American Tobacco Co. v. Zoller Ex Rel. Zoller

6 Tenn. App. 390, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 390 (American Tobacco Co. v. Zoller Ex Rel. Zoller) 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
American Tobacco Co. v. Zoller Ex Rel. Zoller, 6 Tenn. App. 390, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 160 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

On the evening of January 13, 1926, a collision occurred between an automobile owned and driven by Hubert L. Zoller, Sr., and in which his wife and infant son, Elizabeth Zoller and Hubert L. Zoller, Jr., respectively, were riding, and an automobile owned by the American Tobacco Company and being driven by W. D. Simpson. Each of the three Zollers brought a separate suit against the Tobacco Company and Simpson to recover damages, the suit of the infant of course being by next friend.

The three cases were tried together before a jury in the circuit court. In the case of Mr. Zoller, Sr., verdict and judgment were rendered and entered for the defendants. In Mrs. Zoller’s case ver- *392 diet and judgment were rendered and entered in her favor for $2,000. In the infant’s ease verdict and judgment were rendered and entered in bis favor for $500. The defendants have appealed from said last two judgments and have assigned errors.

The first question made by the assignments of error is that there was no material evidence to support the verdicts and judgments and, therefore, that the defendants’ motions for peremptory instructions should have been sustained.

Winona street in the City of Knoxville extends north and south, has a street car track along its center, and intersects at right angles with Woodbine avenue which extends east and west.

Assuming as we must, where the jury has rendered verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs and the trial judge has approved those verdicts, that the facts of the case, including all legitimate inferences, are as testified by plaintiffs’ witnesses, the accident happened in the following manner:

Mr. Zoller, Sr., was driving his Studebaker touring car with its curtains up, and Mrs. Zoller and Zoller, Jr., who was only a little over a year old, were riding on the front seat with him. They were going north on their own right hand side of Winona street, and attempted to cross Woodbine avenue at a speed of about ten miles per hour. After they had gotten more than half way across Woodbine avenue, Simpson drove the Tobacco Company’s Ford westwarclly along Woodbine avenue at a speed of about thirty miles per hour immediately in front of them, the right front end of Zoller’s car striking the left front side of the Tobacco Company’s Ford. The lights were not burning on the Ford and Simpson neither blew his horn nor slowed down at the street intersection but ran at a speed of thirty miles per hour in front of the Zoller car although it had entered upon the street intersection first. The lights were burning on the Zoller car but Zoller did not blow his horn before attempting to cross Woodbine avenue.

After the collision the Zoller car ran head-on into a telephone pole in the north curb of Woodbine avenue sevei’al feet west of Winona street, and the Ford ran info the north curb of Woodbine avenue a few feet east of the telephone pole. Each side claimed that the other car knocked his car into these positions. When the collision occurred the "door of Zoller’s car on Mrs. Zoller’s side opened and she was knocked unconscious and fell out of the car when it struck the telephone pole. Zoller, Jr., was also thrown out of the car when it struck the telephone pole.

It should have been stated that as Zoller approached Woodbine avenue his view eastwardly along Woodbine avenue was obstructed by a bank until he reached a point twenty-five feet south of Woodbine avenue, but from there on he could see up Woodbine avenue for *393 a distance of 150 feet. But he did not see the Ford until it was within about ten feet of his car. Mrs. Zoller saw it first and screamed. This caused him to look quickly to his right and see it. It should also have been stated that immediately after the accident Simpson in answer to a question as to why he was running so fast said that he thought he was on a through street; whereas, in fact the through street was a block north or south of Woodbine avenue, which does not go through to the down town part of Knoxville to which he was going at the time of the accident. And there is a great deal more traffic on Winona street than there is on Woodbine avenue.

City ordinances were pleaded and proven. They provided in substance that no person should drive in a reckless manner or so as to endanger the life or property of others, or without the ear being under complete control, or exceeding a reasonable speed under the circumstances and traffic conditions existing at the time, or in excess of ten miles per hour at street intersections, or without lights at night, etc.

The foregoing is the case as made out by the plaintiffs’ evidence, and while it is sharply contradicted by the witnesses for the defendants, we must under the well known rule accept it as true. And we think it constitutes material evidence to support the verdicts and judgments in favor of the plaintiffs who were simply riding in the Zoller car and one of whom was only a little over a year old. It cannot be said that Mrs. Zoller was as a matter of law guilty of contributory negligence in riding’ in a car on its own side of the street and at a speed of ten miles per hour. She was upon some sort of a lookout because she saw the other car before Mr. Zoller did and screamed. It may have been that she should have seen it sooner but this was certainly a question for. the jury under the circumstances— particularly as she had her one-year-old child with her.

The principal contention of the defendants is that- the physical facts — particularly the courses taken by the two cars after the accident, and the force with which the Zoller car struck the telephone pole — contradict and refute the plaintiffs’ evidence to such an extent that it constitutes no material evidence to support the verdicts. It is true that the courses taken by the two cars after the collision would seem to corroborate the defendants’ version rather than-the plaintiffs, but this was a matter for the jury. It is well known that cars sometimes take peculiar and unexpected courses after accidents, and we cannot say that the courses taken by these two cars so clearly refutes the evidence of the plaintiffs as to render the same nugatory. And certainly there is nothing in it which shows conclusively that the di'iver of defendant’s ear was not guilty of proximate negligence. We have examined the record carefully and in our opinion there is nothing in the physical facts proven which destroys the plaintiffs’ *394 ease or which would justify us in ordering a reversal. The assignments raising the question .that there was no material evidence to support the verdicts and that the defendants’ motions for peremptory instructions should have been sustained, will therefore be overruled.

The next assignment is:

“Because the trial court erred in admitting over the objection of counsel for defendants the testimony offered by plaintiffs tending to show a violation of the city ordinances and State statutes as to the rate of speed and certain precautions to be taken by drivers of automobiles at street intersections and along the streets of the City of Knoxville, and prescribing certain precautions necessary to be taken by such drivers, and making the non-observance of such precautions negligence per se, and in admitting as evidence to the jury copies of said ordinance.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 390, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-tobacco-co-v-zoller-ex-rel-zoller-tennctapp-1927.