Gamble v. Vanderbilt University

138 Tenn. 616
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 138 Tenn. 616 (Gamble v. Vanderbilt University) 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
Gamble v. Vanderbilt University, 138 Tenn. 616 (Tenn. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action brought in the circuit court of Davidson county against Vanderbilt University and its executive committee to recover damages for injuries inflicted upon the plaintiff’s intestate by the falling of an elevator in an office building owned and operated by the university.

The first count of the declaration contains all of the matters necessary to be considered in connection with the demurrer on which the questions for decision arise.

[619]*619This count contains the following averments.

“ (1) That defendant Vanderbilt University is a corporation created and organized nnder the laws of Tennessee and having its situs at Nashville, in said State, and is engaged, and has been for many years, among other things, in the renting and operation of a large building for office purposes, owed by said defendant and situated at Nos. 311 and 313 Fourth Avenue North, formerly Cherry street, in the heart of the business district of said city of Nashville and remote from and wholly separate and distinct from its university buildings and grounds, which are situated in the suburbs of said city.
“(2) That said building consists of five stories, besides a basement, and contains numerous offices which are and have been for many years rented out annually to business and professional persons, firms, and corporations wholly disconnected with said Vanderbilt University or its educational work, in like manner in all respects as other office quarters are owned and rented out to tenants by other property owners of said city, and from whom are collected monthly rentals by said defendant in like manner in all respects a.s such rentals are collected by other landlords from their tenants in said city,
“(3) That said defendant owns, maintains, and operates in said building, and has done so for many years, an elevator for the use of its tenants therein, in like manner in all respects as elevators are owned, [620]*620maintained and operated by other owners in other office buildings in said city.
(4) That, only a small part of said building is and has been at any time used by said defendant for its law department, and for its law library for the use of its law students, and the larger portion of said building is and has been for many years rented out, as aforesaid, to tenants as business offices, and the principal use to which the said building is and has always been devoted is that of rented offices, and from which said def endant derives a large annual income, to wit, the sum of between $5,000 and $10,000, and the rentals charged and collected are the full, usual, and customary rates charged for similar offices in said city.
“(5) That said defendant owns and operates and has for many years owned and operated other buildings in the business portions of said city of Nashville, which it rents out and has rented out for many-years for business, hotels, banking, and residence purposes, to persons, firms-, and corporations in no way connected with its university of institution of learning, and from which it receives and has been for many years receiving an annual income of many thousands of dollars — in fact, said defendant is and has been for many-years one of the largest business property owners of said city of Nashville.
“(6) That’the foregoing facts and conditions existed at and before the time of the injuries hereinafter complained of.
[621]*621“(7) That at and before the time of the injuries complained of defendants J. H. Kirkland, W. R. Cole, Gr. M. Neeley, and Jno. B. .Ransom were members of the executive committee of said defendant Vanderbilt University, and as such had charge and control of the building aforesaid on Fourth Avenue North, and they and their associates and their appointees, agents, servants, and employees were charged with the duty of supervision, management, and operation of said building and the elevators therein.
“(8) That plaintiff’s said husband, Tip Cambie, at and before the time of the injuries herein complained of, was a tenant of defendants, occupying an office on the fourth floor of said building of defendants at 311 and 313 Fourth Avenue North, to wit, in the. year 1908.
“ (9)That on or about the 25th day of November, 1908, during business hours, the plaintiff’s said husband, a lawyer, being at that time a tenant of said building as aforesaid, and lawfully therein, entered the said elevator at the said fourth floor, for the purpose of descending to the street or first floor, the said elevator being at the time in charge of and operated by a temporary servant of defendants, and not the regular operator or conductor, when, as the said elevator descended, the said temporary operator or conductor, by reason of his negligence and incompetence, and the defective, worn, and unsafe condition of the said elevator, lost control thereof and it fell rapidly to the bottom, where the violent and sudden stop and con-[622]*622cnssion so severely jarred and injured plaintiff’s said husband that, by reason of such violent and sudden concussion and injury which was wholly without any fault' or negligence on his part, he suffered great bodily and mental pain and anguish, and was forced to incur, pay out, and expend a large sum of money, to wit, the sum of $1,000, for medical and other treatment and service in and about efforts for his cure for a long space of time, to wit, until the 2nd day of January, 1909, when, as the result of said injury, he died.
“(10) And so the plaintiff avers that the death of her said husband, Tip G-amble, was caused by the negligence of the defendants and their agents, servants, and employees in suffering and permitting the said eleva.tor and its braking and controlling apiaratus and machinery to be, become, and remain defective, worn, out of repair, unsafe, and insufficient to control the movements of said elevator and so as to render said elevator unsafe and dangerous to tenants and other persons lawfully in said building, "and which defects were known to defendants and not known to plaintiff’s said husband; and also by the negligence of defendants in employing and placing in charge of said elevator an unskilled, inexperienced, and incompetent servant as conductor or operator thereof, and whose inexperience and incompetency resulted in his loss of control- or inability to control the movements of said elevator; and also by the negligence of the said temporary operator or conductor in failing to operate the same ,. [623]*623■with reasonable care — to plaintiff’s damage $25, 000, and’ therefore she sues and demands a .jury to try the canse.”

There are several grounds of demurrer, but we need consider only the third, which presents the point that the defendant corporation is a charitable institution, and, as such, holds its funds in trust for eleemosynary purposes, and therefore it. cannot be held liable in damages for the injuries complained of.

This ground of demurrer was sustained in the trial court, and also in the court of civil appeals, and the case is now here on the writ of certiorari to the latter court to review its decision.

We shall defer, for the present, the consideration of the case of the executive committee.

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Bluebook (online)
138 Tenn. 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamble-v-vanderbilt-university-tenn-1917.