Alexander v. Walker and Isaacs

15 Tenn. App. 388, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 388 (Alexander v. Walker and Isaacs) 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
Alexander v. Walker and Isaacs, 15 Tenn. App. 388, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 105 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

CROWNQVER, J.

These cases were tried together in the Circuit Court by agreement. They are actions for damages for personal injuries to occupants of an automobile hired from a “Drive-It-Yourself” Company, caused by the overturning of the automobile on the highway.

The declaration in each ease contained two counts, (1) that the driver was the agent of defendants and the accident was caused by his negligence, and (2) that the steering apparatus of the automobile was defective. The defendants pleaded not guilty. The cases were tried by the judge and a jury. At the conclusion of all the proof defendants moved the court for a directed verdict in their favor in each case, because there was no proof showing that the injuries alleged in the declarations were caused by their negligence, as there was no proof that the driver, Still, was an agent of the defendants or that the automobile was defective. The court sustained the motion and directed the jury to return verdicts in favor of defendants, which was done, and judgments were- entered and the actions dismissed.

*390 Motions for new trials having been overruled, plaintiffs have appealed in error to this court and have assigned as error the court’s action in directing verdicts, which errors are, in substance, as follows:

(1) The court erred in sustaining peremptory instructions because there was competent and credible proof in the record to show that G. A. Still was the duly authorized agent and servant of defendants and that the damages sustained by plaintiffs were directly and proximately due to the carelessness and negligence of said agent acting within the scope of his authority.
(2) The court erred in sustaining peremptory instructions because there wms competent and credible proof in the record to show that the damages sustained by plaintiffs were directly and proximately caused by the carelessness and negligence of defendants in furnishing an unsafe and damaged automobile incapable of being properly operated, 'its condition being known to defendants.

On or about June 5, 1926, N. Y. "Walker and Cortez Isaacs were partners in the taxi, oil and gas business, one of the departments of the Walker Tire Company, of Franklin. At the same time N. Y. Walker conducted" a tire business and sold Chevrolet automobiles under the name of the Walker Tire Company, but Isaacs had no interest in this part of the business. The partnership conducted an automobile for hire, commonly called “Drive-It-Yourself ”, business.

Hon. Hill McAlister was a candidate for Governor of Tennessee, and his County headquarters -were located in Franklin near the Har-peth Bank Building. Mr. Wirt Courtney, of Franklin, was his campaign manager, and his brother, Green Courtney, now deceased, was assisting in the campaign in Williamson County and was in charge of the headquarters at Franklin.

On June 5, 1926, Mr. McAlister was scheduled to speak at Columbia, Tennessee, 25 miles from Franklin. A number of parties were going over from Franklin to Columbia, by automobile, to hear him speak. Mr. Green Courtney decided to secure two automobiles to convey to the meeting some men who had no automobiles. He went to the office of Walker and Isaacs, saw Mr. Isaacs in person, and ordered two cars for this purpose, one with' a driver and one without a driver. Isaacs made a charge on his books against Mr. Courtney for two cars and one driver for the trip from Franklin to Columbia and return. G. A. Still drove the car that was furnished without a driver.

Still was the father-in-law of Isaacs. About two weeks prior to this he had quit the insurance business and was unemployed at this time. He spent some of his time around the garage of the Walker Tire Company and a great deal of time at Mr. McAlister’s head *391 quarters. He was not employed in any capacity by the Walker Tire Company.

On the morning in question Still was assisting Mr. Courtney in getting up a crowd to go to Columbia. Mr. Green Courtney told him that he had arranged to get these two cars and that he did not have a driver for one, and Still told Courtney that he would be glad to drive it. Whereupon Courtney told him to drive it, so he went to the garage, told Isaacs what Courtney had said, and drove the car from the garage to McAlister’s headquarters, where the two plaintiffs and two other gentlemen, Morton and Grimes, entered the car for the purpose of making the trip.

When they had proceeded about two and one-half miles toward Columbia, on the Columbia Pike, there were other ears in front of them. Immediately in front of them, and separating this car from the other cars going to the McAlister speaking, was a car driven by Alex Steele, now deceased. Still wanted to pass this car so that all the McAlister group would be together. He attempted to pass, but the other car remained in the middle of the road and he could not pass, so he undertook to pull his car back behind the other car, and fearing he would run into the front car Still applied his brakes. The road had been covered with fresh oil and gravel. When the brakes were applied the car skidded and turned over and the two plaintiffs were injured. There was evidence that this rented ear had been shimmying for one-quarter of a mile before it reached the point of the accident.

The automobile rented from defendants was a Chevrolet touring car about six months old. It had been run that length of time but had never been in a wreck and had been driven less than four thousand miles. It was in good state of repair, equipped with good tires, and there was nothing wrong with the steering gear or machinery. One door had been removed just before the trip on account of a broken hinge.

1. Plaintiffs’ assignment that the court erred in directing a verdict because there is proof in the record that Still was the agent and servant of defendants, cannot be sustained. Plaintiff Stephens wa« the only witness who undertook to testify that Still was an agent of defendants. Stephens testified:

“Well, a crowd of us were standing on the corner, and your brother Green said, ‘I have to get some cars for this crowd to go to Columbia.’ We were standing on the Harpeth Bank corner, and he called a certain garage, I don’t remember just which one, I think Ballard’s, I am not sure.”
“Q. He called some garage other than the Walker Tire Co.? A. Yes, sir, and Mr. Still spoke up and said, ‘Why not hire it from us, we have ears to rent. ’ ’ ’

*392 The court ruled this was not competent to prove agency. Stephens said he “understood” Still was employed there as chauffeur and “thought” he was the father-in-law of Isaacs. He next said that he didn’t know whether Still was an employee there or not. Alexander said Still stayed at the garage. This Avas all the testimony of the plaintiffs on the subject of agency.

Cortez Isaacs testified that Green Courtney rented the two cars, one Avith a driver and one without; that A. G. Still was not employed by him in. any capacity, and never had been, and that he had never driven a car for him; that he had married Mr. Still’s daughter about two years prior to the accident; that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Tenn. App. 388, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-walker-and-isaacs-tennctapp-1932.