John L. Burns, Inc. v. Matheney

384 S.W.2d 51, 53 Tenn. App. 475, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 28, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 384 S.W.2d 51 (John L. Burns, Inc. v. Matheney) 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
John L. Burns, Inc. v. Matheney, 384 S.W.2d 51, 53 Tenn. App. 475, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 114 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

I

THE CASE

SHRIVER, J.

These two consolidated cases were brought by Mrs. Joan Matheney and her husband Thomas Matheney to recover damages by reason of injuries sustained and expenses incurred as the result of an automobile accident which occurred on a two lane highway connecting Monterey and Sparta, Tennessee.

The jury returned a verdict against all the defendants in favor of Mrs. Joan Matheney for $25,000.00 and in favor of her husband for $5,243.00, which verdicts were approved by the trial Judge and judgment entered thereon.

Motions for a new trial were overruled and appeals in error were prayed and perfected and assignments have been filed.

II

THE FACTS

There is material evidence in the record, with a proper predicate laid in the pleadings, to support the following facts:

[478]*478On August 18,1961, the State of Tennessee entered into a contract with the defendant, John L. Burns, Inc., to resurface the two-lane state highway connecting Cooke-ville and Sparta, which highway runs in a generally North and South direction.

The contract provided that John L. Burns, Inc., would be responsible for the safety of the public using the said highway while it was under construction.

As was stated by witness, Jim Grundy, who was in a supervisory capacity representing the defendant contractor, JohnL. Burns, Inc., the duty to protect the public from injury during the period of reconstruction was recognized and, to this end, a flagman was placed at each end of the construction to control traffic and to allow automobiles to proceed in only one lane of travel at a time and in one direction, and these flagmen were on duty on the day in question.

Defendant, Bill Hendrixson, was operating as a subcontractor to haul crushed rock to the job site, and this operation was in progress at the time of the accident. One of Hendrixson’s drivers, defendant Clinton Butcher, was operating a truck filled with crushed rock and backed into the car of plaintiff while it was standing waiting for traffic going in the opposite direction to clear and this collision caused the injuries complained of.

The accident occurred on November 24, 1961, when Mrs. Matheney was driving her husband’s 1961 Plymouth automobile from Monterey, to Sparta, Tennessee, over this highway. She came upon the construction site at about 9:15 A.M. at which time the weather was clear and it was broad daylight.

[479]*479The flagman employed by the defendant, John L. Burns, Inc., who was stationed on the North end of the construction site, motioned Mrs. Matheney and the driver of a car in front of her, to move into the left lane of traffic and indicated that they should proceed down the highway on that side. However, as she and the car in front of her reached the construction site they saw a line of traffic proceeding toward them in the opposite direction. Thereupon, the car in front of her pulled over to the right in front of a rock spreader that was standing on that side and brought his car to a stop, whereupon, Mrs. Matheney also pulled to the right in a normal manner and stopped her car immediately behind the car in front of her. She had seen a truck in a private driveway just before she reached the point of construction. She also saw a heavy piece of road machinery which was later shown to be a rock spreader, blocking the right lane of traffic for automobiles travelling in a direction she was going.

After having stopped her car in the position above described, and while waiting for some four or five automobiles travelling in the opposite direction to pass, so that she could pull back to the left side of the highway and proceed, the rear of her automobile was struck violently by the heavily loaded truck of defendant Hend-rixson, operated by the defendant Butcher. This truck was backing toward the rock spreader when it crashed into the rear of plaintiff’s automobile causing the injuries complained of.

According to the testimony of Butcher, the driver of the truck in question, shortly before the accident he had driven his truck into a private driveway just north of the scene of the accident for the purpose of turning around [480]*480so as to back up to tbe rock spreader. As be backed out of tbis driveway be was some fifty yards from tbe rock spreader and be backed down tbe highway toward tbe spreader for a distance of approximately 40 yards before striking Mrs. Matbeney’s automobile. Tbe truck was equipped with large rear view mirrors on either side and, according to Mr. Hendrixson, tbe owner, tbe driver by looking into these mirrors, could see an object directly to tbe rear of his truck until be reached a point within 8 to 10 feet of it.

III

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR.

Defendant, John L. Burns, Inc., has assigned error on tbe ground that there is no material evidence to support tbe verdict. In other words, that there is no evidence that defendant, Bums, was guilty of any negligence that directly and proximately caused tbe accident and further that if guilty of any negligent act, tbe negligence of co-defendants, Hendrixson and Butcher, constituted an independent, intervening act that relieved John L. Burns, Inc., of liability.

Attorneys for defendants Hendrixson and Butcher have filed four assignments: (1) That there is no material evidence to support tbe verdict and judgment against them; (2) that tbe evidence preponderates against tbe verdict; (3) that tbe defendant, John L. Burns, Inc., having set in motion, by negligent acts, tbe chain of events which resulted in tbe damages and injuries to plaintiffs, is, therefore, solely liable therefor; and, (4) that tbe verdict of tbe jury in each of these cases is so excessive as to evidence prejudice, bias and caprice on tbe part of tbe jury.

[481]*481IV

We will first consider the assignments of defendant John L. Burns, Inc.

Counsel for the defendant John L. Burns, Inc., insist that this defendant was not guilty of any negligence in connection with this accident and that, if guilty of any negligence, it was not the direct and proximate cause of the accident.

This theory is based on the proposition that, while a contractor doing work on a highway must take due care to avoid injury to travelers, and must warn the travelling public of any hazard in connection with the work, such contractor is not an insuror of the safety of the traveler, and fulfills his duty when he gives warning and notice of the hazard.

It is insisted that this defendant met this obligation by giving adequate warning through a flagman employed for that purpose, and, further, that the work area was not, in fact, a dangerous one and the proof showed that all safety requirements of the State were adequately met by this defendant.

As to a joint liability with his co-defendants, defendant, Burns, insists that Hendrixson was an independent contractor and that the negligence of Hendrixson’s truck driver in backing into the car of plaintiff was an independent intervening cause so as to relieve John L. Burns, Inc., of any previous act of negligence that could be attributed to it.

In the first place as was stated by this Court in Brinkley v. Gallahar, 50 Tenn.App. 129, 359 S.W.(2d) 857, highway construction such as that involved in the [482]

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Bluebook (online)
384 S.W.2d 51, 53 Tenn. App. 475, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-l-burns-inc-v-matheney-tennctapp-1964.