Davis v. Broad Street Garage

232 S.W.2d 355, 191 Tenn. 320, 27 Beeler 320, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 576
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 232 S.W.2d 355 (Davis v. Broad Street Garage) 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
Davis v. Broad Street Garage, 232 S.W.2d 355, 191 Tenn. 320, 27 Beeler 320, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 576 (Tenn. 1950).

Opinions

Me. Justice BubNett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The original bill herein was demurred to. The demurrer was overruled and a discretionary appeal allowed the demurrants.

In substance, the allegations of the bill are that Mrs. Davis, one of the complainants, was driving the automobile of the complainants on one of the streets in Chattanooga. When she approached an intersecting street she looked both ways, and could see about 180' feet to her right when she neared the intersecting street; that she entered this street and as she was about half way [322]*322across Mrs. Roberts, one of the defendants, ran into the right rear of the Davis automobile; that Mrs. Roberts was driving fast, negligent and without looking or applying her brakes; that this gross negligence of Mrs. Roberts was the canse of the accident. It is alleged that the acts of negligence of Mrs. Roberts “were active and flagrant, while the act of negligence on the part of the complainant Jeanne K. Davis was merely passive.” Mrs. Davis’ only act of negligence being her failure to again look to her right as she entered the intersection.

It is further alleged that the car driven by Mrs. Roberts was the property of Broad Street Garage; that it was loaned to the Roberts’ while the garage repaired a car of the Roberts’; that the garage had damaged the Roberts’ car and this loan of their car was while the Roberts’ car was being repaired; that the Roberts were valued customers of the garage while the Davis’ were not.

The Davis’ and the Roberts’ sued each other in the Sessions Court where the Davis’ won. On appeal to the Circuit Court both parties lost — their respective suits being dismissed. The garage sued both Davis’ and Roberts ’ in Sessions Court where they gained a judgment against Roberts’ alone. On appeal the Circuit Court gave judgment against both Davis’ and Roberts’. The judgment against the respective husbands being based on the family purpose doctrine, as neither was present nor took part in the accident.

It is further alleged that “it was stated by an authorized agent of the said Broad Street Garage that if judgment were rendered against all of the defendants named in that suit, it would not attempt to collect anything from the said F. W. Roberts and wife, but would collect the whole judgment and costs from complain[323]*323ants;” that offers were made by complainants to pay half of Garage’s damages; that they offered to buy the judgment and take an assignment; that all these offers were refused the garage insisting they were going to collect the full amount from complainants; that the “whole course of dealings from the beginning constitutes a fraudulent conspiracy between” the garage and Roberts to cast the burden of the damages to Garage’s automobile on the Davis’; and that the Garage has released the Roberts’ of any and all liability.

The complainants paid the full judgment into Court and asked to be allowed to pay one-half of the judgment and be released, or, that they pay the entire judgment with a right over against the Roberts’ for one-half the judgment.

There are nine separate grounds set out in the demurrer, all of which are urged in the brief. But in oral argument before the Court, the principal ground relied upon was that under the law there could be no contribution among the judgment defendants because they were joint tort-feasors.

We do not find it necessary: to refer in this opinion to each separate ground of the demurrer as set forth in the demurrer and in the assignments of error. The Chancellor in his opinion filed with the record attacks the rule first enunciated in Merryweather v. Nixan, 8 Durnford & East’s Term Reports 186, later adopted by this Court in Anderson v. Saylors, 40 Tenn. 551, and Rhea v. White, 40 Tenn. 121, to the effect that where two parties participate in the commission of a tort, and one party suffers damage thereby, he is not entitled to indemnity or contribution from the other party. This general rule of noncontribution between joint tort-feasors had its origin in Merryweather v. Nixan, 1799, supra. [324]*324Prosser in Ms review of the case says: . . the plaintiff’s claim for contribution rested upon what was, in the eyes of the law, entirely bis own deliberate wrong. ’ ’

The courts generally agree that there can be no contribution between joint wrongdoers where they, by concert of action, have been guilty of a wilful tort, an immoral act, or were consciously violating the law. No one will now contend that in such circumstances the machinery of the courts of justice should be made available to one of the wrongdoers to compel another to share a part of the burden. But the exceptions to the rule are too numerous to permit citation of cases. In Cohen v. Noel, 165 Tenn. 600, 56 S. W. (2d) 744, 745, Chibe Justice Green speaking for the Court held that joint tort-feasor would be allowed contribution from another where his negligence was alleged to be only passive, whereas his adversary was guilty of active negligence. Numerous cases are cited wherein contribution was allowed upon the theory that the joint tort-feasors were “guiltless of any intended wrong”. Central Bank & Trust Co. v. Cohn, 150 Tenn. 375, 264 S. W. 641. Our cases make a clear distinction between wilful and intended wrongs in which the general rule of noncontribution is recognized and wrongs resulting from purely negligent acts, mistakes or other unintentional breaches of the law in which contribution is allowed.

In Graham v. Miller, 182 Tenn. 434, 187 S. W. (2d) 622, 624, the late Mr. Justice Chambliss, speaking for the Court, said that this Court in Cohen v. Noel, supra, had “approved an exception to this rule thus stated by the Supreme Court in Union Stock Yards Co. of Omaha v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 196 U. S. 217, 25 S. Ct. 226, 228, 49 L. Ed. 453, 2 Ann. Cas. 525, ‘that, notwithstanding the [325]*325negligence of one, for which, he has been held to respond, he may recover against the principal delinquent where the offense did not involve moral turpitude, in which case there could he no recovery, but was merely malum prohibitum, and the law would inquire into the real delinquency of the parties, and place the ultimate liability upon him whose fault had been the primary cause of the injury.’ ”

Mb. Justice Chambliss said further in Graham v. Miller, supra, that the “controlling principle (of the Cohen case) to be that, ‘where the negligence of one is positive, that of the other, negative,’ such a ‘one’ may not recover over against ‘the other,’ — the obvious implication being that the other, guilty of passive or negative negligence only, may recover over against the one who has contributed more proximate, positive, or active negligence to the injury.”

We, herein, only apply the rule and its exceptions insofar as they are applicable to the facts alleged in the instant bill. These facts, insofar as here concerned, must be taken as true on the demurrer. For this reason we, in the outset of this opinion, have rather fully set forth the facts as alleged in this bill. Under this allegation of fact it clearly seems to us that an exception to the rule of contribution between tort-feasors should be applied by a court of chancery.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.2d 355, 191 Tenn. 320, 27 Beeler 320, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-broad-street-garage-tenn-1950.