Kenny Vaughn v. Notie L. Cunningham

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 4, 2006
DocketE2004-03001-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kenny Vaughn v. Notie L. Cunningham (Kenny Vaughn v. Notie L. Cunningham) 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
Kenny Vaughn v. Notie L. Cunningham, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE September 14, 2005 Session

KENNY VAUGHN, ET AL. v. NOTIE L. CUNNINGHAM, ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamilton County No. 97C2650 Samuel H. Payne, Judge

No. E2004-03001-COA-R3-CV - FILED JANUARY 4, 2006

Kenny Vaughn and Barbara Vaughn (“Plaintiffs” or “Mr. Vaughn” and “Mrs. Vaughn” as appropriate) sued Notie L. Cunningham and John Doe concerning an automobile accident that occurred in Hamilton County. The case was tried before a jury and the Trial Court entered judgment on the jury’s verdict. The jury found John Doe 100% at fault for the accident, but awarded Plaintiffs no damages. Plaintiffs appeal to this Court claiming that the jury verdict is contrary to the evidence because the amount of damages is not within the range of reasonableness, and that the Trial Court erred by not granting a new trial and by awarding court costs against Plaintiffs. We affirm as modified.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed as Modified; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and SHARON G. LEE, J., joined.

J. Taylor Walker and Thomas H. O’Neal, Chattanooga, Tennessee for the Appeallants, Kenny Vaughn and wife, Barbara Vaughn.

Angela Cirina Kopet and Christine M. Vanasse, Chattanooga, Tennessee for the Appellee, Notie L. Cunningham.

Scott M. Shaw, Chattanooga, Tennessee for the Appellee, John Doe. OPINION

Background

Due to the nature of the issues raised on appeal, we discuss the facts of this case in some detail. The accident (“the Accident”) occurred on December 20, 1996, on Rossville Boulevard in Hamilton County. Plaintiffs filed suit in December of 1997, and the case was tried before a jury in October of 2004.

Mr. Vaughn testified at trial about the Accident. He testified that he was sitting at a red light on Rossville Boulevard behind several other vehicles with his foot on the brake when “I heard tires squealing where - - you know, where they locked up their brakes, what I figured.… Well, I was hit before I could do anything. I didn’t - - you know, I didn’t have time to really do anything.” Mr. Vaughn testified that the 1994 Ford F-250 truck he was driving was knocked six or seven feet forward and stated: “Well, I was sitting right up again the one that was in front of me. I thought I was going to slap it, too, but I didn’t.” Mr. Vaughn testified that he sat in his vehicle for a few seconds before getting out, and then the light changed and the vehicles ahead of him pulled away. He testified that Ms. Cunningham, whose car had hit him, came up to him and asked where the white car went.

Ms. Cunningham also testified about the Accident. Ms. Cunningham testified she was driving a 1989 Pontiac LeMans hatch-back and that she came to a complete stop at the red light behind Mr. Vaughn’s vehicle. She testified that there was approximately three or four feet between her vehicle and Mr. Vaughn’s truck after they both stopped at the red light prior to the Accident. Ms. Cunningham testified she heard a car, looked in her rear-view mirror, and saw a white car. She testified that the white car hit her and pushed her car forward into Mr. Vaughn’s vehicle. She described the impact as “[j]ust enough to push me into the back [of Mr. Vaughn’s truck].” Ms. Cunningham testified that she had a Coke next to her and that after impact, she reached to turn the Coke upright, and then turned her vehicle off and got out. Ms. Cunningham testified that after she got out of her car, she looked for the white car, but did not see it. She testified that she approached Mr. Vaughn who by then was out of his vehicle and asked him where the white car went.

Ms. Cunningham testified that she was not injured in the accident. She testified that the cover over the blinker light on the driver’s side of her car was broken, but there was no damage to the front of her bumper. She testified she looked and saw a “streak of white paint on the back bumper …” of her vehicle that had not been there prior to the Accident. Ms. Cunningham testified that she repaired the damage to her car by purchasing a blinker light cover at a junk yard for approximately $4. She described the damage to Mr. Vaughn’s vehicle stating the “bumper was completely turned under.” She also testified that “it wasn’t a bad accident.”

Officer Michael T. Short, who was employed by the Chattanooga Police Department, investigated the accident. Officer Short testified that no injuries were reported at the scene of the

-2- Accident and that and none of the vehicles involved needed to be towed. Officer Short further testified that he saw a white mark on the rear bumper of Ms. Cunningham’s car.

Marcus Wayne Black witnessed the Accident and testified. Mr. Black testified that he was moving furniture for his employer and was outside in front of a building and was facing Rossville Boulevard when the Accident occurred. He testified:

I heard tires screeching and looked up and there was two vehicles stopped at the red light and a third slid into the rear vehicle. And then he backed up to the right and made a right at the red light and proceeded on. He never stopped after he hit the car.

Mr. Black testified that the white car “hit pretty hard. He busted his radiator and there was antifreeze pouring out of it when he backed up and left.” Mr. Black testified that there was a couple of feet distance between Ms. Cunningham’s car and Mr. Vaughn’s truck as they were stopped at the light before the accident. When asked about the weather conditions at the time of the Accident, Mr. Black stated: “I believe the sun was shining. I don’t believe it had been raining. I believe it was a cool day, but pretty nice. It was in December.” When asked why he did not go to the assistance of anyone involved in the Accident, Mr. Black stated: “I didn’t figure there was nobody seriously injured. I mean, it wasn’t that bad of a wreck.”

Mr. Vaughn testified that he did not feel hurt at the Accident site and that later that day, he left for a previously scheduled hunting trip. He testified that his neck started getting sore several hours after the Accident. Mr. Vaughn testified that he did not get to hunt that weekend because he was too sore. He testified that the next week “I was sore. Real sore.” He stated: “I figured it was just soreness, you know. I figured it would probably take care of itself, go away, but it kept getting worse and worse.” Mr. Vaughn testified that over the course of a week and a half or two weeks, the pain kept getting worse, so he called Dr. Dyer, an orthopedic surgeon, and got an appointment. Mr. Vaughn testified that he had to wait a couple of weeks to see Dr. Dyer. Mr. Vaughn saw Dr. Dyer on February 5, 1997, 46 days after the Accident.

Mr. Vaughn, who was 58 years old at the time of trial, testified that he owns Vaughn Equipment and that he repairs all types of mid-size equipment including such things as farm tractors, dozers, and backhoes. When asked to describe his work, Mr. Vaughn stated: “Well, you pretty much have to be almost like an acrobat, you know. You have got to get to every point of the machine to work on it, take bolts out and put them back and repair whatever is wrong with them when it’s apart.” Mr. Vaughn opened Vaughn Equipment in 1991 or 1992, after he quit his job at Swope Equipment due to a lower back problem that Mr. Vaughn testified made him unable to do the work at Swope Equipment.

Mr. Vaughn testified that he hurt his back in 1989 in a work-related injury (“workers’ comp injury”). Mr. Vaughn admitted that he never completely recovered from the workers’ comp injury and that he still was taking medication for it, but stated he was not missing work because of that injury.

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Kenny Vaughn v. Notie L. Cunningham, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenny-vaughn-v-notie-l-cunningham-tennctapp-2006.