Croson v. Marsh

12 Tenn. App. 33, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 33 (Croson v. Marsh) 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
Croson v. Marsh, 12 Tenn. App. 33, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 210 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

This case grew out of injuries inflicted in the overturning of an automobile, being owned and driven by the defendant, in which the plaintiff and another party, the witness Roach, were riding as guests of the defendant. The catastrophe occurred on or about the 30th day of November, 1924, about nine o’clock at night, about fourteen and one-half miles out from Chattanooga on what is known as the Brainard road. The parties were returning to Chattanooga from the house of one Jim Camp, a brother-in-law of the witness Roach, where they had had dinner.

The plaintiff, on the original hearing, described the accident as follows: ,

“Q. While you were taking that trip with him did you have an accident of any sort? A. Well I will say we did; we ran into some rocks in the road — I think there was two in the road, and I think we hit both of them. I don’t know, but anyhow he lost control of the car, and that threw him into a pile of logs and broke uff two of the wheels, and that threw us over the logs and we went about twenty feet, and then we hit the logs and that broke off the wheels on the right hand side and completely turned the car over and pinned *35 me under the steering' wheel and threw him out. Mr. D. L. Roach was behind in the back seat, and the cushion caught his head and held him so that he could not move. ’ ’

Mr. D. L. Roach described the accident as follows:

“When we hit the rocks it give a sudden jar and the nest thing I knew I was down and I did' not know anything for awhile; after the car hit the rocks, why then it went on and went into these logs, hit the ends of the logs, and it slid over the logs like this, (indicating) arid that threw the car over and he stopped his engine.
“Q: In other words the car turned two somersaults?” A. Yes, it turned over twice.'
“Q. In this thing? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. How many logs were there on the side of the road? A. I don’t know, there was a, whole pile of them.
“Q. What was the result of this accident; what happened to the occupants of the car? A. Well what happened to me was this: When it struck the logs I was knocked down between the seats, and I just went down like that, (indicating) and it turned me over and the cushion caught me across my throat and it held me down in there. I heard the car stop, and they must have been pinned down in there some way, but I heard Mr. Marsh getting Mr. Croson out from the steering wheel, and Mr. Marsh was calling to me, but I could not answer. I could not speak because that cushion had caught me across my throat, and it was holding me down in there and I could not speak. He called a half dozen times, and when he got Mr. Croson out he came back there to where 'I was and he saw how I was pinned back there, and they shifted the car off of me and got me out, and after he got me out he asked me if I was hurt, and I told him that I did not think I was hurt much; there was a little place in my head that was bloody and was hurt, and my left arm was hurt a little.”

He testified further that it tore the front wheels up, tore up the top and ruined it, and in fact tore all the wheels off of the car — ■ that the wheels were not off of the car, but they were all torn up — the spokes were just ground out and torn up.

Mr. Croson described his injuries to be, that his back was wrenched, that he was bruised all the way down from his shoulders to his knees, and black and blue; that he suffered with that for about four weeks, and that it left him with a large blood clot on his hip, which he said he still had; that he could feel it all of the time; that it was just like a gristle; that it could be covered with the palm of the hand; that his back was not strong; that his *36 work is stooping over and, while he did not have to do any heavy lifting, that he had to stoop over and that it hurt him continually, and that it was hurting him then; that if he did any stooping it hurt him. Iiis work was that of a quilter and he worked for the Dixie Mercerizing Company. He testified that it was not heavy work, that is, that he did not. have any heavy lifting to do, but that he had to stoop down thousands of times a day, and that it hurt him to do it; that he had to stoop down to take up the ends of the thread; that he was in bed about two weeks, but off from work for four weeks; that he was treated by a Dr. Banks, and was still under treatment.

Mr. Roach testified that he went to see the plaintiff the next day after it happened and he seemed to be hurt some; that he was hurt in the back, and there was a place on his hip that was right black.

The plaintiff testified that at the time of the accident they were running from thirty to thirty-six miles an hour.

The, negligence alleged in the declaration, upon which the liability was predicated is: (1) That the defendant at the time aforesaid did unlawfully, negligently, and carelessly run his said car in excess of twenty miles an hour, contrary to the statute of Tennessee regulating the speed of automobiles. (2) Defendant carelessly and negligently failed to keep a lookout ahead while operating said car, and carelessly and negligently ran the same into a large rock in the road, causing the same to run into a pile of lo'gs and overturn, injuring plantiff as herein alleged, all of which, it was averred, was due to the proximate negligence of the defendant and without fault on plaintiff’s part, and to his damage in the sum aforesaid, which had been previously averred as twenty thousand dollars.

The plea was not guilty, and the proof on the first trial eliminated the negligence averred as to the lookout., as owing to the location of the rocks around a little curve and just over a little hill, going at the rate of speed they were travelling it was conceded that the rocks under the circumstances could not have been seen in time to have stopped the car, though it was insisted that, had they been going at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, it might have been done.

It is proper to state that while Mr. Roach stated on cross-examination that he had made a statement, to Mr. Spurlock that he thought the car was running twenty miles an hour, but he said he had the curtains up and was sitting on the back seat — that he could not tell- — could not state positively — that he could not make a statement of any kind like the speed it was running. .

*37 He was asked to give his best judgment as to the rate of speed the car was running, to which he replied that he would hate to make a statement about it, but said:

“We must have been running faster than twenty miles an hour, the way the car acted when it hit those rocks.”

Following this there appears this objection: “Objected to. Objection sustained.” The questioning then continued:

“Q. I will ask you to tell us what the car did do. A. Well it swung around after it hit those rocks and hit these logs.
“Q. Where did it go after it hit the rocks? A. 'It went on a pile of logs.”

He was also asked:

“Q. Did you hear Mr. Croson say anything to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tenn. App. 33, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/croson-v-marsh-tennctapp-1926.