Nohsey Schwab v. Slover

14 Tenn. App. 42, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 30, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 14 Tenn. App. 42 (Nohsey Schwab v. Slover) 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
Nohsey Schwab v. Slover, 14 Tenn. App. 42, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

Armour Slover hereinafter called plaintiff recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, for $22,500 for personal injuries. He was struck on one of the streets of Memphis, March 8, 1929, by a truck owned by Nohsey & Schwab, hereinafter called defendants. The accident happened about noon. Defendants’ truck was driven by Ollie Jones, a colored man fifty years of age, and who had been working for the defendants for twenty-five years. He was the regular truck driver for the defendants who are in the sheet metal business, and have been in such business for a number of years, in Memphis, Tennessee.

At the time of the accident, the plaintiff was walking in a westwardly direction, walking along the north side of Union Avenue, which is a much travelled Avenue, and runs east and west. Union Avenue is 50 feet wide from curb to curb. When the plaintiff approached Dudley Street, which runs north and south, and is twenty-six feet and four inches wide where it enters Union Avenue, he looked in both directions, before starting to cross and while walking across Dudley Street and when about half way across the street, the plaintiff was struck by the defendants’ truck. Plaintiff received very serious injuries which will be discussed later.

There were seven counts in plaintiff’s declaration. The first count relies upon common law negligence. It was insisted that the driver, at the time of the accident, was operating the truck at an excessive speed, and he failed to keep a proper lookout ahead.

The remaining counts allege the violation of six City ordinances, as follows:

*44 (1) All ordinance requiring' a driver, before turning from one street to another, to see that such movement can be made in safety.

(2) An ordinance requiring the driver of an automobile to keep a vigilant lookout.

(3) An ordinance prohibiting driving of an automobile recklessly, or at a speed to endanger life or limb.

(4) An ordinance prohibiting the turning of a corner at a speed greater than ten miles an hour.

(5) An ordinance fixing speed limit for trucks at twenty miles per hour.

(6) An ordinance requiring a driver, when turning a corner, to turn as near the right-hand curb as possible.

Defendants filed pleas of not guilty and contributory negligence, and that the accident was the result of a sudden emergency cast upon the defendants’ driver.

It appears that the driver of the truck was on the north side of Union Avenue, going west, the same direction that plaintiff was traveling, and when the driver reached Dudley Street, a woman driving an automobile came out of Dudley Street into Union Avenue, and the truck driver insists that he had to make a sudden turn to the right, into Dudley Street to avoid striking the woman in the automobile, and in so doing he struck the plaintiff.

The cause was submitted to a jury which returned the verdict in favor of the plaintiff, for the amount heretofore stated.

The defendants seasonably filed a motion for a new trial which was overruled. They perfected an appeal, and had signed and filed a proper bill of exceptions and have assigned nine errors in this cause. There was a motion for a directed verdict at the conclusion of all the evidence, which was overruled.

The assignments of error will be disposed of under four groups:

Group one contains assignments one and two, and these are:

First, there is no evidence to sustain the verdict.

Second, the Trial Court erred in refusing to grant defendants’ motion for a directed verdict, made first at the close of plaintiff’s proof and renewed at the close of all the proof.

Group two consists of assignments three, four, and five, which are certain excerpts complained of from the Court’s charge.

Group three consists of assignments six, seven and eight, which complain of the Court’s action in refusing to give certain special instructions offered by the defendants.

The last assignment, number nine, insists that the verdict is grossly excessive and evinces passion, prejudice or caprice on the part of the jury. It is insisted in support of this assignment that *45 tbe verdict should have been set aside, or at least the Court should have entered a remittitur to correct the same.

This case was ably argued by counsel for both parties at the bar on the day it was heard in this Court. We have been furnished with elaborate briefs, covering every phase of the ease.

It is insisted on behalf of the defendants in support of the first two assignments, as follows:

(1) Plaintiff failed to prove any of the acts of negligence alleged in the declaration.

(2) The Court charged the jury that if the defendants’ theory of the accident was true there was no liability.

(3) The defendants’ theory was uncontradicted and unim-peached by any evidence.

Negligence is never presumed from the happening of an accident. Negligence must be proven. De Glopper v. Railway & Light Co., 123 Tenn., 633, 134 S. W., 609.

If there was sufficient evidence to carry the case to the jury, there was some material evidence to support the verdict, so the first two assignments of error should be considered together. 139 Tenn., 37, 201 S. W., 131, 142 Tenn., 678, 222 S. W., 1053; Cullom v. Glasgow, 3 Tenn. App., 444.

It is admitted by counsel for the defendants that the plaintiff was guilty of no contributory negligence.

The plaintiff testified that as he approached Dudley Street where it intersects Union Avenue, and before starting across Dudley Street, he looked in both directions and then started to cross Dudley Street on a crosswalk. In the center of Dudley Street there was a cast iron stop sign, called by some of the witnesses, a turtle back, by some, a mushroom, and by some a button. This stop sign indicated that traffic from the north, on Dudley Street, going south into Union, should stop before entering Union Avenue. As plaintiff reached this stop sign he was struck by the defendants’ truck, which had approached Dudley Street from the east and swerved from Union Avenue into Dudley Street. Plaintiff w7as struck a terrific blow in the back. The truck ran over the stop sign, broke it, crashed into a Yellow7 Cab, wrhich had stopped in obedience to the stop sign, and defendants’ truck stopped about 18 or 20 feet north of the stop sign.

At the time of the accident, Dr. Kinsey Buck, a reputable, prac-tising physician of Memphis, was seated in his automobile, which was facing east and wdiich was stopped on Union Avenue, at Dudley Street, preparatory or waiting for the proper opportunity to turn north into Dudley Street.

*46 Tbe plaintiff, when struck, was rendered unconscious, and he did not see the truck until about the time it struck him. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Tenn. App. 42, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nohsey-schwab-v-slover-tennctapp-1931.