Gulf Refining Co. v. Frazier

83 S.W.2d 285, 19 Tenn. App. 76, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 8, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 83 S.W.2d 285 (Gulf Refining Co. v. Frazier) 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
Gulf Refining Co. v. Frazier, 83 S.W.2d 285, 19 Tenn. App. 76, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

This is an action for personal injuries, brought in the circuit court of Wilson county, by Bobert Victor Frazier, a minor, suing by his father, A- L. Frazier, as next friend, against Gulf Befining Company, a corporation, W. G. Ingram, and B. A. Bridgewater.

• The case has been tried to a jury three times. Bach of the first two- trials resulted in a verdict of the jury, and judgment of the trial court thereon, in favor of the plaintiff and against the three defendants, for $12,000, but each of said judgments was reversed by this court and the cause remanded for a new trial on account of errors committed at the trial below, and certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court. However, in neither instance was the reversal on the ground that there was no evidence to support the verdict of the jury finding the issue of the liability of defendants in favor of the plaintiff.

On the third trial (which is now before us for review), the jury reported a verdict of "not guilty” as to defendant Bridgewater, but found the issues in favor of the plaintiff and against defendants Gulf Befining Company and W. G. Ingram, and fixed plaintiff’s damages at $10,000, for which sum, and for costs, judgment of the court was rendered in accordance with the verdict.

A motion for a new trial on behalf of the two unsuccessful defendants was made and overruled, and they thereupon reserved exceptions to the action of the court in overruling their motion for a new trial, and prayed an appeal to this court, which was granted by the trial court and perfected by defendants Gulf Befining Company and Ingram.

For convenience, we will designate the parties as they appeared on the record in the trial court — Bobert V. Frazier, as plaintiff, and Gulf Befining Company and W. G. Ingram, as defendants.

At the threshold of the investigation of the case, we are met with four motions on behalf of the plaintiff. The first of these motions is to strike the defendants’ assignments of error, brief, and argument from the files, for the reason that It entirely omits the address, viz., "May it please the Court.” It is said, in the motion, that such address "is an indispensable requirement to every argument, either oral or written, and especially so written when addressing an appellate court, and no pleading will be countenanced that does not show this respect to the Court.”

The use of such salutation as thus indicated in the motion, or its *79 equivalent, is an almost invariable custom of such long standing in oral argument at the bar that its omission might be -considered a breach of court etiquette; but this court has not, by rule or practice, required such manner of address in assignments of error, briefs, and written arguments.

The second motion is to strike the “so-called bill of exceptions” from the record, for the reason that “it only purports to be filed and signed by ‘G. W. Alexander’ and not by G. W. Alexander, Clerk of the Circuit Court of "Wilson County, Tennessee.”

The third motion is to strike the “so-called record” in this case from the files of this court because “it only purports to be certified by ‘G. W. Alexander, Clerk,’ which said Alexander does not appear to be vested with authority to certify to said record.”

Appellate courts of this state judicially recognize the public officers of the state under whose laws and organization they act, and this court will take judicial notice of the fact that G. W. Alexander, who certified and attested the record in this case, was the clerk of the circuit court of Wilson county at the time of such certification. Major v. State, 2 Sneed, 11, 15; State v. Cole, 9 Humph., 626, 627; State v. Evans, 8 Humph., 110, 112; Burton v. Pettibone, 5 Yerg., 443, 444.

The fourth motion is “to dismiss the appeal and to strike the ease from the record” (docket) because “it affirmatively appears that the appeal to this Court was not taken as an appeal in the nature of a writ of error, but, on the contrary, was taken only as a broad appeal, which, in this case, the case being the result of a judgment based on a verdict at law, does not bring the case to this Court for review.”

We held on the former appeal of this case (15 Tenn. App., 662, 664), on the authority of cases there cited, that in -such case the “appeal” will be treated as an appeal in the nature of a writ of error.

There is no merit in either of the aforesaid four motions, and they are all overruled.

There is no assignment on this appeal that there is no evidence to support the verdict of the jury, nor an assignment that the trial court erred in overruling the motion of defendants for a directed verdict. The absence of such assignments is, in effect, a concession, for all the purposes of the appeal, that there is material evidence to support the verdict of the jury finding the defendants liable to respond in damages to the plaintiff. But, under the practice obtaining in the appellate courts of this state in a case of this character, the amount of the damages assessed by the jury may be questioned by an appropriate assignment of error, without an assignment that there was no evidence to support the verdict of the jury. 15 Tenn. App., 662, 665.

*80 Although, it is now, in effect, conceded that plaintiff suffered personal injuries as the proximate result of negligence of defendant Ingram, while he (Ingram) was driving a truck in the distribution of oil and gasoline for defendant Gulf Refining Company, a statement of the plaintiff’s case may be helpful to an understanding of the questions raised by the defendants’ assignments of error, and, as a matter of convenience, we will quote from the charge of the learned trial judge to the jury as follows:

“In the outset, Gentlemen of the Jury, and before going into any discussion of the law it is admitted on all sides- that an accident did occur and on the Pike mentioned and in September, 1929.
“The plaintiff says that on that day in the early morning of the day, that he was riding in a little Ford' car with his father, that he and his father had driven from their home on the way to school, that he was attending at Shop Springs, I believe, and that they had come out on the Highway and turned Bast, going away from Lebanon and towards Watertown, in the car in which they were riding, described as a little Ford roadster that had been converted into a small truck by addition of a little box on the back of the car. The plaintiff, who it is conceded on all sides, was then about eight years of age, was riding on the seat by his father and it is said for him that Mr. Frazier, his father, was driving the truck at a reasonable and moderate rate of speed and that as he drove along and approached a narrow bridge or culvert in the road that he observed a passenger bus coming, that is Mr. Frazier did, father of the boy, coming, meeting him from the east going towards Lebanon and that he observed that if he continued to travel at the rate he was going that they might possibly meet on this narrow bridge and Mr. Frazier as a matter of precaution slowed up his ear to allow the bus to pass over the culvert, or bridge before he arrived at the bridge in order to avoid his car being possibly in a dangerous position on the bridge. It is said for the plaintiff that there was following Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W.2d 285, 19 Tenn. App. 76, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-refining-co-v-frazier-tennctapp-1934.