Monday v. Millsaps

264 S.W.2d 6, 37 Tenn. App. 371, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 23, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 264 S.W.2d 6 (Monday v. Millsaps) 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
Monday v. Millsaps, 264 S.W.2d 6, 37 Tenn. App. 371, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 96 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

HOWARD, J.

These consolidated actions for personal injuries grew out of an automobile accident wbicb occurred on H. S. Highway 70, at a point about one mile east of Ozone, Tennessee, on June 21, 1951, at about 12:30 p. m., when a Buick automobile owned by C. Boyd Jones and driven by Thomas G-. Clynes’, collided with a Chevrolet truck owned by Lewis B. and Orville C. Monday, d/b/a Monday Trucking Company, and operated by one of their employees, Kenneth Boss. The automobile was traveling downgrade in an easterly direction toward Bockwood, while the truck was traveling in the opposite direction toward Crossville. The accident occurred on the north side of .a curve in the highway when the Buick skidded from the right to the left into the path of the approaching truck, the left side of the car striking the front end of the truck. The curve in the highway was to the south, and *379 the pavement at the point of the accident was from 24 to 26 feet wide, was in the process of being resurfaced, and was described as “very slick”.

Plaintiffs, David G-atlin and Ronald P. Millsaps, were guests in the Buick, Gatlin riding on the right side of the front seat and Millsaps on the left side of the rear seat. Others riding in the car at the time-inclnded Jones, the owner, who was sitting on the right side of the rear seat, Clynes, the driver, who was fatally injured, and W. Howard Hildreth, who was sitting on the front seat between G-atlin and Clynes. They were all engaged in the insurance business at Oak Ridge, and were returning to their homes after attending an insurance convention at Nashville. A,t the time of the accident the Trucking Company was engaged in a state paving contract on Highway 67, south of Rockwood, and the truck involved was returning empty to the asphalt mixing plant near Crossville for a load of asphalt.

Each of the original declarations contained four counts, Millsaps suing the defendants for $75,000, and G-atlin for $5,000.

By the first counts the plaintiffs sued the Trucking Company, alleging that the truck driver prior to and at the time of the accident was guilty of both common law negligence and gross negligence. These counts allege in substance that plaintiffs were riding as guests in the Buick automobile, and that previous to the accident it had been raining and the pavement of the road was slick and slippery; that as the automobile approached “a rather sharp curve” it skidded or went out of control, and that the defendant’s “employee was or should have been thoroughly familiar with the highway at this point, having traveled over it innumerable times, and was or should have been fully aware of the dangerous condition *380 of the said road, the numerous sharp curves thereon and the tendency of the road to become slick when wet, hut nevertheless the said * * * employee disregarding these conditions drove the said truck at a high and dangerous speed and without having the truck under control and without proper regard for other persons or vehicles.upon the highway and without proper lookout for such other persons or vehicles. While so operating the said truck, the driver and employee- of the defendant, * * * saw or should have seen at a great distance the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding go out of control and skid, but nevertheless the said driver of the defendant’s truck continued proceeding at a high and dangerous rate of speed, proceeding straight into the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding as a guest without making any due effort to avoid the accident and carelessly, wrongfully, wantonly and with gross negligence propelled his truck into and against the automobile in which the plaintiff was a passenger and guest with terrific force.”

Then follows a description of the plaintiffs’ injuries, which will hereinafter be considered.

Under the second counts plaintiffs allege that the driver for the Trucking 'Company was driving the truck recklessly and dangerously, and at a high rate of speed in excess of 40 miles per hour, the speed limit for trucks, in violation of Code Sections 2681, 2682, 2682.1. All Sections refer to Williams’ Tennessee Code.

. Under the third counts the plaintiffs sued Dorothy B. Clynes, Administratrix of the estate of Thomas G-. Clynes, on grounds of common law negligence. These counts allege in substance that plaintiffs were riding as guests in the Buick automobile, and that the driver, Thomas Gr. Clynes, “while driving in a negligent and careless manner, without due caution considering the condition of the road *381 and surrounding circumstances, lost control of the automobile and skidded sideways onto the wrong side of the highway, whereupon the .automobile collided with great violence with the truck of the defendants, the Monday Trucking Company, being driven in the opposite direction in the manner described and set forth in the First Count of this declaration.”

Under the fourth counts the plaintiff sued the Clynes estate alleging that the driver of the Buick was operating the car dangerously and recklessly, in violation of Code Sections 2681, 2682.

It appears that after process was served on Lewis Monday and the Clynes estate, Monday filed a plea in abatement to each of the suits on the ground that he and his brother were residents of Knox County, and that inasmuch as all the defendants were not alleged to be joint tort feasors there was a misjoinder of parties defendant, and that he and his brother could not be required by counterpart summons to litigate wrongs in Anderson County where the declaration failed to allege that the Anderson County defendant was not jointly liable.

■ To each of the declarations the Clynes estate filed a demurrer on grounds (1) misjoinder of parties defendant, and (2) that counts 1 and 2 of the declaration were inconsistent with counts 3 and 4. Thereupon the plaintiffs upon application were permitted by the court to amend each count of their declarations by alleging that the accident resulted from the “combined and concurrent” negligence of each of the defendants, and the amount sued for by Millsaps was increased from $75,000 to $100,000. (Later during the trial the amount was increased,- over objections of the Trucking Company, to $115,000.) Plaintiffs further amended the third count of their declarations by alleging that the driver of the Buick, “while driving in *382 a negligent and careless manner, without due caution and at an improper speed considering the condition of the road and surrounding circumstances and by improper application of the brakes and turning of the wheels, lost control of the automobile and skidded sideways on the wrong side of the highway, whereupon the automobile collided with great violence with the truck of the defendants, the Monday Trucking Company, being driven in the opposite direction in the manner described and set forth in the First Count of this declaration.”

The plea in abatement and both demurrers were overruled, each of the defendants duly preserving exceptions. Later the plaintiffs filed amended declarations which contained all of the averments and allegations of the original declarations and amendments thereto.

The defendants, Lewis B. Monday, et al., filed a plea of general issue, and being required upon motion to plead their defenses specially, they.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W.2d 6, 37 Tenn. App. 371, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monday-v-millsaps-tennctapp-1953.