Basham v. Southeastern Motor Truck Lines, Inc.

201 S.W.2d 678, 184 Tenn. 532, 20 Beeler 532, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 407
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 678 (Basham v. Southeastern Motor Truck Lines, Inc.) 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
Basham v. Southeastern Motor Truck Lines, Inc., 201 S.W.2d 678, 184 Tenn. 532, 20 Beeler 532, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 407 (Tenn. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit brought in the circuit court of Davidson County by Angie Amelia Basham, widow, a resident of *534 Nashville, Tennessee, to recover damages for the negligent death of her husband. She declares that her deceased husband was regularly employed by the defendant Southeastern Motor Truck Lines, Inc., a Tennessee corporation with its principal office in Nashville, as a truck driver; that the defendant was engaged in the business of operating interstate a line of trucks for the hauling of freight; that while driving one of defendant’s trucks from Atlanta, G-eorgia, to Nashville on the night of November 12, 1945, when south of Adairsville, Georgia, because of defective construction and improper location of the gasoline tank, the gasoline became ignited, and because of defective brakes the deceased could not stop the truck promptly and an explosion and lire occurred in which the deceased was burned to death. The duty the defendant owed to the deceased and its failure to discharge that duty in respect to the construction, care, repair and inspection of this truck are appropriately charged in the declaration.

To this declaration the defendant demurred, as follows: “The Declaration shows upon its face the injury and death complained of therein are within the coverage of the Workmen’s Compensation Law of the State of Tennessee ; the remedy afforded by said Workmen’s Compensation Law being exclusive, and this action being therefore barred.”

The trial judge sustained the demurrer and dismissed the suit and plaintiff appeals and assigns this action as error, specifying, but inadequately, (1.) that Chapter 120, Acts of 1943, is unconstitutional and void, (2) that if construed to be of extra-territorial effect and to apply to this case said chapter is unconstitutional and void, and (3) that the Workmen’s Compensation Act, Code 1932, sec. 6851 et seq., does not apply under the facts of this case.

*535 This assignment fails to point ont any reason for the alleged nneonstitntionality of this Act; it does not fairly present the points relied on, and does not comply with our rule 14.

However, we have looked to the brief and argument, from which it appears that the chapter above cited is challenged as unconstitutional upon the ground, first, that ‘ ‘ The caption or title thereof fails to cite the title or substance of the law it seeks to amend,” as required by Article 2, Sec. 17, of our Constitution.

The caption reads: ‘ ‘An Act .to amend Section 6856 of the Official Code of the State of Tennessee.” The argument appears to be that this caption, with its citation of the Code section only, fails to direct the attention of the legislators to the existing law and the proposed change and thus leaves open the way for enactment of statutes whose effect is unknown to the legislators and the public. State ex rel. v. Gaines, 69 Tenn. 734; Home Insurance Co. v. Taxing District, 72 Tenn. 644; Mayor, etc., of City of Knoxville v. Lewis, 80 Tenn. 180; Memphis Street Ry. Co. v. State, 110 Tenn. 598, 75 S. W. 730.

The pertinent part of Article 2, Sec. 17, reads: “All acts which repeal, revive or amend former laws, shall recite in their caption or otherwise, the title or substance of the law repealéd, revived or amended.”

That an Act which fails to comply with this constitutional requirement is invalid needs no argument, but it is well settled that a reference in the caption to the section of the Code of Tennessee proposed to be amended is sufficient to comply with the requirements of Section 17, Article 2, of the Constitution. State v. Runnels, 92 Tenn. 320, 21 S. W. 665; Gamble v. State, 159 Tenn. 446, 19 S. W. (2d) 279; Texas Co. v. Fort, 168 Tenn. 679, 80 S. W. (2d) *536 658, 659. The Code of 1932 is now the “Official Code of the State of Tennessee.”

Counsel argue at length, and earnestly, that such a reference is unihforming and fails to satisfy the purpose of the-requirement, hut this specific question has been too long settled to admit of further debate. In the last case above cited it was said: “We understand counsel for appellants to concede that reference to the sections of the Code of 1932 is a sufficient recital of the title of the act to be amended to satisfy the requirement that the amend-atory act shall recite the title of the law to be amended. As said in Gamble v. State, 159 Tenn. 446, 19 S. W. (2d) 279, 280, this ‘was long since decided.’ State v. Runnels, 92 Tenn. 320, 21 S. W. 665.”

In this connection it is insisted that Chapter 120 of the Acts of 1943 is a repealing and not an amending Act; that it should have been entitled “An Act to repeal” and not “An Act to amend.” We fail to see the materiality of this alleged difference. The constitutional provision invoked applies equally and alike to “all acts which repeal, revive or amend former laws.” In so far as the application of this requirement goes, and it is that with which we are here concerned, it would seem to be unimportant whether the Act under consideration be one or the other. It frequently happens that an Act overlaps and reaches out into the domains of both amendment and repeal, and it may be conceded that the instant Act operates both to repeal and to amend. This is a common occurrence and presents no objectionable difficulty.

Before the enactment of this amendment the opening clause of Code Section 6856, a part of the Tennessee workmen' s compensation law, read: ‘ ‘ This law shall not apply to whom. — This chapter shall not apply to: (a) Any common carrier doing an interstate business while en *537 gaged in interstate commerce.” Other exemptions are provided in later subsections, with which we are not here concerned.

Chapter 120, Acts of 1943, purports to amend section 6856 by striking out all of’subsection (a) of said section and inserting in lien thereof a.new subsection, reading as follows: “(a) Any common carrier doing an interstate business while engaged in interstate commerce which common carrier and such interstate business is already regulated as to employer’s liability or workmen’s compensation by Act of Congress of the United States- — it being the purpose of this Act to regulate all such business which the Congress has not regulated in the exercise of its jurisdiction to regulate interstate commerce; provided, however, that this chapter shall apply to 'those employees of such common carriers provided, however, that this chapter shall apply to those members of such common carriers with respect to whom a rule of liability is not provided by Act of the Congress of the United States.

(We have italicized certain repetitious words which appear in the Act as published, but which quite obviously are meaningless and'there by oversight.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 678, 184 Tenn. 532, 20 Beeler 532, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basham-v-southeastern-motor-truck-lines-inc-tenn-1947.