Bry-Block Mercantile Co. v. Proctor

13 Tenn. App. 45, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 45 (Bry-Block Mercantile Co. v. Proctor) 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
Bry-Block Mercantile Co. v. Proctor, 13 Tenn. App. 45, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

Mrs. J. M. Proctor instituted a suit in the Circuit Court in Shelby County to recover damages against the Bry-Block Mercantile Company, Hays Flowers, Jack Dillon and O. L. Wooley. The declaration contained three counts. The first count was for malicious prosecution. The second and third counts alleged slander.

It appears that there has been two trials of this cause. At the first trial, the second and third counts were dismissed, a non-suit was taken as to Hays Flowers and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the other three defendants for $7,500. From this judgment there was an appeal to this court, and this court at its January term, 1929, reversed the judgment in favor of the plaintiff, writ for certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court March 1, 1930.

The opinion of this court was delivered by Mr. Justice Senter and appears in Yol. 10, page' 251 of the Reports of the Court of Appeals. The cause was reversed and error in the trial court’s charge to the jury. Upon the remand for a second trial there was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants, Bry-Block Mercantile Company and O. L. Wooley, for $5000 actual damages, and $1000 punitive damages. A verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant, Jack Dillon.

U/pon a motion for a new trial, the Circuit Court suggested a remittitur of the entire amount allowed for punitive damages and rendered a judgment for $5000 as compensatory damages. The two defendants have appealed in the nature of a writ of error to this court and have assigned errors.

The plaintiff has filed the record for error and insists that the court erred in ordering any remittitur. The defendants have assigned eleven errors.

By the first and fourth errors it is insisted that there is no evidence to support the verdict and that the court erred in overruling the motion of the defendants for peremptory instruction made at the conclusion of all of the proof, because (a) there is no evidence of any malice; (b) there is no proof of the lack of probable cause; *47 (c) the defendants acted' upon the advice of counsel, which advice was fairly and honestly sought by the defendants and was given upon a full and fair disclosure to the attorney of all the facts in the case, and the prosecution was instituted on the advice of the attorney.

The second assignment is, that the verdict is contrary to the weight or the preponderance of the evidence. This assignment is overruled because this Court does not weigh the evidence passed on by a jury to ascertain where the weight or preponderance lies.

The third assignment goes to the exeessiveness of the verdict.

The fifth and sixth assignments complain of the following excerpts in the Court’s charge:

“Now, under our law in a case where the plaintiff says: alleges that the defendants, or defendant, has done them a malicious wrong, then the jury finds that is so, then the law permits the jury in the jury’s discretion to award, if they desire, an additional amount further than compensatory damages, damages known as punitive damages, damages by way of punishment, damages that would punish the defendants and deter them or persons in the like situation from the commission of like offenses.
“Now in this case the plaintiff says that they acted with malice at the time, and if you find that the defendants, or either of them, acted with malice, then you may in your discretion award punitive damages in addition to compensatory damages. But if you find that the act was not malicious, why then you can’t exercise that discretion and allow that character of damages; and since that is a question, gentlemen of the jury, in which you have got to find, if you find for the plaintiff, that it was maliciously done, then the punitive damages, if you award any, is a matter of discretion with you.” .
“It is the law, gentlemen of the jury, that you may consider the advice of counsel as negativing the existence of malice; and the law is that if defendant in an action for malicious prosecution commenced the prosecution for which he is sued in pursuance of the advice of counsel, that establishes existence of probable cause, and as a matter of law entitled the party sued to complete immunity from damages, provided such advice was honestly sought and all of the material facts relating to the case, as ascertained or ascertainable by due diligence, were presented to counsel.”

The remaining assignments allege that the Court should have charged five special requests seasonably offered by the defendants.

It is plaintiff’s insistence that what this Court said, as to the former appeal and as reported in’Yol. 10, page 660 of the Reports of this Court, is the “law of this case;” that the same question is *48 now made by assignments one and four as were made on the former appeal and the facts in the second trial being substantially the same as at the first trial establishes what is known in the law books as the “law of the ease,” this Court having held on the former appeal that a directed verdict should not have been entered. Counsel for plaintiff cite the following authorities in support of their contention :

Under the law as enacted in 1857-58, Chapter 6, which appears as Sec. 3178 of the Code of 1858, Sec. 3890 of the M. & Y. Code, and Sec. 4906 of Shannon’s Compilations, it is provided as follows:

'1 ‘ Transcript. — And if a cause be remanded, upon being brought up again for correction of errors, the transcript or the record previously sent up, together with the transcript of the subsequent proceedings in the court below, constitute the full record. ’ ’

Counsel also rely upon the case of Memphis City Bank v. Smith, 110 Tenn., 337, 75 S. W., 1065.

Counsel for the defendant, in answer to the insistence that this Court is bound by its former opinion rely upon Bynum v. Apperson, 9 Heiskell, 632, where the Court held as follows:

“On a former trial of this case on appeal, reported in 5 Col., 341, the opinion, reversing the case, holds the law different from that we have laid dowil, but we cannot and will not assent to the view there expressed. The doctrine of a former adjudication can have no application to this case, as it was a simple reversal of the judgment of the court below, for reasons therein stated; but no judgment was given for the one party or the other, except that of reversal, and what the law fixed as a consequence, the costs of this Court. The judgment of reversal is conclusive that the case was reversed, but of nothing more. Under this judgment the ease was sent back for a new trial, but on that trial a new case might have been made, new evidence introduced, and entirely different questions presented. We are no more bound by that opinion of the Court, as to the law laid down, than in any other case, between other and different parties. The rule in a Chancery ease would be different, where the decree made could settle the rights of the parties upon.the facts of the record. ’ ’

We are of the opinion that the authorities relied on by plaintiff are not controlling in the instant ease.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 45, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bry-block-mercantile-co-v-proctor-tennctapp-1931.