Landrum v. Callaway

12 Tenn. App. 150, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 26, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 150 (Landrum v. Callaway) 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
Landrum v. Callaway, 12 Tenn. App. 150, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

This is a suit by Charles Callaway, Administrator of the estate of Horace M. Callaway, against Sam Landrum, H. B. Hines and H. B. Hines Taxi Company; and G. T. Tinsley and Larabee Flour Mills Company.

The parties will be referred to as in the court below. There are two sets of defendants, G. T. Tinsley and Larabee .Flour Mills Co., as one set, and Sam Landrum, H. B. Hines, and Hines Taxi Co., as the other.

The plaintiff sued the defendants for the alleged wrongful and negligent acts and conduct of Sam Landrum,' the driver of the taxi cab owned and operated by H. R. Hines, under the firm name of Hines Taxi Company; and also G. T. Tinsley as the driver of the automobile of Larabee Flour Mills Company, resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate, Horace M. Callaway. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff, and against all the defendants for the sum of $6,000. From this judgment the tw.o. respective sets oí defendants prayed and were granted appeals in the nature of a writ of error to this court, after the trial judge had denied the respective motions of the respective defendants for a new trial. Errors have been assigned on behalf of Larabee Flour Mills Company,' and G. T. Tinsley, appellees, and also, by Sam Landrum and H. B. Plines, doing business as Hines Taxi Company.

The suit has resolved itself largely in a contest between the respective sets of defendants.

It appears that the defendant G. T. Tinsley, was driving the automobile of his employer the • defendant Larabee Flour Mills Company, while engaged on the business of the Larabee Flour Mills Company, on Clark street in the City of Knoxville; that the defendant, Sam Landrum, was driving the Buiek car of H. B. Hines, doing business as the Hines Taxi Company, on Oak street. *152 in the City of Knoxville, and a collision between the respective automobiles occurred near the center of the intersection of these two streets. Tinsley was driving a Chevrolet automobile, and Landrum was driving a Buick automobile. As a result of the collision the Chevrolet was thrown or ran onto the sidewalk where the deceased was then walking, with great' force and violence, knocking down several panels of wire or iron fence and striking the deceased with great force, knocking him to the pavement and to the gutter, resulting in his death.

For convenience we will refer to the respective defendants as Landrum for the Hines Taxi Company, and Tinsley for the Larabee Flour Mills Company. We will first take up and dispose of the assignments of error filed on behalf of Landrum and the Hines Taxi Company.

By the first and second assignments of error of these appellants it is insisted that the accident resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate was due solely to the negligence of defendant Tinsley in operating the Chevrolet automobile of his employer, Larabee Flour Mills Co., and that there was no evidence to support the verdict of the jury.

These two. assignments cannot be sustained under the facts as disclosed by this record. Sam Landrum was driving the Buick car at a very high and dangerous rate of speed on Oak street, and according to the evidence of certain of the witnesses he did not slacken the speed of the car as he approached the street intersection, and that the car was running sixty miles per hour or more at the time it collided with the automobile driven by Tinsley. There being some evidence to support the verdict, and the verdict having been concurred in by the trial judge, this court is not called upon to weigh the evidence for the purpose of ascertaining the preponderance of the proof. These assignments are accordingly overruled.

The third assignment is directed to the action of the trial judge in refusing to give in charge to the jury special request No. 1, submitted by these two appellants. This special request No. 1, is as follows:

“It was the duty of the defendant, Tinsley, while driving the automobile to so operate it as to avoid an accident or . collision with other vehicles upon the streets which might endanger or impair the life or property of others rightfully using said streets, and it was his duty to have made use of his senses and he is chargeable with seeing what he could have seen by the,ordinary exercise of his sense of sight, and if before entering the intersection of Clark and Oak streets he saw *153 or could have seen the Buick sedan approaching at a high and dangerous rate of speed so that it would appear by the exercise of reasonable care and caution that a collision was probable if he entered said intersection and continued his course .across Oak street in front of said Buick sedan, then he, the said Tinsley, was guilty of negligence, and if that negligence proximately contributed to the accident resulting in the death of Horace M. Callaway, then he would be liable although the driver of the Buick sedan may have been also guilty of negligence and although the negligence of the driver of the Buick sedan may have been' greater in degree.”

Under this assignment it is urged by Landrum & Hines Taxi Company that the trial judge erred in not giving the above quoted special request in charge to the jury, and in refusing to do so, on the theory that if Tinsley had exercised due care and caution in approaching and entering upon .the intersection of these streets the collision would not have occurred, and that this negligence upon the part of Tinsley, was the direct and proximate cause of the collision resulting in the death of Callaway.

It being further contended by Sam Landrum & Hines Taxi Company that this special request was not covered by the general charge. The general charge fully presented the question of' negligence of the respective drivers of the respective automobiles. This special request was properly refused because it in effect states that even though Sam Landrum, the driver of the Buick car, was guilty of negligence in the operation of the automobile, and however great his negligence may have been, that if by the exercise of reasonable care Tinsley could have avoided the collision, that this would have absolved Landrum and the owner of the taxi cab from any liability for the death of plaintiff’s intestate. This is not a sound statement of the law. If the drivers of the respective cars were both guilty of negligence, and the negligence of both resulted in the collision, then the negligence of both would have constituted the proximate cause of the collision resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate. Thiis assignment' is accordingly overruled.

The fourth assignment presents the question that there was no evidence that this accident occurred within the corporate limits of the City of Knoxville, and that that portion of the charge referring to certain provisions of the city ordinances introduced at the trial constituted error. This assignment will be considered and disposed of in considering and disposing of a similar assignment made by Tinsley and the Larabee Flour Mills Company, as will also the fifth assignment, which complains of the action of the court in ■ *154 charging that the administrator was entitled to recover for the expenses of the funeral of plaintiff’s intestate.

"We come now to consider and dispose of the assignments of error filed on behalf of G. T. Tinsley and Larabee Flour Mills Company.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tenn. App. 150, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landrum-v-callaway-tennctapp-1930.