Amerco Marketing Company Of Memphis, Inc. v. Carlos Myers

494 F.2d 904, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9138
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 1974
Docket73-1524
StatusPublished

This text of 494 F.2d 904 (Amerco Marketing Company Of Memphis, Inc. v. Carlos Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amerco Marketing Company Of Memphis, Inc. v. Carlos Myers, 494 F.2d 904, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9138 (6th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

494 F.2d 904

AMERCO MARKETING COMPANY OF MEMPHIS, INC., Defendant-Appellant,
v.
Carlos MYERS, Administrator, Estate of Junior J. Myers,
Deceased, et al., Plaintiff-Appellee, and James A.
Seymour and Elphreda B. Seymour,
Defendants-Appellees.

No. 73-1524.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Argued Jan. 30, 1974.
Decided April 16, 1974.

Charles E. English, Bowling Green, Ky., for defendant-appellant; English, Lucas, Priest & Owsley, Bowling Green, Ky., on brief.

Paul R. Huddleston, Bowling Green, Ky., for plaintiff-appellee; Marion Vance, Glasgow, Ky., on brief.

H. Francis Stewart, Stewart & Estes, Nashville, Tenn., on brief for defendants-appellees.

Before McCREE and LIVELY, Circuit Judges, and McALLISTER, Senior Circuit Judge.

LIVELY, Circuit Judge.

This diversity action arose out of a collision which took place on Interstate Highway 65 (I-65) a short distance north of Bowling Green, Kentucky. The plaintiff is the personal representative of three occupants of a south-bound Ford Pinto who received fatal injuries in the collision. The other vehicle was a 1966 Plymouth owned by the defendant James A. Seymour and his wife Elphreda B. Seymour who was driving the automobile north on I-65 at the time of the collision. The Seymour automobile was pulling a U-Haul trailer which Mr. Seymour had rented from an agent of the defendant Amerco Marketing Company of Memphis, Inc. (Amerco) in Memphis, Tennessee the previous evening. Amerco also furnished a trailer hitch which was attached to the rear bumper of the Seymour automobile. The complaint alleged that Amerco was 'negligent in hooking said trailer and hitch to said automobile, so that, the attachment was defective and unsafe. Consequently . . . the connection fell apart causing the automobile to go out of control and into a violent collision with another vehicle operated by Junior J. Myers.' The complaint also alleged that Mr. and Mrs. Seymour were careless in the operation of their automobile and trailer and that this was a contributing cause of the collision.

All of the occupants of the Myers car were killed, and Mrs. Seymour was the only occupant of her car who was awake at the time of the collision. She testified that she was running normally in the outside, or slow, lane of I-65 prior to the events immediately preceding the collision and that the trailer was pulling easily. She and her husband both testified to previous stops between Memphis and Bowling Green at which times the trailer connection seemed to be all right. Mrs. Seymour's description of the collision was as follows:

And I noticed this Chrysler Corporation place after we passed it-- it's sort of a landmark, because when we first started coming it was just being built. I noticed that, and I was just driving along and everything was seemingly just lovely. The radio was playing and I was driving along, and all of a sudden that car just out of the clear blue, just out of nowhere, the car just took a lunge like it was taking off like an airplane, just taking off to the right, and I just didn't know that was happening and I-- my only instinct was to grip that wheel, grip that wheel (Indicating), and by that time it was just going on to the left, and we were over in the median, and I just held the wheel trying my best to guide it, because I saw it was out of-- I was just trying to guide it, and I tried to keep it in that median and I tried hard to keep it in that median. And when I-- I thought it had come to a stop, and about the time I thought it had come to a stop, you know, slowed down, well, I didn't know anything, it had gone over in the next lane, and just at that point was this brown car and I realized we were collided, had collided, and we landed into the bank, and when we landed into the bank, well I-- I looked down and I saw flame.

Almost immediately Mrs. Seymour corrected this testimony to state that the automobile lunged to the left, not to the right, and went straight into the grass median. Mrs. Seymour first said she did not remember hearing any sound immediately prior to losing control of the car, though on cross-examination it was brought out that she had previously testified that she did hear a noise, described as a 'pop,' just as the car started veering. She said that she glanced in her rear view mirror and the trailer was 'sort of swaying.' She heard a bumping noise behind her but did not remember hearing any dragging or scraping noise. Mrs. Seymour estimated her speed at between 50 and 55 miles per hour, though there was other evidence that she had told an investigating Kentucky State trooper that she was driving about 65 miles per hour. She stated that she had not noticed a sign on the rear of the trailer indicating a maximum safe speed of 45 miles per hour.

While no witness testified that he actually observed the collision between the vehicles, two truck drivers who were in the vicinity testified concerning what they saw and heard. James D. Earp who was operating a tractor-trailer south bound on I-65 made this statement:

Well, anywhere between six to six-thirty in the morning, it just started getting daylight, I noticed this car on the left side of the interstate going north. It got just about parallel with me and it sounded like, something like a shotgun blast, like a tire blew out, and the car started weaving and I started stopping and pulled over to the edge of the interstate and I got stopped just about at the entrance to the rest area and by the time I got out of the truck and started back the Plymouth that was pulling a U-Haul trailer was headed into the bank on the south-bound side.

Earp further stated that after the collision the Ford and Plymouth were sitting up against a bank on the west side of the south-bound lanes of the highway and that the trailer and trailer hitch were all intact, but separated from the Seymour automobile and sitting in the passing lane of south-bound I-65.

Another truck driver named Aiken was also proceeding south on I-65 and saw a set of lights flash or dip in the north-bound lane. He didn't see the Seymour car cross the median or collide with the Myers car. However, he was confronted with the trailer and hitch in the passing, or east lane of south-bound I-65, and maneuvered his truck between the U-Haul trailer and the two automobiles which had collided and were sitting side by side on the west side of the highway. This witness examined the trailer and hitch and found them intact with the chains still wrapped around the hitch. He also noticed a gouge in the passing lane of the north-bound portion of the highway near the median. The witness testified that the right front tire of the Plymouth was down and looked as if it had been penetrated by the bumper or bumper arm. He did not notice the left front tire as it was against the earth bank on the west side of the highway.

The first officer to arrive at the scene of the collision was Sheriff Montgomery who described marks which he found in the north-bound portion of the highway and the grass median. He testified that there were no marks made by the rim of a wheel. State Trooper Pitcock located the point of impact as near the center of the two south-bound lanes of the highway and testified concerning marks which he found in the road.

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Bluebook (online)
494 F.2d 904, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amerco-marketing-company-of-memphis-inc-v-carlos-myers-ca6-1974.