Hunter v. Stacey

141 S.W.2d 921, 24 Tenn. App. 158, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 16, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 141 S.W.2d 921 (Hunter v. Stacey) 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
Hunter v. Stacey, 141 S.W.2d 921, 24 Tenn. App. 158, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

PELTS, J.

Paul Stacey, a minor, was struck at a street crossing in Nashville by an automobile driven by Mrs. Reba Hunter and *159 owned by her husband, Ralph W. Hunter; and by nest friend he sued them to recover for the injuries thus inflicted. The negligence charged was that Mrs. Hunter failed to keep a lookout, ran down plaintiff and a companion, and hurried away without stopping, leaving them lying in the middle of the street, and that she violated a city ordinance which required her to ‘ ‘ keep as near the right-hand curb as possible,” and a state statute which made it her duty to yield the right-of-way to plaintiff at the crossing. Code, sec. 2687 (e). Defendants pleaded not guilty.

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $10,000. The trial judge suggested a remittitur of $1500, and judgment was entered for plaintiff against defendants for $8,500. Defendants appealed in error; but on the day before they perfected their appeal their insurer paid into the circuit court $5,000, together with interest to date and all the court costs, which is said to be the extent of its liability.

Defendants did not move for a directed verdict; but they insist that a new trial should be granted because there is no evidence of any negligence on the part of Mrs. Hunter, and because plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and the verdict is excessive and so excessive as to indicate passion, prejudice, and caprice.

The accident occurred shortly after one o’clock on the morning of December 1, 1938, at the intersection of Twenty-first Avenue and Church Street. Mrs. Hunter had been playing bridge that night at the Noel Hotel. She had left the hotel about one o’clock to go to her home in the Belle Meade Apartments, and was alone in her husband’s car, a maroon colored Ford, driving westerly along Church Street. Plaintiff, a school boy seventeen years of age, and Richard Robinette, another boy about the same age, had attended a dance given by a high school sorority at the Women’s Club located on Louise Avenue; and these two boys had walked to the northwest corner of Church Street and Twenty-first Avenue, and were walking-over this crossing, going south across Church Street toward the southwest corner, where they intended to wait for an in-bound or east-bound street car, their homes being in East Nashville.

At this intersection Church Street forks, the left or south fork being called Elliston Place and the right or north fork being Church Street, which bends to the north and runs into Twenty-second Avenue. Two street ear tracks are laid in Church Street, the north track being for out-bound ears and the south track being for inbound cars. At this intersection Church Street is wide but its exact width is not shown. As stated, Mrs. Hunter was driving west along Church Street and she intended to continue on along Elliston Place en route to her home.

*160 Plaintiff’s testimony is that before lie and Eobinette stepped off the pavement on the north side of Church Street he looked east and west along 'Church Street and saw no automobile coming; that they walked over the crossing until they got beyond the center of Church Street, and he was looking to his right or west for in-bound traffic; that about this time he saw a light behind him and turned his head in time to see the automobile approaching fifty or sixty miles an hour and it “cut in to usthat before they had time to take more than about “a step” the car struck them and rolled or dragged them a great distance; that he and Eobinette both fell in the street, he falling on top of Eobinette; that the automobile continued on without stopping, leaving them lying in the street. Eichard Eobinette, who sustained a serious brain injury, was unable to recall anything as to the details of the accident.

A little later Edwin A. Hill and some companions in his automobile, who had also attended the dance, were coming east on Elliston Place, when Iiill saw about twenty feet ahead of him what appeared to be a body or a person injured. He stopped his car, got out and found Stacey apd Eobinette lying in the street, both seemingly unconscious, Stacey lying on top of Eobinette. They were lying about the middle of the in-bound or south street car track and were fifty or sixty feet beyond or west of the intersection of Twenty-first Avenue and Church Street. Between where they were lying and the north curb of Church Street (Mrs. Hunter’s right side of the street) there was about thirty feet of clear space or room for two or three cars to pass. The evidence also is that the clothes of the boys were bloody, dirty and torn as if the bodies had been dragged or rolled in the street. Hill and his companions took Stacey to St. Thomas Hospital and another car, which had come up, took Eobinette to the hospital.

Mrs. Hunter testified that it was very foggy and murky, and a white smoke was coming out of St. Thomas Hospital so that her vision was obscured. There were no traffic lights and she was driving “thirty miles an hour.” She was familiar with the intersection of Twenty-first Avenue and Church Street. She said, “all at once I saw two men in front of me on the left-hand side of my car.” She said she could not tell which way they were going, but when the smoke coming from the hospital • passed away she saw “two men on the right side of my car.” On cross-examination she stated the left fender of her car struck the two boys. She also admitted that she knew at the time that she had 11 struck them ’ ’ or had “struck something.” She stated that the reason she did not stop was that she had heard of some robberies and a murder having been committed in the vicinity and that she thought the persons she saw in the street might be intending to rob or harm her. She stated when she reached home she told her husband of the accident *161 and be told ber to go to sleep and they would notify tbe authorities next morning. It appears, however, that they did not do this until after they bad read a story in tbe morning’ paper about tbe accident in which it was stated that the police were looking for a “bit and run” driver of a maroon colored Ford, which was the description of the car she was driving.

There is abundant evidence to support the jury’s finding that Mrs. Hunter was guilty of actionable negligence. The intersection where the accident occurred was within “a business or residence district.” Code, sec. 2687(c), made it her duty to yield the right-of-way to plaintiff at this crossing. Also the ordinance of Nashville made it her duty “to keep conveniently near the curb” on her right side. Gouldener v. Brittain, 173 Tenn., 32, 114 S. W. (2d), 783. This ordinance is for the protection of pedestrians as well as vehicles; and this Code provision is for the protection of pedestrians. Violation of these duties by Mrs. Hunter was negligence per se. The evidence also warranted the inference that she was not keeping a proper lookout and was driving at a reckless rate of speed under the conditions she says existed.

Nor can we assent to defendants’ insistence that the evidence showed plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. This insistence is rested upon plaintiff’s statement that after looking both ways and seeing no traffic when he started to cross Church Street he did not look again toward the east until he saw the light behind him just before the car struck him.

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W.2d 921, 24 Tenn. App. 158, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-stacey-tennctapp-1940.