Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Harrell

110 S.W.2d 1032, 21 Tenn. App. 353, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 2, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 1032 (Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Harrell) 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
Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Harrell, 110 S.W.2d 1032, 21 Tenn. App. 353, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 38 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

Two cases, brought and docketed separately, were, by consent, tried together in the circuit court of Bedford county, and have been brought to this court in one transcript, with a single bill of exceptions, and docketed and tried here under the above style.

One of the cases is an action brought by F. J. Harrell, Jr., a minor, suing by his father, F. J. Harrell, as next friend, against the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, to recover damages for personal injuries which, he avers, he suffered as the proximate result of negligence of the defendant railway.

The other of the two cases is an action by F. J. Harrell against the same defendant to recover for the expenses incurred in the necessary care and treatment of his said minor son, and for the loss *355 of his said son’s services, all of which, he avers, was proximately caused by negligence of the defendant railway.

Although tried together to a jury, such joint trial did not operate as a technical consolidation of the two cases, and separate verdicts and judgments were rendered, separate motions for a new trial were made and overruled, and separate appeals in error were prayed and granted, in the two cases below.

In each case the defendant railway filed a plea of not guilty to the plaintiff’s declaration, and the cases were tried upon the issues thus made. The jury found the issues in favor of the plaintiff in each case, and assessed the damages of F. J. Harrell, Jr., at $750, and the damages-of F. J. Harrell at $500.

In this court, the railway has assigned errors upon matters which were included in its motions for new trial, overruled below. The first five assignments of error are the same in each case.

The trial judge overruled a motion made by the defendant, at the close of all the evidence, for a peremptory instruction in its favor, and, through its first assignment of error, the railway asserts that this was error.

The second assignment of error is that there was no evidence to support the verdict of the jury.

The third assignment is that the evidence preponderated against the verdict of the jury. This assignment (the third) presents no question which this court can consider in a jury case. Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Abernathey, 106 Tenn., 722, 728, 64 S. W., 3.

The first and second assignments of error, supra, require a consideration of the evidence from the same viewpoint, for if there was no evidence to support the verdict, there was no evidence which would justify the submission of the case to the jury.

For the convenience of statement, we will designate the parties in each case as plaintiff and defendant, as they appeared on the record below; and (as F. J. Harrell has no right of action for expenses and the loss of his son’s services unless there is material evidence to support the action of F. J. Harrell, Jr.), whenever we refer herein to the plaintiff, without more, F. J. Harrell, Jr., is intended.

During the period covered by the occurrences disclosed by the evidence in these cases, the defendant railway operated a mixed freight and passenger train between the towns of Wartraee and Shelbyville in this state; a distance of eight miles. The accommodations for passengers consisted of a single coach at the rear of the train, which coach was divided by a partition into two compartments; the rear compartment for white passengers, and the front compartment for colored passengers. At the rear of the passenger coach there was a platform, with steps, by means of which white passengers reached a door through which they entered the white compartment when boarding the train, and made their exit when leaving it. There was a *356 “trap door” which, could be lowered so as to prevent the use of the steps to the platform while the trap door was down, but this trap door was seldom lowered, and it was not down on the day of the accident involved in this case. There is nothing' in the record which indicates that the door, platform, and steps were materially different from those commonly seen on railroad day coaches in use in Tennessee now and during recent decades.

The family of plaintiff F. J. Harrell consisted of his wife and one child (the minor plaintiff), and his home was near a “flag station” known as Coldwell, on. defendant's said railroad between Wartrace and Shelbyville.

On February 12, 1936, the plaintiff (F. J. Harrell, Jr.) “jumped” from the rear platform of the coach above described to the ground, while he was a passeng-er thereon, and at a time when the train was moving at a speed variously estimated by the witnesses at 25 to 35 miles an hour, and, as a result thereof, he suffered the injuries for which he sued in this case. Plaintiff was born on March 14, 1927, and “lacked one month and two days” of being nine years of age when he was thus injured.

Plaintiff was at that time, and had been since September, 1935, a pupil at Holly Grove School, which was near Gray’s Crossing, a station on defendant’s road between Coldwell and Shelbyville. His teacher at Holly Grove School was Miss Blair Allen, who lived at-Wartrace, and who was accustomed to ride from Gray’s Crossing to Wartrace on defendant’s train each afternoon on school days. During several weeks prior to the time he was injured as aforesaid, plaintiff had been riding from his home to Holly Grove School each morning in a “milk truck” and returning to Coldwell each afternoon on defendant’s train. It was plaintiff’s custom to board the train at Gray’s Crossing in company with his teacher, Miss Allen, sit with Miss Allen in the white compartment of the coach at the rear of the train, and alight from the train at Coldwell. It was the uniform custom of the conductor to help plaintiff on and off the train each afternoon when plaintiff was a passenger thereon. The same man (I. H. Woodruff) was in charge of the Wartrace-S-helbyville train as conductor each day. He was 68 years of age, had been in the service of defendant railway for 51 years, and had been conductor of the Wartrace-Shelbyville train since the year of 1933.

On the day plaintiff was injured as aforesaid, he boarded the train at Gray’s Crossing a few minutes before 3 o’clock p. m.,- accompanied by his teacher, Miss Allen, and her father, W. J. Allen (city recorder at Wartrace), and they seated themselves near the rear of the white compartment of the coach, on two seats thrown together; that is, the back of one seat was reversed and the plaintiff sat thereon facing Miss Allen and her father.

• As the train was leaving Gray’s Crossing, the conductor (Wood- *357 ruff) came through the white compartment collecting fares. Miss Allen and Mr. Allen paid the usual fare to Wartrace, and plaintiff handed the conductor a nickel, which was the correct fare (half-fare) for one of his age to Coldwell, and which was also the proper fare for him to pay to Wartrace. Thereupon, the conductor went into the colored compartment, where he had a desk, and busied himself with the preparation of his daily conductor’s report to defendant railway, and where he remained until the train had passed Coldwell.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W.2d 1032, 21 Tenn. App. 353, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-c-st-l-ry-v-harrell-tennctapp-1937.