Archie ex rel. Archie v. Yates

325 S.W.2d 519, 205 Tenn. 29, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 338
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 325 S.W.2d 519 (Archie ex rel. Archie v. Yates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archie ex rel. Archie v. Yates, 325 S.W.2d 519, 205 Tenn. 29, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 338 (Tenn. 1959).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Tomlinson

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

Tbe Court of Appeals approved tbe action of tbe Trial Judge in directing a verdict for tbe defendant in this tort action. Certiorari alleging error upon tbe part of tbe Court of Appeals in so doing was granted. Tbe petitioner, James Robert Archie, is tbe original plaintiff, and tbe respondent, John Taft Yates, is tbe original defendant.

Archie and Yates were each about seventeen years of age at tbe time of tbe automobile traffic accident which inspired this tort action in behalf of the injured Archie for resulting damages based on a declaration charging [31]*31Yates, who was driving the automobile, with (1) common law negligence consisting of a failure to keep a lookout ahead and failing to have the car under proper control, and (2) a violation of the statute fixing the speed limit in the driving of an automobile over the public highway at a speed in excess of fifty-five (55) miles per hour at night.

These two boys had been double dating two young ladies who resided in Lake County. On occasions the four went driving. Sometimes it was in the automobile of defendant’s father. At other times it was in the automobile of plaintiff’s father. On this occasion they were using the automobile belonging to the father of the plaintiff.

Archie had an injured leg. His father told him that he could take the car in dating the young lady on this occasion “if I got some one else to drive”. Yates, defendant here, and with whom Archie was double dating, said that he, Yates, would do the driving.

These boys had taken the young ladies to their respective homes and were returning to plaintiff’s home when the accident occurred. Yates was driving, and Archie was seated beside him. It was about midnight. There was a mule weighing about 1,400 pounds standing in the middle of this hard surfaced highway. That highway was straight for a considerable distance on each side of the mule. Visability was normal, and they were not meeting another car. The automobile struck the mule and knocked it thirty-five (35) feet. The car then proceeded a distance of one hundred and three (103) feet, then left the highway, proceeded eighty-seven (87) feet to, and through, a two foot ditch and fence, knocking [32]*32out of the ground a twelve (12) inch in diameter post set three (3) feet therein. The testimony is that Tates was driving between seventy (70) and seventy-five (75) miles per hour at the time. It is for the injuries thereby received that Archie sues. That such injuries resulted from Tates’ negligence must be conceded, as apparently it is.

Archie had the right and duty of controlling the manner in which the automobile was being driven on this occasion.

The Court of Appeals at the outset of its opinion said:

“The determinative issue of the cause is whether or not the negligence of the defendant must be imputed to the plaintiff so as to bar his right of action. ’ ’
The Court concluded that the case
“does not involve a situation of a joint enterprise as between plaintiff and defendant, but rather that of a vice principal, plaintiff having been entrusted with the care and supervision of the automobile in which he was riding, and being responsible for the operation of same.”

And, in deciding that the Trial Court did not err in directing a verdict for defendant driver of the car, ended its opinion with this statement:

“In the instant case, we think the plaintiff should be treated as the alter ego of his father, the owner of the car, and that he must be treated and considered as operating the car at the time of the accident through his own alter ego, the defendant, who was driving in his place and stead. The negligence of the defendant in operating the car must therefore be imputed to the plaintiff so as to bar the right of action.”

[33]*33The holding of the Court of Appeals thus is that as between Archie and Yates, Archie must be regarded as the principal and Tates as his agent.

Therefore, the decision of the Court of Appeals is that in a tort action by the principle against his agent for damages resulting from the injuries to the principal caused by the negligence of the agent, this negligence of the agent is imputable to the principal so as to bar the principal’s right of action against the agent. Is this the law? The Court of Appeals in so holding said that it based its decision upon Wilson v. Mullen, 11 Tenn.App. 319, 337; Wilson v. Moudy, 22 Tenn. App. 356, and Pikeville Fuel Company v. Marsh, 34 Tenn.App. 82, 232 S.W.2d 789, 794.

In Wilson v. Mullen, supra and Wilson v. Moudy, supra, the injured plaintiff was a third party. As to such third party the doctrine of imputed negligence applied to the principal for the negligence of his agent. In all probability the Court of Appeals overlooked this fact. At any rate, neither of these cases is in point here, where the principal is suing the agent for injuries inflicted upon him by reason of the agent’s negligence.

Pikeville Fuel Company v. Marsh, supra, the third case referred to by the Court of Appeals in support of its conclusion, and very strongly relied upon by defendant Tates in this case, is not regarded by this Court as being in point in this case.

This Pikeville Fuel Company case, unlike the two preceding cases cited by the Court of Appeals, is one in which, as in the case at bar, the principal, as plaintiff, is suing his agent and also the agent’s master for injuries [34]*34received by reason of the negligence of this agent in the driving of the motor bns belonging to, and being operated for the benefit of the master Pikeville Fuel Company, and under the immediate supervision and control of Marsh, the plaintiff in this case, who, as foreman over the driver, and present in the bus, had “control over the bus and over the operation thereof by the defendant”, driver.

It was apparent to this principal, the plaintiff, who was on the bus, that it was being driven in a reckless and negligent manner by his agent at the time, — the defendant. But he never directed this driver, his agent, to cut down his speed, or change his manner of driving. In admitting this dereliction he answered: “ ‘No, I had been asked to but I didn’t’. To the question, ‘Who asked you’, he answered ‘ some of the boys who was riding’ ”.

Such being the undisputed record, the Court of Appeals held as follows:

“It therefore appears that although the plaintiff was fully cognizant of the reckless propensities of the driver of the bus as well as his manner of operation of the vehicle on the occasion in question, he not only took no precautions for his own safety, but allowed to go unheeded the requests of others for whose safety he was, at least to a degree, responsible.
“We are of the opinion that, under such circumstances, a plaintiff cannot recover. ’ ’

Having thus decided the case, the Court then unnecessarily entered into a discussion of the law as to whether the negligence of an agent is imputable to his principal so as to bar the action of the principal against the [35]*35agent for injuries received by this principal by reason of the negligence of his agent.

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Bluebook (online)
325 S.W.2d 519, 205 Tenn. 29, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archie-ex-rel-archie-v-yates-tenn-1959.