Blaylock v. Nash

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 14, 2000
DocketM1999-00568-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Blaylock v. Nash (Blaylock v. Nash) 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
Blaylock v. Nash, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 2000 Session

ROBERT CHAD BLAYLOCK v. LLOYD NASH dba PEOPLES STOCKYARD

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Putnam County No. 98 J 0165 John A. Turnbull, Judge

No. M1999-00568-COA-R3-CV - Filed September 14, 2000

This negligence action arises out of a collision between a cow and a car driven by the plaintiff. The trial court granted summary judgment to the defendant, the alleged owner and operator of a stockyard from which the cow supposedly escaped. We affirm the trial court’s decision finding that the plaintiff presented no evidence that the defendant breached his duty of care. However, we do not find that the plaintiff’s appeal of the trial court’s decision was frivolous.

Tenn. R. App. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., joined.

William L. Draper, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Robert Chad Blaylock.

John T. Rice, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Lloyd Nash, dba Peoples Stockyard.

OPINION

On Saturday night, March 7, 1998, Robert Blaylock was driving his Chevrolet Camaro in Cookeville, Tennessee when, around 9:00 p.m., his car collided with a cow that was in the middle of the road. The accident occurred while Mr. Blaylock was on Jefferson Avenue in front of a stockyard business known as the People’s Stockyard which, Mr. Blaylock alleged, is owned and operated by Lloyd Nash. Mr. Blaylock (“Plaintiff”) brought this action against Mr. Nash, d/b/a People’s Stockyard, (“Defendant”) charging that Defendant breached his duty to keep and maintain control over this particular cow and, specifically, to keep the cow off the public roads.

Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment attaching a Statement of Undisputed Facts by Defendant in which it is asserted that neither Mr. Nash nor People’s Stockyard owned the white cow that Plaintiff’s car hit, that neither had prior knowledge of the propensity of the animal, that Plaintiff was compensated by his insurance carrier for the property damage, that Plaintiff did not have his vehicle repaired, and that Plaintiff subsequently traded in his vehicle on a newer one and received the same value on a trade-in as he had received from the insurance carrier for damages.

The evidence in the record consists of the depositions of the parties, Mr. Nash and Mr. Blaylock, as well as three affidavits presented by Plaintiff in his memorandum opposing summary judgment. In the first of these affidavits, a witness to the accident, Jim Shake, asserted that at the time of the accident, he was driving on Jefferson Avenue and he saw the cow coming from the direction of the stock barn. He said that after the cow was hit, a man with a Bob-Cat machine came from the stock barn, picked up the cow, took it back to the stock barn and put it in a pen there.

The affidavits of Barbara Thomas and Kenneth Clement were also attached to Plaintiff’s memorandum opposing summary judgment. According to Ms. Thomas, an owner of an oil and lube business across the street from People’s Stockyard, a white cow had crossed Jefferson around 3:00 p.m. on the day of the accident. Ms. Thomas called the police, and Officer Kenneth Clement stated in his affidavit that he searched the area but found no evidence of the cow around 3:00 p.m. However, at approximately 6:00 p.m., Officer Clement first spotted a white cow by itself in front of the sale barn. He and another officer attempted to drive the cow into the sale barn. Officer Clement said that, at about 6:30 p.m., he called someone that he thought was connected with the stockyard and was told that the cow would be taken care of. The next time he saw the cow was on that same night after Plaintiff had hit it.

Officer Clement confirmed that a man brought a front-end loader across Jefferson from the sale barn and took the cow there and placed it in a pen. Plaintiff also confirmed this story. In his deposition, Plaintiff testified as follows regarding the disposal of the cow:

. . . All I know is they were having a hard time . . . until somebody got an idea to go over to the stockyard, and they got a bulldozer, a tractor over there with a scoop on the end of it. And they brought it from the stockyard over to the Class-A Oil & Lube and scooped the cow up in the scoop and just took it over there, and as far as I’m concerned – I was told it was dumped over there in a stall and it was later shot. That’s what I was told.

While in his answer, Defendant asserted that “he is not the only owner, nor the only operator of People’s Stockyard,” Defendant stated in his deposition that he had no ownership in the stockyard but that he was only a manager of the sale of livestock. He later explained that he had no ownership in the land but that he did draw a commission from the sale of the cattle. He said that it was his job to specify the bottom price for the cattle. Defendant stated that he had been in this position for only twelve years though the stockyard had been operating since 1947.

Defendant stated that in addition to managing the stockyard sales, he is an agent for a packing company for whom he buys stock at the weekly stockyard sales. Defendant testified that there is a building thirty yards from the stockyard which he uses to store the cattle that he buys at the

-2- stockyard sales for his clients before those clients come to retrieve the cattle. This building can house up to 300 cattle.

Defendant testified that, for the weekly sale, the stock are brought to the stockyard on Tuesday mornings and then they are sold every Tuesday afternoon. He stated that he leaves on Wednesday morning by which time there are no cattle left. Defendant then stated that if there are any cattle at the stockyard past Wednesday, they are his and not the stockyard’s.

A. If [animals were] there on Friday, they would not be the stockyard’s. Q. Whose would they be? A. They would be Lloyd Nash’s, if they [were] there on Friday. Q. If they were there any day past Wednesday, they would belong to you. Is that what you’re saying? A. Unless we had a feeder sale.

Defendant went on to say that the stockyard had only five or six feeder sales per year and that there had been one the first Friday in March but that those feeder cattle should have been gone the following Saturday by noon.

Defendant said that, on the afternoon before the accident occurred, he had gotten a call from a woman who worked at the oil and lube shop notifying him about a loose cow. He called the night watchman at the stockyard who later informed Defendant that someone not connected with the stockyard had loaded the cow on a truck and taken it away. Defendant stated that if the cow had been his, he would have gladly taken care of it since he had insurance to cover this type of thing. However, he had nothing to do with the cow getting to the road or being picked up. Neither he nor the night watchman on duty had any idea who picked up the injured cow. He stated that there were some Charolais heifers, the type of cow that was identified to have caused the accident, which were fenced within one fourth of a mile from the stock barn.

Regarding the ownership of the cow, Defendant made the following statement in his deposition:

I didn’t have any animals out. And I wouldn’t have had [any] animals like that in a barn. It’s somebody else’s besides mine. That’s what I told them all the time. I mean, you know, there’s cattle all around that stock barn. What keeps one from crawling out of a fence? It [isn’t] Lloyd Nash’s when it crawls out of a fence.

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Bluebook (online)
Blaylock v. Nash, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaylock-v-nash-tennctapp-2000.