Municipal Paving & Construction Co. v. Hunt

123 S.W.2d 843, 22 Tenn. App. 380, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 8, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 843 (Municipal Paving & Construction Co. v. Hunt) 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
Municipal Paving & Construction Co. v. Hunt, 123 S.W.2d 843, 22 Tenn. App. 380, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 37 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

Walter S. Hunt sued the Municipal Paving & Construction Company and its truck driver, George Corbitt, to recover for *382 personal injuries and property damages sustained by him in a collision between his automobile and the company’s truck. He obtained a verdict and judgment for $2250, $2000 for his personal injuries and $250 for the damages to his automobile.

The company appealed in error and has assigned errors, insisting (1) that a verdict should have been directed for it because there is no evidence that it was negligent and the evidence shows plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; (2) that the verdict is excessive; and (3) that the trial judge should have charged a special request tendered by defendants.

It was conceded the truck belonged to the company and was being driven by its servant, Corbitt, upon its business.

The main controversy was as to which side of the highway the collision occurred on, each party claiming it occurred on his right side. There was evidence to support each party’s theory, but the defendant insists that the evidence for plaintiff was “so inherently impossible and so absolutely at variance with the physical facts” that it should have been disregarded and a verdict directed for defendant.

The accident happened June 24, 1936, about 11 P. M. on the Nashville-Clarksville Highway (No. 112) 7 or 8 miles west of Nashville. Here the highway runs east and west. The two vehicles were meeting, the automobile coming east and the truck going west. The automobile, a Chevrolet sedan, was driven by Hunt, with Mrs. Hoppe riding with him on the front seat on his right. The truck was a Ford Y-8 equipped with a bed for hauling gravel and was carrying a load of about four tons of gravel.

The highway had just been constructed and no white mark had yet been painted on its center line. Its paved surface was 20 feet wide, with a shoulder on each side about 10 feet wide. Approaching from the east, as the truck was, there was a slight up-grade and a right hand curve. The curve started about 100 feet .or more east of the point where the collision occurred and continued on beyond that point. The car was coming down this grade and its right side of the road was the out side of the curve, while the truck was going up the grade and its right side was the inside of the curve. The lights of both vehicles were on, and there was no other vehicle in sight.

There were three eye witnesses to the accident, Hunt, Mrs. Hoppe and Corbitt. Hunt and Mrs. Hoppe both testified that the car was on its right side of the highway, traveling about 25 miles per hour, and the truck came diagonally across the highway directly in front of the car and struck the car on its left front and side. Hunt estimated the truck was going 40 or 50 miles per hour.

Three other witnesses, who came just after the accident and before either vehicle was moved, testified for plaintiff. They described the positions of the truck and the car and the appearances on the *383 ground, showing these matters by diagrams, which were sent up as part of the record.

The truck had turned over on its right side, and was lying across the highway at an angle of about 45 degrees. Its front end was toward the southwest and was 4 or 5 feet over the center of the highway and about 5 or 6 feet from the south edge of the paved surface (the truck’s left side of the highway). Its rear end was toward the northeast and a few feet from the north edge of the pavement. The truck was badly damaged. The head lights were broken, the left front fender mashed in, the left front wheel driven back under the cab, the tire on this wheel blown out, the left side of the cab crushed in so that the door had to be pried open to get the driver out, and the frame and body were twisted and bent. The right side of the truck was also damaged all the way back to the rear end, both fenders and the running board being mashed or bent in. Defendant’s witnesses, however, said the front bumper and the front point of the left fender were not damaged. The load of gravel was scattered all over the road, but most of it was on the north side of the highway and near the shoulder. ■ The truck was painted red. On the right or north side of the highway near where the truck turned over there were red paint marks on the pavement and two or three gashes cut in the pavement. Two of these cuts appear in a photograph, exhibit No. 1 to the testimony of defendant’s witness Sessions, and he said there was a third mark near the north curb which the camera “did not pick up.”

The automobile had not turned over but had nearly changed ends so that the front was toward the northwest and the rear toward the southeast. Its position was about at right angles to that of the truck, but about 25 feet past or east of the front end of the truck. The rear left wheel of the car was on the south shoulder and the right rear wheel on the paved surface. The right front wheel was a few feet south of the center of the highway and the left front wheel was nearer the south edge of the pavement. A photograph sent up shows the ear was almost demolished. The damage extended from the left front of the radiator on back to the left rear door. On the south side of the paved surface and on the south shoulder were broken glass, splintered wood, and other parts of the wreckage of the car.

(1) Defendant is not asking us to weigh this evidence. It recognizes we can not do that or disturb a verdict which is supported by any material evidence. Nor does it deny the general rule, arising out of the constitutional right of trial by jury, that, upon defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, all the evidence must be viewed most favorably to plaintiff and that which supports his rights taken as true and all countervailing evidence discarded. Wildman Mfg. Co. v. Davenport Hosiery Mills, 147 Tenn., 551, 556, 249 S. W., 984, and cases there cited. Its insistence is that this rule does not *384 apply to tbis case; but that the case is governed by the rule that evidence which is “inherently impossible and absolutely at variance with the physical facts” will be treated as no evidence and a verdict directed in spite of it. N., C. & St. L. Railway v. Overcast, 3 Higgins 235; Nashville, C. & St. L. Railway v. Justice, 5 Higgins 69; DeKalb County v. Tenn. Elec. Power Co., 17 Tenn. App., 343, 350, 67 S. W. (2d), 555; Oliver v. Union Transfer Co., 17 Tenn. App., 694, 698, 71 S. W. (2d), 478; Standard Oil Co. v. Roach, 19 Tenn. App., 661, 666, 94 S. W. (2d), 63.

This rule was recently considered by our Supreme Court in Southern Ry. Co. v. Hutson, 170 Tenn., 5, 91 S. W. (2d), 290. It was there said [page 291] :

“Conceding the soundness of the rule as applied in this line of cases, this distinguishing element must be kept in mind. The testimony under review is not destroyed by conflicting testimony, never mind how fully supported, when the test is that of the credibility of the witnesses. That improbability of the truth of the plaintiffs’ testimony which justifies rejection under this rule may not be rested upon either a mere numerical preponderance, however great, or upon any theory involving consideration of the comparative credibility of the witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 843, 22 Tenn. App. 380, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/municipal-paving-construction-co-v-hunt-tennctapp-1938.