Olson v. Sharpe

259 S.W.2d 867, 36 Tenn. App. 557, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 141
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 8, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 259 S.W.2d 867 (Olson v. Sharpe) 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
Olson v. Sharpe, 259 S.W.2d 867, 36 Tenn. App. 557, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 141 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

McAMIS, J.

This action was instituted in the Circuit Court of Anderson County December 19,1949, by William L. Olson against Edward D. Sharpe, J. D. Phillips, Moran Trucking Company, a partnership composed of Cleo Moran and Guy Moran, and Bridges Paving Company to recover damages in the sum of $100,000' for personal injuries sustained :as the result of being struck by a truck operated by the defendant Edward D. Sharpe on September 23, 1949. The case was tried before 'the court and a jury and resulted in a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $100,000 against Bridges Paving Company and a general verdict in favor of the other defendants which was accompanied by special jury findings absolving plaintiff of contributory negligence and the defendants Sharpe, Phillips and Moran Trucking Company of negligence. The jury also found specifically that the proximate cause of *562 plaintiff’s injuries was 'the negligence of Bridges Paving-Company in failing to provide a flagman for trucks engaged in a backing movement on the construction project in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, where plaintiff was injured.

Judgment was rendered in accordance with the verdict. Plaintiff thereupon moved for a new trial as to the defendants Sharpe, Phillips and Moran Trucking-Company, insisting there was no material evidence to sustain the verdict in their favor, and Bridges Paving-Company moved for a new trial, insisting among numerous other grounds that a verdict should have been directed in its behalf at the close of plaintiff’s evidence at which time it stood upon its motion for a directed verdict and announced that it would not be bound by any evidence thereafter introduced. Both motions were overruled and the plaintiff and Bridges Paving Company have perfected appeals in error to this Court where both have assigned numerous errors.

We consider first the assignments of Bridges Paving Company, noting that the greater number of its assignments deal with the issue of the inherently dangerous nature of its operation which, plaintiff insists, deprived it of the right to rely upon the defense that the injury was inflicted by an independent contractor and the question of the liability of Bridges Paving Company for the acts of its codefendants under the doctrine of respondeat superior. We find that the questions raised by such assignments have become immaterial in view of the special findings of the jury.

On September 231,1949, and for more than a year prior thereto plaintiff Olson, 31 years of age and a graduate engineer, was in the employ of Merritt-Chapman & Scott, a general contractor holding ia prime contract from the Atomic Energy Commission for the performance of cer *563 tain construction work in Oak Ridge. Ross Construction Company had a subcontract for a part of the work and it in turn subcontracted to the defendant Bridges Paving-Company the laying of an asphalt pavement on Road 101 in the Oak Ridge area. Prior to the date of the injury, Moran Trucking Company had contracted with Bridges Paving Company to haul by truck hot asphalt from the mixing plant of Bridges Paving- Company to the paving-operation, a distance of about one mile. Phillips was engaged by Moran Trucking Company to furnish four trucks and four drivers to assist in the performance of the hauling contract of Moran Trucking Company and they were so engaged at the time of the injury to plaintiff. Sharpe, the driver of the truck which struck plaintiff, was employed by Phillips. The status of Phillips in relation to Moran Trucking Company, whether that of an independent contractor or agent and employee, is a controverted issue.

On the day of the accident plaintiff, in company with another engineer, Mr. McTurk, andPIubert C. Roberson and in line of duty, went upon a parking- lot for Apartment 30, where Roberson was engaged in a grading operation, to locate the cause of a “soft spot”. Adjoining the parking lot and running generally east and west was Road 101 then in the process of being paved by Bridges Paving Company. After inspecting the “soft spot” it was surmised that the cause might be found by inspecting underground pipes running from beneath Road 101. The three men then left the parking area which was approximately six feet above the street level and, after stopping at a manhole cover located at the inside edge of the sidewalk, proceeded to the curb to inspect a curb inlet. To remove the iron grating- weighing approximately 200 pounds plaintiff took up a position at the west of the *564 inlet, facing east, and Roberson a position on the east facing west. They pushed the lid to the west of the inlet and while plaintiff was in this position looking down for the purpose of inspecting the pipes within the inlet to determine their direction in relation to the parking area, Phillips’ truck, driven by Sharpe, and being backed upgrade loaded with 7% tons of asphalt, struck him in the back of the head, knocking him to the pavement and, despite all his efforts to escape, his feet and legs became engaged in the axle of the truck turning his body in a reversed somersault. Efforts by Roberson and McTurk to have the driver stop the truck were unavailing until it had passed almost over plaintiff.

It appears that the paved portion of Road 101 when completed was to be 27 feet in width. Prior to the time in question, Bridges Paving Company had put down two strips of asphalt each 9 feet in width along the south side of Road 101 and had moved its asphalt machine beyond the top of a slight hill a distance of approximately 1,000 feet east of the curb inlet mentioned for the purpose of paving the north strip from east to west. Because the heavily loaded trucks could not be operated upon the newly laid asphalt on the south side of the Road, loaded trucks were being brought into a parking area some 200 feet west of the inlet Avhere, immediately preceding the accident, three of Phillips’ trucks had been waiting for 15 or 20 minutes until the asphalt machine could be set in position. When this was accomplished a truck driven by Cox backed out of the parking lot and upon the unpaved portion of the road from which point it was backed, according to the contention of Bridges Paving Company, to a point east of the inlet before plaintiff was struck by the truck driven by Sharpe.

*565 When Sharpe had hacked his truck out of the parking lot and into the unpaved strip on the north side of Road 101, he opened the left door and either from a position standing on the left fender or looking ont of the cab, was watching the left rear wheel of his truck to avoid encroachment upon the new pavement. According to all the evidence his line of vision enabled him to see to the east from a point 25 or 30 feet behind the truck along the edge of the pavement. He could not see an object behind the right rear of his truck. According to all the evidence, neither Moran, Phillips nor Bridges Paving Company provided a flagman or watchman in connection with the backing operation of trucks although the general area of the operation was a construction area with machines and drills making loud noises and workmen were known to he congregated in the area and pass at frequent intervals from one job to another on the opposite sides of Road 101. According to the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, the Sharpe truck was being operated at a speed of 5 or 6 miles per hour.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.2d 867, 36 Tenn. App. 557, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olson-v-sharpe-tennctapp-1953.