Hill v. Harrill

310 S.W.2d 169, 203 Tenn. 123, 7 McCanless 123, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 469
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 310 S.W.2d 169 (Hill v. Harrill) 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
Hill v. Harrill, 310 S.W.2d 169, 203 Tenn. 123, 7 McCanless 123, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 469 (Tenn. 1957).

Opinions

Mb. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A passenger automobile, while being driven by Don Allen Hill on a public highway of the State, collided with one in which Paul and Hugh Harrill were riding. The one driven by Hill had attached thereto a special license plate issued under the authority of Section 59-414, T.C.A., to a partnership composed of J. R. Jenkins and E. R. Sloan, engaged in the business at Madisonville of selling automobiles under the name of J. R. Jenkins Motor Sales. [126]*126Both of the Harrills were killed as a result of the collision.

In the two tort actions thereafter maintained (and consolidated for trial) by Floyd Harrill as administrator of each of decedent’s estates there was an award of damages in the amount of $25,000 and $25,400, respectively, against Hill and against Jenkins and Sloan, individually and as partners under their trade name.

The Court of Appeals affirmed as to Hill. It reversed and remanded for a new trial as to the other defendants. All parties sought certiorari. The writs were granted as to Harrill, Administrator, and as to Jenkins, Sloan and the partnership because this Court was uncertain as to the correct answer to the determinative questions made, and desired the benefit of oral arguments. Therefore, the writ was granted as to Hill so that all questions might be decided in one opinion.

There is an abundance of evidence to support the verdict of the jury, concurred in by the Trial Judge and the Court of Appeals, to the effect that the proximate cause of the collision was the negligence of Hill. Hill, however, insists that he is entitled to a new trial for each of two reasons, to-wit: (1) alleged error of the Court of Appeals in permitting an amendment to the declaration in each case by adding thereto the names of the children of each deceased as next of kin, and (2) by reason of the cross-examination of Hill with reference to what he told his lawyers as to how the accident occurred.

The addition of the names of additional next of kin for whose use and benefit the suits were brought “in no sense changed the cause of action which was [127]*127brought for the purpose of recovering damages for decedent’s next of kin”. Gogan v. Jones, 197 Tenn. 436, 443, 273 S.W.2d 700, 703, and cases there cited. And it was an amendment permitted in accordance with Code Section 20-1505 providing that Courts shall have the authority to insert in the pleadings the names of plaintiffs or defendants so that the proper parties may be before the Court.

With reference to the insistence that what Hill told his lawyers as to how the accident occurred is privileged communication, the fact is that Hill testified that it occurred because of the fault of some one else, and not his own fault. The special pleas did not carry an averment consistent with this particular testimony. He was asked, therefore, if he told his lawyers that to which he testified, and he replied in the affirmative. No conceivable prejudice could possibly have resulted to Hill by reason of his being asked these questions since his answer did not in any manner reflect upon him. If error, it was harmless.

Hill was a nineteen year old boy, who, along with his mother, had purchased on the installment plan a Ford car from Jenkins Motor Company and on which there was a purchase money indebtedness of $300 secured by title retained, etc. Hill had gone to the yard of Motor Sales on this day, so he says, to make a payment on this note. He saw, and became interested in, a Chevrolet automobile there. Conversation as to its purchase with the Ford as part payment was then had between Hill and Jenkins. $100 was the amount fixed as the difference between the two cars in the event of a trade. That necessitated, in the event of a trade, a new note for $400, that [128]*128being the amount still due on the Ford, plus the $100 additional to be paid in exchange for the Chevrolet.

Hill, unaccompanied, drove the Chevrolet off the lot to try it out. Upon his return in a few minutes, further conversation was followed by another try out, being accompanied this time by Jenkins. What happened upon their return is a matter as to which Jenkins and Hill disagree. Both testified, however, that as a condition precedent to a sale, Hill’s mother would be required by Jenkins Motor Sales to become a party to the transaction, sign the papers, note, etc., just as she had when the Ford car was sold. This was because Hill was a minor.

Hill testified that the arrangement was:

“Well, I was going to take it home and drive it over night and let my mother see it and bring her back the next day, if I decided to trade, for her to sign for it. ’ ’

He then drove it from the car lot to the home of his mother some miles away, and showed it to her. Her reaction is not disclosed by the record. Immediately thereafter Hill started to Maryville for the purpose, he says, of obtaining the opinion of a mechanic there as to the mechanical condition of the car, etc. The collision occurred before he reached Maryville.

As heretofore stated, the license plate attached to this automobile was the one authorized by Section 59-414, T.C.A., reading as follows:

“59-414. Special plates issued manufacturers, transporters and dealers. — (a) A manufacturer or dealer owning any vehicle of a type otherwise required to be registered hereunder may operate or move the same [129]*129upon any highway within the state solely for his business purposes, including transporting, testing, demonstrating, repossessing, or selling the same without registering each such vehicle upon condition that any such vehicle display thereon in the manner prescribed in sec. 59-410 a special plate or plates issued to such owner as provided in secs. 59-414 — 59-416.”

The Trial Judge charged the jury that the effect of this statute as to a prospective purchaser who is operating with the consent of the dealer an automobile upon the highway of the state, to which is attached this special dealer’s plate, for the purpose of demonstrating that automobile to himself as a prospective purchaser, and is so demonstrating it with the knowledge and consent of the dealer, is that such prospective purchaser would be acting as the agent of the dealer while so demonstrating the car to himself; hence, that if the jury found that Hill was operating this car at the time of this collision as a prospective purchaser for the purpose of demonstrating it to himself, then the Motor Sales Company, and its partners, would be liable for the negligence of Hill; and that this partnership would likewise be so liable by reason of this statute if Hill was in possession of it for the purpose of completing the purchase with the knowledge and consent of the dealers.

The Court of Appeals held this instruction to be reversible error, saying this:

“Was this the purpose and intent of T.C.A. 59-414? It was taken from Chapter 70, Public Acts 1951, Sec. 59, which is generally known as the Tennessee Motor Vehicle and Begistration Law.
[130]*130“We do not find anything in the caption or other part of this Act to make such a revolutionary change in the law previously existing.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.2d 169, 203 Tenn. 123, 7 McCanless 123, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-harrill-tenn-1957.