O'Guin v. Corbin

777 S.W.2d 697, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 440
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 9, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 777 S.W.2d 697 (O'Guin v. Corbin) 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
O'Guin v. Corbin, 777 S.W.2d 697, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 440 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

LEWIS, Judge.

Plaintiff Judy O’Guin has appealed from the trial court’s dismissal of her complaint against B.M. Petty and Dickson County, Tennessee. In her complaint, plaintiff alleged that defendants-appellees had failed to use reasonable care in locating, constructing, repairing and maintaining the intersection at which the automobile driven by plaintiff and an automobile driven by defendant Corbin collided, and that as a result of the collision she received painful and permanent injuries and damages.

The pertinent facts are as follows:

On 28 May 1986, plaintiff and defendant Corbin were involved in an automobile accident on the county roads in Dickson County, Tennessee. Plaintiff was operating her automobile, traveling east on North Hummingbird Road. Corbin was operating his automobile and traveling north on Jones Creek Road. Both vehicles approached the intersection at approximately the same time and as the plaintiff entered Jones Creek Road her automobile was struck on the driver’s side by the Corbin automobile.

Jones Creek Road, the paved roadway on which Corbin was traveling, is considered to be the thoroughfare. The paved portion of North Hummingbird Road ends at the intersection of Jones Creek Road and continues as a gravel road on the opposite side of the intersection from which the plaintiff was approaching.

On 28 May 1986, defendant BJM. Petty was the road engineer for the Dickson County Highway Department. He had held this position since 15 April 1985. On [698]*69828 April 1986, there was not a stop sign at the intersection of Jones Creek Road and North Hummingbird Road and, so far as the record shows, there had never been a stop sign at that intersection.

So far as the record shows, there had been no accidents at the intersection of Jones Creek Road and North Hummingbird Road. Also, insofar as the record shows, neither defendant Petty nor anyone in his department had actual notice of any accidents occurring at that intersection.

Mr. Petty testified that he did not consider the intersection of Jones Creek Road and North Hummingbird Road to be a dangerous intersection. It was his.judgment as road engineer for the Dickson County Highway Department that it was not necessary to place a stop sign at the intersection of Jones Creek Road and North Hummingbird Road.

At the time the accident occurred, plaintiff was on her way to talk to a prospective insurance client. She had not been on North Hummingbird Road prior to the date of the accident. She did not see the intersection or know there was an intersection until she was in the intersection. She did not see the Corbin vehicle until she was in the intersection. Upon seeing the Corbin vehicle she tried to speed up to get through .the intersection to avoid the collision, but was unable to do so.

There is evidence in the record, including a video tape of the intersection and still photographs, which shows vegetation (trees and bushes) on the county right-of-way surrounding the intersection. There is evidence that some of this vegetation was eight to ten feet high. There is evidence that because of the vegetation, you cannot safely see traffic approaching the intersection without coming to a complete stop.

There was no traffic control of any type at the intersection. The speed limit on North Hummingbird Road is fifty-five miles per hour.

Defendant Corbin testified that he did not see the plaintiffs automobile until it was in the intersection in front of him because of the vegetation blocking his view of approaching traffic from North Hummingbird Road.

Defendant Petty testified that he had never read or heard of the Uniform Manual on Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways. Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-5-108 adopts the Uniform Manual on Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways for Tennessee.

Mr. Petty also testified that since his election as county road engineer he had caused about 150 stop signs to be installed in Dickson County, that these were installed due to the amount of traffic or at the request of a community and that he used common sense rather than the guidelines contained in the Uniform Manual.

The evidence is that the county crews mow the highway right-of-ways twice each year and that the process of trimming tree limbs on the right-of-way throughout the county takes about two years. There is a fifty foot right-of-way bn Jones Creek Road and a ditch-to-ditch. right-of-way on North Hummingbird Road. It is normally June 10 through 20 of each year before the crew gets to the North Hummingbird Road and Jones Creek Road intersection for the first time. Gravel is sometimes spilled into the intersection by gravel trucks using North Hummingbird Road.

Francis May, who was called as an expert witness by plaintiff, testified that because of the high growth of vegetation there was zero sight distance of traffic on Jones Creek Road to drivers heading north on North Hummingbird Road. It was his opinion that a stop sign should have been placed on North Hummingbird Road at this intersection pursuant to the guidelines contained in the Uniform Manual. It was further his opinion that either installing a stop sign or properly maintaining the intersection would have avoided the injury to the plaintiff.

At the conclusion of the bench trial the trial court concluded: (1) that governmental immunity had been waived for injuries resulting from negligence relating to traffic control devices or improper maintenance of road or right-of-way; (2) that the plaintiff suffered severe injuries, a large [699]*699amount of expenses and future disability; (3) that the cause of the accident was that neither driver stopped before entering the intersection rather than a lack of a traffic control device or improper maintenance; (4) that drivers are supposed to stop and look when they come to an unmarked intersection according to the rules of the road; (5) that a careful and prudent driver could see there was an intersection; and (6) that the placement of a traffic control sign at the intersection was a discretionary act.

Plaintiffs first issue is “[t]he trial court erred in finding that the plaintiff’s injuries were not caused by the defendants’ [B.M. Petty and Dickson County, Tennessee] failure to place traffic control devices in the intersection or to properly maintain it.”

The trial court found that plaintiff’s injuries and damages were caused by her failure to stop before entering the intersection, rather than the negligence of the County and the County’s road engineer. Plaintiff insists that the evidence preponderates against the court’s finding that a careful and prudent driver would have known there was an intersection.

This Court reviews the findings of fact “de novo upon the record of the trial court, accompanied by a presumption of the correctness of the finding, unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise.” Tenn.R.App.P. 13(d).

The trial court specifically found:

According to the proof as I have heard it, the Court finds that the cause of this accident was not the foliage or the lack of a clear sight around the corner that much has been made of, but rather by reason of the fact that neither of the parties entering this unmarked intersection stopped.... [Plaintiff] said she didn’t realize it was an intersection and she drove into it, so it wasn’t the fact that she couldn’t see. She didn’t stop and didn’t try to see.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
777 S.W.2d 697, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oguin-v-corbin-tennctapp-1989.