Phillips-Buttorff Manufacturing Co. v. McAlexander

15 Tenn. App. 618, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 6, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 618 (Phillips-Buttorff Manufacturing Co. v. McAlexander) 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
Phillips-Buttorff Manufacturing Co. v. McAlexander, 15 Tenn. App. 618, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 132 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

A. S. McAlexander, as administrator of the estate of his deceased wife, Mrs. Janie P. McAlexander, as plaintiff, recovered a judgment for $12,500 and costs against Phillips-Buttorff Manufacturing Company and H. A. McQueen, as defendants, in the Third Circuit Court of Davidson County, on June 11, 1931, and, after their motion for a new trial had been overruled, the defendants appealed *622 in error to this Court, and are here insisting, through assignments of error, briefs, and oral argument of counsel at the bar, that the trial court should have sustained the motion for a directed verdict made on behalf of each and both of the defendants at the close of all the evidence; that the trial judge erred, to the prejudice of the defendants, in his charge to the jury, and in refusing instructions requested by the defendants; and that, if this Court should hold that a verdict for plaintiff was proper, the amount of the verdict, for which judgment was rendered, was excessive.

For convenience, we shall continue to refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendants, as they appeared on the record in the trial court.

Plaintiff’s intestate was struck by an automobile — a Ford coupe— owned by defendant Phillips-Buttorff Manufacturing Company and driven by defendant McQueen, between 5:30 and 6 o’clock P. M. on October 7, 1930, and died, as a. consequence thereof, in the evening of the following day. She was continuously unconscious from the time of the accident until her death.

(We are using the word “accident” in its “loose and popular sense,” rather than according to its strict definition. Sweeny v. Erving, 228 U. S., 233, 57 L. Ed., 815, 818.)

The deceased was thirty-three years of age, and an active, healthy woman, suffering from no physical or mental disability or infirmity. She was regularly employed in the office of an insurance agency in the business section of the City of Nashville, and lived with her husband (to whom she had been married about three years) in the Seminole Apartments situated on the south side of West End Avenue, a short distance east of its intersection with Twentieth Avenue.

The general direction of West End Avenue is east and west, and two street car tracks are located thereon — outbound or westbound street cars moving on a track located to the north of the center of the street, and inbound or eastbound street cars on a track located south of the center of the street.

The accident occurred in front of the Seminole Apartments and on the southern half of West End Avenue. The Ford coupe, driven by defendant McQueen, was traveling eastward. There was at that hour much westbound traffic on West End Avenue, but few cars were going east.

Defendant Phillips-Buttorff Manufacturing Company is a corporation engaged in manufacturing and merchandising in the City of Nashville, and it operates, among other things, a large foundry or factory for the manufacture of stoves or furnaces, and defendant McQueen was, at the time of the accident in question and for several years theretofore, employed by defendant Phillips-Buttorff Manufacturing Company as paymaster at said foundry.

*623 A. tí. McAlexander duly qualified as administrator!.)of bis deceased wife, and thereafter, viz: on October 17, 1930, brought this action in the Circuit Court of Davidson County, and it was transferred to the Third Circuit Court, where it was tried before Special Judge AYilliam A. G-uild and a jury, upon the issues made by the plaintiff’s declaration and separate pleas of not guilty filed by the defendants, respectively.

The declaration contains three counts. The first count, after the statement of some of the undisputed facts which We have heretofore related, contains averments as follows:

“That on the late afternoon of said date plaintiff’s intestate alighted from an outbound or westbound street car, at or near the intersection of Twentieth Avenue North and said West End Avenue, intending to cross over West End Avenue from the point where she alighted from said street car to the south side of said West End Avenue to reach her home; that as plaintiff’s intestate was crossing said West End Avenue going south, defendant McQueen, in charge of and driving said automobile of the defendant Company in furtherance of its business, at the same time was proceeding in an easterly direction on said West End Avenue towards the main part of the City, and at a time when, and place where, said defendant McQueen knew, or should have known, that pedestrians were likely to cross said West End Avenue in front of him, since said outbound street ear had just left the intersection of said two streets, proceeding westWardly; that while plaintiff’s intestate was crossing south on West End Avenue, because of said defendant McQueen’s failure to keep a proper lookout ahead, and at a time and place when the defendant saw, or should have seen, her, he wrongfully, carelessly, recklessly and negligently drove said automobile upon and against plaintiff’s intestate, with great force and violence, knocking and hurling her body through the air, and dragging it many feet in the street, so crushing, maiming and mangling her head and other parts of her body that, after lingering for many hours, she died the next day, to-wit October 8, 1930, leaving surviving her the plaintiff, her husband.
“Plaintiff’s intestate was a dutiful housewife, active, healthy and energetic, and had a long expectancy of life, and plaintiff sues the defendants for the pecuniary value of her life and demands a jury to try her cause.”

The second and third counts each adopts all the averments of the first count, and in the second count it is averred that defendants’ said automobile was, at the time it struck plaintiff’s decedent, operated in excess of thirty miles an hour in violation of an ordinance of the *624 City of Nashville making it “unlawful for any vehicle to exceed a speed of thirty miles per hour within the corporate limits of said City. ’ ’

In the third count it is averred that at the time when and the place where the accident in- question occurred, defendant McQueen was driving said automobile which struck plaintiff’s intestate, in violation of a certain specified traffic ordinance of the City of Nashville which provided that “a vehicle, except when passing a vehicle ahead, shall keep as near the righthand curb as possible.”

Through their first and second assignments of error the defendants assert (1) that there was no evidence before the jury that they were guilty of negligence as charged in the declaration, and (2) that the deceased, Mrs. McAlexander, was guilty of proximate contributory negligence which should bar plaintiff’s action.

And through the second assignment of error defendant Phillips-Buttorff Mfg. Co. makes the further question that it is not liable in damages to the plaintiff because “at the time of the accident McQueen was not engaged in the business of defendant Company.”

It is stated that, for the reasons thus presented through the first and second assignments of error, the trial court erred in not sustaining the motion of the defendants for a directed verdict in their favor.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Tenn. App. 618, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-buttorff-manufacturing-co-v-mcalexander-tennctapp-1932.