Atkins v. Smith Ex Rel. Smith

9 Tenn. App. 212, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 225
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 212 (Atkins v. Smith Ex Rel. Smith) 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
Atkins v. Smith Ex Rel. Smith, 9 Tenn. App. 212, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 225 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

Plaintiff below, Clarence Smith, by next friend C. D. Smith, sued the defendant Robert Atkins for a sum under five hundred dollars, alleged as damages for personal injuries to *213 the minor, sustained, as the warrant sets forth, on or about the 15th day of October, 1926, on Leslie street, within the- corporate limits of the city of Knoxville, Tennessee, by the said minor being struck by an automobile operated by the defendant, in violation of the laws of the State and the city of Knoxville, and in a negligent manner, resulting in cuts and bruises on plaintiff’s head, and injury to plaintiff’s nose, shoulder and other parts of his body.

A trial was had before the justice, who gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $150. On appeal of defendant the cause was heard before the Circuit Judge without the intervention of a jury, who rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the same amount, with all costs, awarding execution therefor. On his motion for a new trial being overruled the defendant has appealed to this court, and now, as plaintiff in error, with reference to the judgment, complains that — ■

“The trial court was in error in rendering judgment and in overruling his motion for a new trial, and in taxing him with the costs of the cause, for the following reasons:
“1. Because there is no evidence to support the judgment.
“2. Because no actionable negligence upon the part of defendant has been shown.
“3. Because under the evidence disclosed plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, which in law bars his right to recovery against the defendant.’’

¥e have carefully considered the evidence in this case, and are convinced that all of the assignments are well taken.

The boy, who was seven years of age, at the time of the accident, was not examined. The father stated that he “did not bring him here as a witness today in his case;’’ that' he was in school, in B grade. The only other eye witnesses to the immediate facts of the collision were the plaintiff in error and his wife. The attention of others was directed to the scene just before and after the accident, but their testimony in no way requires the discrediting of the clear and satisfactory statements of the said plaintiff in error and his wife as to how the accident occurred. There is no proof that the plaintiff in error was violating any provision of the ordinance that was introduced, and the case resolved itself inevitably into the insistence that, notwithstanding any negligence that may have characterized the actions of the child, the plaintiff in error was negligent in not seeing the child in time to have stopped his car and prevented the accident.

All the proof indicates that the plaintiff in error, going west on Leslie street, and after driving around a truck of the Power & Light Company standing, it was said, at the corner of Leslie and 16th *214 streets, had resumed liis place on the right hand side of the street, and at this time was about seventy-five feet from the place of the accident. Plaintiff in error testified:

“As soon as I had rounded the track I drove back on the right hand side of Leslie street — right of the center- — and the speed of my car was about ten miles an hour. I could not go faster there, for the street was rough. (When I reached the place of the accident a two-horse wagon, it looked like a slop wagon, was passing going east on Leslie street, and in the center of said street. The first I saw of the little boy he came out from behind this wagon, running with his hands up before his face like as if he had swung off the hind end of the wagon. He was four feet of my car when I first saw him. He was making at me, but not looking towards me. He had his head turned, looking backwards. I saw he was going to run into me, and if I had stopped still right then he would have run against my car, striking it between'the left front door and the radiator. I swerved to the right and stopped my car within its length, but the boy had struck the car. He ran against its left rear door and fell back into the center of the street. My wife and I got out and picked him up and a little boy nearby told us where he lived, and we carried him to his home.” On cross-examination he said:
“The child was not picked up behind the car. T did not run against him, he ran into me, bumped into the rear door of my car. When we picked him up he was lying on his side in the middle of the pike, about even with my left hind wheel and south of it. I put on my brakes and did all I could to keep him from running against my car. I did not see him until he was about four feet from me; that wagon kept me from seeing him; it obstructed my view of him, wherever he was. The boy had his hands up like he had let go of the hind end of the Avagon. I don’t knoAV that he had hold of the wagon, as I did not see him ahold of it. No, I don’t knoAV Avho AAras driving the Avagon. The Avagon did not stop, and got aAvay before I learned AAdio he Avas. I have tried to find him. I saw a felloAv one day driving what T thought to be the Avagon, but. I did not ask him, because he was going in the opposite direction from me. I had not had any liquor that day. Yes, I drink a little sometimes. ’ ’

The foregoing is substantially the testimony of Mrs. Atkins as to the immediate facts of the accident. The defendant in error and his Avife. testified as to the character of the injuries. Neither of them saAV the accident. The mother, Mrs. Smith, said that just before the accident Clarence went across Leslie street to play Avith *215 a boy friend, and in going there he had to cross Leslie street, but she did not see him crossing the street. In addition to testifying as to the character of the wounds, both she and her husband say the boy was unconscious all night, and that his clothes were dirty all over. They also introduced a Mr. Daniel Jones, who said that he was a line man, and was going down a telephone pole at the time of the accident; that the defendant’s car passed him going west on Leslie street; that he looked down the street and saw the kid start across Leslie street from the south side toward the north side; that he was out in the street about eight feet when he last saw him, until after the accident; that D. Hamilton, a man working with him called his attention to it; that when the kid was about eight feet from the south side of Leslie street the defendant’s care looked about fifty feet of being at the point of accident, running on the right hand side of the center of Leslie street; that he did not know how fast .defendant’s car was running, as he was above him; that he saw Mr. Atkins pick the kid up; that the defendant’s car was in between witness and the kid; that the kid Avas picked up near the center, opposite the left front wheel of the car. On cross-examination he stated that he did not see the defendant’s car strike the kid; that he could not say AA'hether the car struck the kid or the kid ran into the car; that the defendant stopped his car on the right hand side of the street, a short distance from the place of the accident; that he did not see any wagon there; that he was not looking for any; that it looked like he Avould have seen one if any had been there.

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Related

State v. Blair
634 S.W.2d 627 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1982)
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187 F.2d 489 (Sixth Circuit, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 212, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkins-v-smith-ex-rel-smith-tennctapp-1928.