National Funeral Home v. Dalehite

15 Tenn. App. 482, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 13, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 482 (National Funeral Home v. Dalehite) 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
National Funeral Home v. Dalehite, 15 Tenn. App. 482, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 117 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The National Funeral Home and J. L. Carlisle, hereinafter referred to as defendants, have appealed from a judgment rendered against them in favor of the plaintiff below, Mrs. Bessie K. Dalehite.

The plaintiff was injured on Madison Street in Memphis, Tennessee, October 1, 1930, by an ambulance owned by the defendant National Funeral Home and driven at the time by the defendant J. L. Carlisle.

The plaintiff’s declaration contained four counts. The first count Was based on common-law negligence. In the other three counts, the plaintiff, in addition to her allegations of common-law negligence, alleged that the defendants had violated a certain city ordinance of the City of Memphis. The three ordinances set out in counts two, three and four are as follows:

(1) That no motor vehicle, street car or other vehicle, however operated, shall be driven upon any street at a greater rate of speed than 25 miles per hour.

(2) That the driver of every vehicle on approaching a street car which is stopping or has stopped to take on or let off passengers shall stop such vehicle at the rear of the street ear so as to allow free passage between the street car and the curb and the driver of every such vehicle shall keep his vehicle standing until the street ear has resumed motion.

(3) That no person having control or charge of any motor vehicle shall allow such vehicle to pass such street car on the left.

*485 The plaintiff. also sued for compensatory and punitive damages.

It appears that on the morning of the accident, which occurred about 7:30 A. M., the plaintiff came to her work. Her employer was engaged in business on Madison Avenue, near Fourth Street in Memphis. The plaintiff alighted from a street car, known as a Fair Grounds ear, when the car stopped at Fourth Street and Madison Avenue. The car was going west. It appears that Madison runs east and west, and is a much used street. The street car w'as carrying a trailer. The plaintiff was in the front car. , She alighted at the front end of the first ear. The Street Car Company has double tracks on Madison Avenue. The plaintiff alighted on the north side and proceeded south in front of the car and was near the curb on the south side of Madison Avenue when she was hit by the defendant’s ambulance. This ambulance was also proceeding west on Madison Avenue at a rate of speed estimated from 20 to 55 miles an hour. It appears that when this ambulance passed the street ear, it had the siren horn which utters a shrill shriek and also two other horns on the ambulance blowing.

The plaintiff was knocked down, rendered unconscious, bruised over the greater part of her body, and her skull was fractured at the base. The substance of her brain was injured. She w'as rushed to the Baptist hospital where she remained for about a month. She was unconscious for several days then remained semi-conscious from ten to twelve days.

To plaintiff’s declaration the defendants filed three pleas:

(1) Not guilty.
(2) Contributory negligence.
(3) Ordinance 69, known as “Jaywalking,” which is as follows:
“No pedestrian shall cross any street except at a street intersection, and no pedestrian crossing any street intersection shall cross diagonally, but shall use only such' crossings for pedestrians as are designated by lines or other mark, or if no lines or marks, shall cross only in the space between curb lines extended and the property lines extending across any street over which said pedestrian intends to pass. ’ ’

The case was tried before a jury on December 10, 1931. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $15,000. The defendants seasonably filed their motions and amended motions for a new trial. These were overruled. The defendants excepted, prayed and perfected an appeal, and had a .proper bill of exceptions filed. They have assigned thirty errors. These thirty assignments will be grouped in five groups and some of the groups will be subdivided.

The assignments raise questions of the admission of evidence, the exclusion of evidence, the charge of the Court, special requests offered by the defendants which were refused, and the excessiveness of the verdict.

*486 By the first assignment or group No. 1, it is insisted that the Court erred in permitting the plaintiff to testify that she had a child, a boy thirteen years of age that she was supporting.

The following appears from the record as to this:

“Q. Have you any children? A. One.
“Q. What is it? Is it a boy? A. A boy.
“Q. How old is he? A. Thirteen.
‘“Q. Fourteen? A. Thirteen.
“Q. Who has been supporting him, Mrs. Dalehite?
“Mr. Armstrong: 'I object to that, if Your Honor please.
“A. Me, Mrs. Dalehite.
“Mr. Earl King: Don’t answer until the court has ruled on it.
“The Court: I don’t see any objection to that. Go ahead.
“Mr. Armstrong: The defendant excepts on the ground that it is incompetent, .irrelevant and prejudicial.
“The Court: Well, strictly speaking, I don’t think it is right.
“Mr. Earl King: All right, we withdraw it.”

It is insisted that this was prejudicial error and tended to prejudice the jury against the defendants. And in, support of this assignment, counsel for the defendants have cited and rely on Pullman Company v. Pennock, 118 Tenn., 565, 102 S. W., 73; Manufacturing Company v. Woodall, 115 Tenn., 605, 90 S. W., 623; English v. Ricks, 117 Tenn., 73, 95 S. W., 189.

Upon examination of the cases relied on it is shown in each of the three cases cited that the attorneys for the plaintiff and the party who won in the lower Court were guilty of improper conduct and continued the improper conduct after they were admonished by the trial judge.

We do not think that the defendants were prejudiced by the statement of the plaintiff, and especially after her counsel had withdrawn the testimony. There was no motion for a mistrial made by the defendants at the time the evidence was Withdrawn. The first assignment is overruled.

Group number two includes assignments 2, 3, and 30. By assignments 2 and 3 the defendants attempted to prove that the ordinance related to motor vehicles passing to the left of a street ear when the street car stopped for the discharging and receiving passengers; that it was the general custom in the City of Memphis that ambulances when answering emergency calls when they came up behind a street car, passed it to the left.

Two witnesses testified in the absence of the jury. They stated that they had not heard of the police enforcing the ordinance against ambulance drivers for violating the ordinance known as Section 52.

Mr. Jerome testified as follows:

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15 Tenn. App. 482, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-funeral-home-v-dalehite-tennctapp-1932.