Harbin v. Elam

1 Tenn. App. 496, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 11, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 496 (Harbin v. Elam) 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
Harbin v. Elam, 1 Tenn. App. 496, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CLARK, J.

This is a suit for personal injuries resulting from the. collision of two automobiles, the suit being brought by A. T. Elam, as plaintiff, and against J. C. Harbin, as defendant. There was a verdict below in favor of the plaintiff for $4999.25. Defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled, and he has perfected an appeal to this court and assigned errors. The first, second, third and fourth assignments are as follows:

1. The court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant to enter a mis-trial and discharge the jury because of the bringing to the attention of the jury in the testimony of witness Day the existence of liability insurance. This was error because the testimony of said witness brought to the jury’s attention the existence of said liability insurance.

2. The court erred in refusing to grant the defendant a new trial on account of the misconduct of the jury in considering improper evidence, to-wit the evidence of liability insurance.

3. The court erred in failing-and refusing to grant defendant a new trial because of the misconduct of certain jurors in bringing to the attention of the jury the existence of liability insurance and because of the misconduct of the jury as a whole in returning a verdict because of the existence of said liability insurance.

4. The court erred in failing and refusing when requested by defendant to find whether or not any of the jurors were influenced in their verdict by their belief that liability insurance existed.

There is no assignment that there is in the record no material evidence to support the verdict, but a proper disposition of the above assignments makes necessary a statement of the material facts of the case, and in stating them, as is the rule, we will take that view of the evidence most .favorable to the successful party below.

The plaintiff, Mr. A. T. Elam, in company with two of his brothers, on the 4th day of February, 1924, in a Ford sedan, was driving south on the Hernando Road in Shelby county, Tennessee. One of the brothers of the defendant owned the automobile in which they were riding and was driving same. It was between 5:45 and 6:15 P. M.

When they reached a point a few miles from the business section of the city of Memphis, a bus passed them and some of those therein called the attention of the occupants of the Ford sedan to the fact that the radius rod of said sedan was down.

The graveled or hard surface part of said Hernando Road is about nineteen and one-half feet wide. On each side of said hard surface portion there is a surface that is not graveled, and this ungraveled portion on the west side of said road is about five feet wide, that *498 is the distance from the west edge of the graveled portion of the road to the west edge of the road is about five feet.

When his attention was called to the fact that- the radius rod was down, plaintiff’s brother di'ove to his right, that is to the west side of said road, and so that the right wheels of his automobile were off the graveled portion of the road but the left wheels remained thereon. He stopped, got out, went to the front of the car and was undertaking to temporarily repair same. Plaintiff got out of the car, went around in front of same, and while his brother returned to the car for the purpose of getting a wrench, plaintiff stooped and was looking under the front end of said car when a Reo truck driven by defendant crashed into the rear end of the Ford sedan, caved in the rear portion of said sedan, knocked same over plaintiff and injured him in the manner that will be hereafter described. The front lights of the Ford sedan were burning, and there is in the record some material evidence from which it may be inferred that the tail light of said sedan was also burning. Several witnesses testified that it was not. Plaintiff did not on that night before the accident examine it to ^gee whether it was burning, but there is in the record evidence that, said tail light was in good repair and was burning when the lights were on the last time noticed before the accident. There is also material evidence to the effect that when defendant’s truck crashed in to said car the tail light was demolished and the frame work that supported it very much twisted.

Defendant admits that it was his truck that ran into the Ford sedan, and he also admits that he was driving same at the time of the collision. He says that he was going at a speed of about twenty miles an hour shortly before he approached said sedan, when the headlights of a car coming from the south and meeting him blinded him and he turned quickly to his right for the purpose of avoiding said car, that he was on the look-out, ahead, but did not see the Ford sedan until he was so close to it that it was impossible for him to stop, notwithstanding he had slowed down to about fifteen miles per hour when he turned to his right. He insists that there was no tail light on said sedan and that plaintiff’s brother was negligent in stopping it without getting off the travelled portion of the highway, and that plaintiff was grossly negligent in going in front of said sedan and stooping down knowing said sedan was in said portion of said road.

We think there is in the record material evidence convicting defendant of negligence. He says that his headlights were burning, and that he was on the look-out ahead. , There is in the record evidence that he stated on at least one occasion shortly after the accident that his headlights were not burning, but, however that may be, if his head lights were burning and he was on the lookout ahead, it is right difficult to understand how it was that he could not see an object as large as the back end of a Ford sedan before *499 getting in sncli close proximity to it that it was impossible for him to stop in time to avoid the collision, when he was going only fifteen miles per hour.

Coming now to the assignments of error: when the witness, Day, was being cross-examined by one of the attorneys for plaintiff, he was asked whether the defendant told him where the accident occurred. and he answered "No sir, the insurance man who went with me.” That is all that was said during the course of the trial with reference to insurance, and it is clear that the attorney for plaintiff, when he asked the question, had no intention of having the witness refer to insurance. The answer was unexcepted to. Other testimony was introduced, the case was argued, and still no exception was made to said testimony, but before the jury retired to consider of its verdict, the defendant moved the court to enter a mistrial because of the action of said witness in bringing to the attention of the jury the matter of insurance. The motion was overruled.

The matter of insurance was discussed by some of the jurors in the jury room and before the verdict was returned, but no juror stated to his fellow jurors that defendant did or did not have liability •insurance. The most that can be said is that, while the jury was discussing the case, one or more jurors said that if judgment was' given against defendant he would not have it to pay; that the insurance company would pay it. Another juror probably referred to the fact that the witness Day stated that an insurance man showed him where the accident occurred, and another juror stated he had carried as much as $5000 liability insurance when he drove a car, and that Mr. Harbin probably had insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 496, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbin-v-elam-tennctapp-1925.