Cartwright v. Graves

184 S.W.2d 373, 182 Tenn. 114, 18 Beeler 114, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 303
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 373 (Cartwright v. Graves) 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
Cartwright v. Graves, 184 S.W.2d 373, 182 Tenn. 114, 18 Beeler 114, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 303 (Tenn. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These are two consolidated actions brought to recover damages for injuries to Joyce Graves, a child just under six years of age. The Court of Appeals affirmed judgments awarding to the child $4,000 and to her father, J. H. Graves, $1,000. This Court granted certiorari.

We are called upon to declare the measure of care which the law exacts of the driver of a school bus for the safety of young children entrusted to him for transportation. The use of these busses for such purposes is a custom of relatively recent origin. The rapid spread of the custom and incidental multiplication of accidents render the question presently of much public interest.

Petitioner is the owner and operator of a school bus under contract with the County to carry children along a given route to and from school. The child, Joyce, was seriously injured when, just after alighting from this bus, she collided with a large lumber truck, which met and was passing the bus on its left, at a point on the highway where the bus had been stopped to permit the child to alight. She was running from the bus door around *118 the rear of the bus en route to her home located on the opposite side of the highway. ■

The negligence with which the bus driver is charged is his failure to exercise due care in discharging this child, with notice that this truck was approaching and with notice that the route of the child upon alighting would be around the bus and into the pathway of the oncoming truck.

The specific insistence appears to be that, plainly aware of the approach of the truck and of the usual and necessary route of the child to reach its home, the driver, failing to exercise that degree of care for this small child’s safety which the law exacts of him, (1) opened the bus door and invited the child to alight, and (2) did not notify or warn the child of the plainly impending danger, of which she was, quite apparently, unaware.

The trial Judge refused to direct a verdict and the Court of Appeals concurred in the opinion that the facts and clearly established circumstances presented a question for determination by the jury as to whether or not the driver was negligent in failing to exercise that high degree of care for the safety of this small passenger entrusted to his care which the law exacts.

In recognition of an assumed obligation of protective care for the immature school, passengers which the bus operator undertakes to transport from and to school, it appears that ingress and egress to and from the bus by the children is controlled by the driver by means of a side door, opened and closed by him at his will and discretion. This is a practice adopted and followed manifestly for the protection of these immature passengers. This opening of these doors is, therefore, a positive invitation to the child whose home has been reached to *119 alight and an implied assurance that the time is right and the way is safe.

In apparent appreciation of the significance of this situation and obligation, counsel for the defendant, when moving for a directed verdict, made this specific statement of the negligence charged and the evidence:

“The defendant-renews the same motion made at the conclusion of plaintiff’s «proof for a directed verdict, on general grounds. But I want to point out this additional fact, that the ground of negligence alleged and charged in the declaration is permitting this minor plaintiff to get out of the bus when he knew or should have known that the truck was approaching from the opposite direction. There is absolutely not one hit of proof in regard to this truck approaching this school bus when that door was opened and when this minor plaintiff got out on the shoulder of the road.”

While we do not understand counsel to thus concede liability even if the proof establishes this charge, little argument has been, or could be, offered against the liability of a bus driver for some degree of negligence who, seeing this oncoming truck and well knowing that the path of the child led across the highway down which this truck was speeding, threw open his bus door and invited, if not directed the child to alight.

The respondent here, plaintiff below, insists, (1), a proposition of fact, that the evidence shows that the driver of. this bus opened its door for this small child to alight when he saw, or in the exercise of due care should have seen, this oncoming truck; and that (2), a proposition of law, such conduct was in disregard of his legal and moral obligation and is actionable negligence. And, further, that even should the proof fail to establish this proposition of fact, the admitted failure of the driver to *120 warn this child as it alighted from the bus was an actionable omission of a plain duty.

Considering, first, the question whether or not there is material evidence that the driver saw, or should have seen, the approaching truck before discharging the child, we find that Mrs. Pierce, the only witness not on the bus who saw the accident, testifies that she was standing at a point near the highway, in plain view of the scene, and saw the bus stop, the door opened and this child alight, run around the rear of the bus and collide with the truck. She was standing in the rear of the bus and when it stopped plainly saw the oncoming truck, then some distance up the highway. We quote her testimony:

“Q. When you-first saw this bus, or saw it stop, state where was this truck that struck the little girl, when the bus first stopped? A. Well, on up somewhere close to where Mr. Harvey lives.
“Q. Was it at a place where the driver of the school bus could have seen it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. When he drove up there? A. Yes, sir.
‘ ‘ Q. The truck was not far distant, and the driver of the bus could have seen it if he had been looking?
“Mr. Groins: She don’t know whether he could have seen it or not, we object.
“A. It could have been seen easily.
“Q. (Mr. Kerr) Now, after that truck that was meeting this school bus was. at a place where the driver could have seen it, did the driver or not open the door and let this child off? A. He opened the door just as the school bus stopped.
“Q. How far away did you say you were? A. I guess I was something like three hundred feet.”

The driver, defendant Cartwright, says he had opened *121 the door before he saw the truck approaching. We quote him:

“Q. When did you first notice this truck you were meeting? A. It was coming over a little rise up there.
“Q. Coming down grade ¶ A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Had you stopped at that time? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you have your arm extended? A. Yes, sir.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 373, 182 Tenn. 114, 18 Beeler 114, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cartwright-v-graves-tenn-1944.