Newark Insurance Company v. Seyfert

392 S.W.2d 336, 54 Tenn. App. 459, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 31, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 392 S.W.2d 336 (Newark Insurance Company v. Seyfert) 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
Newark Insurance Company v. Seyfert, 392 S.W.2d 336, 54 Tenn. App. 459, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 162 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

HUMPHREYS, J.

Mrs. Muriel M. Seyfert as widow and executrix of her husband, Dr. Carl Seyfert, deceased, recovered a judgment against Newark Insurance Company, and Newark has appealed in error.

By her declaration plaintiff alleged Dr. Seyfert had been employed by Vanderbilt University as a professor of *462 astronomy and to run, manage and maintain the Arthur J. Dyer Observatory, its equipment and properties operated by and under the auspices and as a part of Vanderbilt University in connection with its research and educational activities. That defendant, on April 11, 1960, issued a policy insuring for $50,000.00, the officers, faculty, staff and employees of Vanderbilt University accidentally killed while driving a passenger automobile-on the business of the university. That Dr. Seyfert while in the course and scope of his employment, driving his automobile for the purpose of obtaining items of equipment belonging and to- be used at the Arthur - J. Dyer Observatory, was involved in a fatal automobile collision, and so plaintiff was entitled to recover $50,000.00 and interest.

Special pleas were filed which raised three principle issues as follow:

1. Whether Dr. Seyfert at the time of his death was engaged in travel within the meaning of the group travel accident insurance policy issued to Vanderbilt University.

2. Whether Dr. Seyfert at the time of his death was on the business of Vanderbilt University.

3. Whether Dr. Seyfert’s death was the result of a hazard to which he was exposed in the course of his employment within the meaning of the policy.

The case was first tried in the Third Circuit Court of Davidson County before- Honorable Henry F. Todd and a jury, where there was judgment for plaintiff for $56,-500.00. On motion for a new trial and peremptory instructions, a new trial was granted on the insufficiency of the evidence to satisfy the trial judge, but peremptory instructions were denied. Exception was noted and a way *463 side bill of exceptions filed. The case was later tried in the Fifth Circuit Conrt of Davidson County before Honorable Sam L. Felts, Jr., and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the principal sum of the policy, and interest amounting to $58,640.00. Newark has appealed and we now have the case on assignments of error on both trials.

There is one assignment on the wayside bill of exceptions: That the lower court erred in declining to grant defendant’s motion for peremptory instructions made at the conclusion of all the proof. It is said this was error because: (1) There was no evidence upon which a verdict against defendant could be based. (2) The uncontradicted proof showed deceased, Dr. Seyfert, was not engaged in travel within the meaning of the group travel policy. (3) There was no competent evidence that Dr. Seyfert was on the business of Vanderbilt University at the time of his death. (4) There was no competent evidence that Dr. Seyfert’s death was the result of a hazard to which he was exposed in the course of his employment.

In considering this assignment for peremptory instructions we must, of course, consider all of the evidence, taking the plaintiff’s evidence as true, discarding all countervailing evidence. And, taking the strongest legitimate view of the plaintiff’s evidence, draw all reasonable inferences therefrom in her favor, and deny the motion if there is any material, determinative evidence, or any doubt as to the conclusion to be drawn from the whole evidence. Smith v. Sloan, 189 Tenn. 368, 225 S.W.(2d) 539, 227 S.W.(2d) 2; Lackey v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 30 Tenn.App. 390, 206 S.W.(2d) 806.

The proof is that Dr. Carl Seyfert came to Vanderbilt in 1946, when its observatory was located on Vanderbilt *464 Campus. Subsequently the Dyer Observatory was built in the southern part of Davidson County, approximately nine miles from the campus, on a hill of about 1,000 to I,100 feet in elevation. Under his contract of employment with Vanderbilt, Dr. Seyfert served as professor of astronomy in the Physics Department and also as custodian of the Observatory, responsible for it and the physical equipment in it. As custodian of the Observatory and its equipment, he was required by the University to live in a dwelling house erected on the observatory grounds. His custodial duties and research and scholarly activities were year-round in requirement and character and were not halted by vacations or holidays.

Dr. Seyfert went to and from the Observatory and the Nashville campus in his automobile. His classes were arranged to commence not before eleven o’clock in the morning so he could sleep after his astronomical observations at night.

On the night of Dr. Seyfert’s death, a Dr. Tifts, a visiting professor of astronomy, and a new faculty member, was to arrive at the Nashville Airport, and preparations had been made at living quarters within the Observatory for Dr. Tifts to spend the night.

On the same night, Mr. Jack DeWitt, President of WSM, an electronics expert, who was also a member of the faculty at Vanderbilt University as a research associate in the Physics Department in astronomy, and who worked closely with Dr. Seyfert on projects at the Arthur J. Dyer Observatory was in possession of a plate holder, a device used on the telescope at the Observatory, and a knife edge, belonging to the Observatory. Mr. DeWitt had these items for use in certain tests in connection with work he was doing in his capacity as faculty member *465 and research associate on the Vanderbilt faculty. Mr. DeWitt’s home is located on Hood’s Hill Eoad near the intersection of Woodmont Boulevard and Hillsboro Eoad, in Nashville.

On the night he was killed, Dr. Seyfert called Mr. DeWitt on the telephone and told him he needed the plate holder for use at the Observatory and would be by to get it. Mr. DeWitt offered to return the equipment himself, but Dr. Seyfert declined this. As communicated to Mrs. Seyfert and Mr. DeWitt in conversations with each, Dr. Seyfert left the Observatory for three purposes. (1) To substitute for radio announcer Boyce Hawkins at WSM T.V. Station for the 10:10 weather broadcast; (2) to go to the home of Mr. DeWitt and pick up the Vanderbilt equipment there; and, (3) to pick up Dr. Tifts at the airport and take him to the observatory.

Following the broadcast, Dr. Seyfert was killed in an automobile collision at the place where Stokes Lane dead ends into Hillsboro Eoad. A map of the City of Nashville filed by plaintiffs indicates that a direct route from the WSM station to Mr. DeWitt’s house would be to go west on Woodmont Blvd, to the- intersection of Woodmont and Hillsboro Eoad, and then across Hillsboro Eoad to DeWitt’s home on Hood’s Hill Eoad near the intersection. However, Woodmont was blocked for traffic that evening, with “horses” across the entrances, so a next direct route would be by way of Stokes Lane, the first road north of Woodmont, and then to Hillsboro Eoad. The map indicates the place where Seyfert was killed was not on a route to his home from WSM. It is also undisputed the front-end of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
392 S.W.2d 336, 54 Tenn. App. 459, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newark-insurance-company-v-seyfert-tennctapp-1964.