Driver v. Smith

339 S.W.2d 135, 47 Tenn. App. 505, 1959 Tenn. App. LEXIS 139
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 21, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 339 S.W.2d 135 (Driver v. Smith) 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
Driver v. Smith, 339 S.W.2d 135, 47 Tenn. App. 505, 1959 Tenn. App. LEXIS 139 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

Tbe defendant, Clarence Driver, appeals in error from judgments rendered against him in favor of tbe. plaintiff below, Happel E. Smith, in tbe amount of $1,000 and in favor of Miss Geraldine Smith by next friend in tbe amount of $5,000.

On tbe night of August 12,1957, a Mercury automobile owned by tbe defendant, Clarence Driver, and being driven by a teen-ager, Bobby Joe Moore, ran into a ditch alongside tbe Humboldt-Medina blacktop road in Gibson County, Tennessee, a short distance from tbe city limits of tbe City of Humboldt. There were four young people, all minors, seated on tbe front seat and four young people, all minors, on the back seat including tbe plaintiff, Geraldine Smith, daughter of tbe plaintiff, Happel E. Smith.

In tbe front seat next to tbe driver, Bobby Joe Moore, were seated Miss Gayle Driver, aged 18, a daughter of tbe defendant, Clarence Driver, Miss Kate Hamilton and a young man, Jerry- Barrix. On tbe back seat along with the plaintiff, Geraldine Smith, were Miss Susan Bennett and two young men, Dwight Hawks and Kenny Dunlap.

On tbe evening of the collision, Miss Gayle Driver and her guest from Paris, Tennessee, Miss Kate Hamilton, ate supper with tbe plaintiff, Miss Geraldine Smith. Miss Driver bad tbe family automobile with tbe permission of her parents. After supper tbe three girls drove by and picked up tbe fourth girl, Miss Susan Bennett, and stopped at a restaurant for a soft drink. At tbe restaurant tbe four *508 boys, Bobby J oe Moore, Jerry Barrix, Kenny Dunlap and Dwight Hawks, walked up and accepted an invitation to go riding.

The young people then drove by the Driver home where Miss Gayle Driver obtained permission from her family to ride around for a while longer. They drove out the highway toward Milan, Tennessee, on a blacktop road where they parked the car and danced for about thirty minutes to the car radio.

About 9 :30 P.M. the young people decided to return to Humboldt via the Medina-Humboldt blacktop road. Bobby J oe Moore was driving the automobile at the suggestion of Miss Gayle Driver who was setting next to him.

As they proceeded toward Humboldt one or more of the couples in the car were kissing; Miss Gayle Driver made a remark about feeling left out and thereupon she leaned over and she and the driver of the automobile, Bobby Joe Moore, were in the act of kissing when he lost control of the automobile and ran into the ditch on the right hand side, struck a bank and the automobile came to rest headed in the opposite direction from which it had been travelling.

A number of the occupants were injured including the plaintiff, Geraldine Smith. She was severly injured, sustaining a fractured pelvis, a brain concussion and injuries to her right leg. She was hospitalized for many weeks and unable to walk for several more weeks. The jury returned a verdict of $5,000 for her injuries and a verdict of $1,-000 in favor of her father for medical expenses, loss of services, etc. Judgments were entered on these jury verdicts and no question is made on this appeal as to the amount of the judgments.

*509 Plaintiff-in-error, Clarence Driver, has made five assignments of error. Assignments of error Nos. I and II insist that there was no material evidence to support the verdicts of the jury and that His Honor the Trial Judge was in error in overruling the defendant’s motion, for directed verdicts at the conclusion of all the evidence.

It is the contention of the plaintiff-in-error that while the Family Purpose Doctrine is in force in Tennessee yet in this case the father, Mr. Driver, is not liable for the negligence of Bobby Joe Moore for three reasons:

(1) Miss Gayle Driver did not have general permission to use the automobile but was required to obtain special permission from one of her parents each time she used the automobile.

(2) Miss Driver was not driving the automobile herself at the time of the accident and the negligence of Bobby Joe Moore who was driving at her request was not imputable to her father, Clarence Driver.

(3) Miss Gayle Driver had permission to drive the automobile only within the corporate limits of the City of Humboldt and that act of Miss Gayle Driver and her friends in going outside of the Town of Humboldt constituted a material deviation from her authority and therefore, Mr. Driver is not liable for the injuries sustained by the plaintiffs during this material deviation.

The members of Mr. Driver’s household at the time of the accident were his wife and their daughter, Gayle. Mr. Driver testified that he kept the car, among other things, for the use, pleasure and convenience of his family, including Gayle; that he kept one set of keys to the car and his wife, Mrs. Driver, the mother of Gayle, kept the other set; *510 and that he was glad for Gayle to use the car at any time he or Mrs. Driver was not using the same but that she had to get permission from one or the other each time she used the car.

Mr. Driver further testified that he did not know Bobby Joe Moore and that Moore had no permission to drive the automobile on the night of the accident. However, he did admit that on a few occasions he had permitted other young men to drive his automobile when they were escorting his daughter, Gayle, to some social function.

Mr. Driver testified that Gayle was under standing instructions not to drive.the car out of the limits of Humboldt except to the Humboldt Country Club which is about three miles from town. The accident happened about three miles from Humboldt. However, he said occasionally Gayle was permitted to drive to Jackson, Tennessee, and other surrounding towns.

Further, to the best of his recollection Gayle had never been permitted to drive out of town at night and on the night in question she had no permission to go out of town though no mention of that fact was made to her on the evening in question.

Miss Gayle Driver and her mother corroborated Mr. Driver in regard to the restrictions on Gayle’s use of the automobile.

Some of plaintiffs’ witnesses testified they had driven with Gayle Driver outside the city limits of Humboldt on several occasions and that they had never heard of any restrictions on Gayle’s right to drive outside the city limits.

The plaintiff-in-error, Mr. Driver, relies most strongly upon the following statement taken from the opinion of *511 Judge Anderson in the case of Redding v. Barker, 1950, 33 Tenn. App. 132, 230 S. W. (2d) 202, 205:

‘ ‘ The family purpose doctrine does not apply where the members of the family must obtain special permission on each occasion of the vehicle’s use by them; nor does it apply where there is no evidence that the vehicle was maintained wholly or partly to serve the convenience of the family. Woodfin v. Insel, 13 Tenn. App. 493, 495; Long v. Tomlin, 22 Tenn. App. 607, 125 S. W. (2d) 171; 60 C. J.S. Motor Vehicles sec. 434, p. 1075. Cf. Scates v. Sandifer, supra and Adkins v. Nanney, supra.”

The above quotation is quoted with approval in the case of Harber v. Smith, 1956, 40 Tenn. App. 648, 292 S. W. (2d) 468.

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Bluebook (online)
339 S.W.2d 135, 47 Tenn. App. 505, 1959 Tenn. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driver-v-smith-tennctapp-1959.