Kemp v. Caruthers and Lester

11 Tenn. App. 201, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 17, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 201 (Kemp v. Caruthers and Lester) 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
Kemp v. Caruthers and Lester, 11 Tenn. App. 201, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 8 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

DeWTTT, J.

C. F. Kemp and Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company have appealed in error from judgments rendered against them jointly in these cases, which were tried together, in favor of Bud Caruthers for $1000, and in favor of William Lester for $1500. The actions were instituted and tried in Wilson County for damages for personal injuries sustained by Caruthers and Lester in a collision between a Ford car in which they were riding and a Graham truck owned and operated by Kemp, which collision occurred about three miles west of Lebanon, in Wilson County, in April, 1928.

The defendant Kemp owned and operated the truck as a public carrier of freight between the cities of Lebanon and Nashville.

The claim of right of joint action against Kemp and the Company is based upon a policy of liability insurance issued by,the Company upon the truck, containing the following recitals:

“The automobile described above is and will be “principally used, maintained and garaged in the city and town (and its vicinity) of Lebanon, Tennessee. The described automobile is and will be used for Public Truckman.”

To this.policy the following was attached as a rider:

“ENDORSEMENT .
“COVERING FREIGHT CARRYING VEHICLES, EXCLUDING CARGO, UNDER CHAPTER 729, PRIVATE ACTS OF 1925 — TENNESSEE.
*203 “The policy to which this endorsement is attached is written under and pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 729, Private 'Acts of 1925, of the General Assembly of the State of Tennessee and is payable to the State of Tennessee for the benefit of any person who may suffer bodily injury and/or property damage as defined in the policy, resulting from any negligence of the assured, his agents or employees, for which liability is imposed by.law upon the assured, in the operation of the automobiles mentioned and described in the statements of the policy, in and/or about the city or cities herein named, to-wit:
“AS STATED IN POLICY
“Ebr the carriage of property for hire, subject, in any event to the limits of liability set forth in policy.
“The Company agrees to pay any final judgment rendered against the assured for bodily injury and/or property damage as aforesaid, within the said limits of liability and agrees further that any person sustaining such personal injury and/or property damage shall have the right to institute suit jointly in the court of Tennessee against the assured andi the Company.”

As this truck was actually operated as a public carrier between Nashville and Lebanon, the rider was intended, among other things, as a compliance with the requirements of Chapter 729 of the Private Acts of 1925, that in all counties having a population of more than 110,000 any operator of such vehicle as a public carrier must obtain a license from the County Court Clerk and, as a condition thereof, file with him a bond, or insurance policy which shall be for the benefit of the public, binding the principal and insurer to make compensation, within limits named, to make compensation for injuries to persons and' loss of or damage to property resulting from the neg-lient operation of such vehicle, and providing that any person injured, or whose property is damaged by such negligent operation of said vehicle, shall have the right to institute suit jointly in the courts of this State against the owner or operator of said vehicle and the obligor or insurer.

In behalf of the Accident and Indemnity Company it is insisted that under the construction given to said Chapter 729 by the trial court, it is unconstitutional as authorizing unreasonable discrimination between the operator of a truck running within a county embraced within the act and the operator of a smiliar truck in a county not so embraced, when the casualty occurs in either case in the latter county; in the one case there being a right of action against the insurance company and in the other case it is not being permissible to show that the owner or operator was insured against liability or loss. If this question were determinative or even material, this court would be devoid of jurisdiction over these causes, *204 Chapter 100, Acts of 1925. But we hold that the plaintiffs below had their rights of action jointly against Kemp and his insurer under the provisions of the policy itself, independently of any provisions of Chapter 729 of the Private Acts of 1925. The question of the constitutionality of the act is immaterial because it yields entirely to the provisions of the contract made by the parties.

Construing the original policy and the rider together, it is clear that the privity created between the person injured and the insurer is not limited to operation of the truck in Davidson County, and that the provisions are broad enough to include liability for injuries occurring in Wilson County. These injuries in contemplation are expressly defined as those occurring in or about the City of Lebanon; and the insurer expressly “agrees further that any person sustaining such personal injury or property damage shall have the right to institute suit jointly in the court of Tennessee against the assured and the company.” The policy is a contract of insurance against liability, not merely against loss. The contract is one which the parties had a right to make, although it may be an unusual one in its provision for right of direct action by the person injured in person or property against the insurer. There is no consideration of public policy forbidding the making of such a contract. 36 C. J., 1130, 1132, and cases cited. In U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Allen, Admr., 158 Tenn., 504, 14 S. W. (2d), 724, a joint action against the insured and the insurer was sustained under the right given by said Chapter 729 of the Private Acts of 1925; and such joint action is equally sustainable under the plain'provisions of the contract.

The jury resolved the conflicts in the evidence in favor of the plaintiffs, and the duty of the appellate court is confined to determining whether or not the verdicts were based upon material and substantial evidence to. support the averments of the declarations.

The plaintiffs, Will Lester and Bud Caruthers, reputable colored men, were riding in the Ford car of Lester (who was father-in-law of Caruthers) along the highway westward, so that the north side of the highway was the side on which they should be driving. Both of them testified that at the time of the collision they were on that side going in low gear at a rate of about ten miles an hour, as it was about two-thirds of the'way up a long hill and their car would not go fast up the hill. The defendant Kemp testified that when he visited the place after the accident there was broken glass on the right side going westward and some other glass that had been swept over on that side. This glass had been swept over there by Tatum, the driver of the truck, and a negro who was with him. Lester and Caruthers testified that the truck was coming down the hill toward them very fast, at a rate of thirty miles an hour or faster; that it struck their car when it was on the north, or right-hand side, of *205 tbe highway. This evidence alone would support the verdicts of the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 201, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemp-v-caruthers-and-lester-tennctapp-1930.