. App. 727, 1969 Tenn. App. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acuff-v-vinsant-tennctapp-1969.