Barton v. Wexler

10 Tenn. App. 19, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 19 (Barton v. Wexler) 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
Barton v. Wexler, 10 Tenn. App. 19, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiff below, George Wexler, has recovered a judgment for $300, and court costs, against the defendant below, John F. Barton, who was the sheriff of Hawkins county, for *20 wrongfully shooting- and damaging the plaintiff’s automobile. The defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, he has appealed to this court and has assigned errors.

The defendant has sought to make the question in this court that the greater 'weight or preponderance of the evidence is contrary to the verdict and judgment, and that the trial court should have directed a verdict in his favor upon his motion therefor made upon the ground that the greater weight or preponderance of the evidence is against the verdict of the jury and shows certain facts, etc. This court, of course, does not weigh the evidence in law cases, and can only look to the record to determine whether there is any material evidence to support the verdict and judgment. Neither can a trial court, upon a motion to direct a verdict, weigh the evidence. If there is any material evidence to support a verdict the trial court must overrule the motion for a directed verdict and submit the case to the jury. It is only when asked to do so in a motion for a new trial that the trial judge must weigh- the evidence and set the verdict aside if he is not satisfied with it on the evidence or facts, and we cannot review his action even in this particular unless the record shows that he failed and refused to discharge his duty to weigh the evidence on the losing party’s motion for a new trial.

"We think however "that the motion for a directed verdict, the motion for a new trial and the assignments of error in this court are sufficient to raise the question that there was no material evidence to support the verdict and judgment and that the trial court should have directed a verdict in favor of the defendant.

The defendant, Barton, sheriff of Hawkins county, in March, 1924, received word from one, Cam King, Chief of Police of Kings-port, Tennessee, to be upon the lookout for a large car containing liquor which he thought would pass through Hawkins county. Two or three nights later, and on a dark Sunday night in March, 1924, Barton parked his car on a side road just about thirty feet off the Lee highway, which extends from Rogersville to Kingsport, *and at a point slightly west of the town of Surgoinsville. With him were his two sons, Joe and Charles Barton, and deputy sheriff,, Mayo. They were on the lookout for the liquor car or any other law violators who might pass alone the Lee highway. Barton had previously talked to Esquire Miller, a Justice of the Peace who lived near Surgoinsville, and had arranged with him to bring any law violator whom he might arrest to Miller’s home for trial. He had also stationed deputy sheriff, Craddic, and George Vaughn at Surgoins-ville and had told them that if any law violator passed him going in the direction of Surgoinsville he would fire a shot as a signal for them to stop him, etc.

*21 About 9:00 p. m., the plaintiff’s Dodge oar, which was going east along the Lee highway and toward Snrgoinsville, at a speed of about twenty-five or thirty miles per hour, passed the place where Barton and his companions were stationed. Barton did not call to the. driver of plaintiff’s car to stop it, but fired a signal shot to Craddic and Vaughn to stop it. Barton then started up his own car and he and his companions gave chase to the plaintiff’s car.

According to the defendant’s evidence, Craddic and Vaughn put some chicken coops in the highway at Surgoinsville and called to the plaintiff’s driver to stop, but the plaintiff’s driver ran around the coops and continued along the highway (with Barton’s car in pursuit) in the direction of Church Hill which was some ten or eleven miles east of Surgoinsville. That the driver of plaintiff’s car increased its speed as they left Surgoinsville and when the sheriff’s ear would attempt to pass it, he would pull to the side of the road, and by "horning” the sheriff’s car off the road, and nearly causing it to wreck, prevent its passage. That finally, and after they had left Surgoinsville, Barton and his companions began shooting at the tires and gasoline tank of plaintiff’s car, which however still kept going. That at a wide place in the road about a mile or two west of Church Hill, Barton managed to pass plaintiff’s car and ran on into Church Hill ahead of it. That there he turned his car across the road, and also placed some chicken coops (which had been left in front of a store) across the road. That as plaintiff’s car'drove up he called to its driver to stop, which he did but not until after he had run into the coops. That Barton then arrested the plaintiff, his driver and his companion. Barton and his companions also testified that as they pursued plaintiff's car Barton frequently called out in a loud voice to stop, that he was the sheriff and that he was attempting to arrest the driver of plaintiff’s car, etc., but that plaintiff’s driver paid no attention except to increase his speed; and that he was making from forty to fifty miles per hour.

But the plaintiff’s testimony, which we must on this appeal accept as true, was as follows:

On Saturday (the day before the day of the trouble) he, B. C. Pendleton and Charles Leeper drove from Kingsport, which was their home, to Knoxville in his (plaintiff’s) car. That they spent the night (Saturday night) in Knoxville. That they left Knoxville Sunday afternoon in plaintiff’s car and drove to Rogersville, where they went into a restaurant and got something to eat. That when they left Rogersville to go on to their homes in Kingsport, it was nighttime and Pendleton, who was the best driver of the three, began to drive. That they did not hear the signal shot which Barton claimed to have fired west of Surgoinsville, but as they passed through *22 Surgoinsville (at a' speed of twenty-five or thirty miles per hour) they heard someone on the side of the road call out “hey.” That they thought nothing of this as people had frequently called out to them along the road. That they did not see any chicken coops or other obstructions in the road or any signal to stop. That they drove on through Surgoinsville without realizing that anything was wrong or that they had been called upon to stop. That just after they got out of Surgoinsville they began to 'hear shots and discovered that some one in a car behind them was shooting at and hitting their car. That they thought it was a “bunch of drunks or hoodlums” and became frightened and not knowing what else to do, they increased their speed — plaintiff and Leeper “scrooching” down into the rear seat so as to be protected by the metal sheet or covering at the rear of the car. That the car behind continued to follow them and its occupants continued firing. That first one rear casing was shot down and then the other. That this caused their car to go somewhat from one side of the road to the other but they did not do anything to prevent the rear car from passing them. That one of the bullets passed through the extra casing on the rear end of plaintiff’s car and struck the metal sheet or strip at plaintiff’s and Leeper’s back. That another bullet made a hole in the gasoline tank and still others struck the body of the car and passed through the fenders. That they kept going although their speed was decreased after the two rear casings had been shot down.

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Related

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255 S.W.2d 1020 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Tenn. App. 19, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barton-v-wexler-tennctapp-1928.