Rankhorn v. Sealtest Foods

479 S.W.2d 649, 63 Tenn. App. 714, 1971 Tenn. App. LEXIS 258
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 3, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 479 S.W.2d 649 (Rankhorn v. Sealtest Foods) 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
Rankhorn v. Sealtest Foods, 479 S.W.2d 649, 63 Tenn. App. 714, 1971 Tenn. App. LEXIS 258 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

PURYEAR, J.

This suit is for personal injuries and property damage arising out of a collision between plaintiff’s automobile and a truck owned by Sealtest Foods, which truck was driven at the time of the accident by its employee, Wesley G. Clark.

The suit was originally filed by plaintiff against Seal-test and Clark and another party by the name of William *716 G-. Adler, Sr., whose vehicle was also involved in the accident.

Process was never served on the defendant, Clark, the Sheriff’s return on the summons showing that he could not be found in Davidson County.

The plaintiff took a voluntary nonsuit as to Clark and the suit was dismissed as to him, on August 10, 1966. At conclusion of trial of the case, judgment was rendered against Sealtest and Adler for $50,000.00. Both defendants appealed, hut Adler has voluntarily dismissed his appeal and now the only appellant is Sealtest.

The suit was filed on April 27, 1966, and the accident is alleged to have occurred on May 10, 1965.

The defendant, Sealtest, first filed a general issue plea of not guilty on October 15, 1966. Thereafter-, Sealtest then filed the following additional pleas:

(1) “Comes the defendant, Sealtest Foods Division of National Dairy Products Corporation and for plea to the declaration filed against it and other defendants in this cause, says that it is not guilty of the matters, things and damages as alleged therein and defendant demands a jury to try the cause, and
The defendant Sealtest Foods Division of National Dairy Products Corporation further states and shows to the Court that the plaintiff, Dorothy S. Rankhorn, is barred by law from suing the defendant’s servant, Wesley Gr. Clark, and has not sued said servant, and that Dorothy S. Rankhorn is likewise barred from *717 maintaining a. suit against said master, Sealtest Foods Division of National Dairy Products Corporation, as the liability of said master is predicated solely on the doctrine of respondent superior.”
* ** * * **
(2) “Comes the defendant, Sealtest Foods, and in addition to the general issue plea and special plea in bar heretofore filed by said defendant, states and shows to the Court that the plaintiff Dorothy Rankhorn is barred by law from suing the said servant "Wesley Clark by the plaintiff’s failure to either obtain alias process from term to term, recommence her law suit, or obtain any service of process upon the Secretary of State of the State of Tennessee, after and subsequent to her voluntary dismissal of her suit against said servant, Wesley Clark, on August 10, 1966,” (Tech. Rec. pp. 36, 37)

The plaintiff demurred to the foregoing special pleas of the defendant, Sealtest, which demurrer to said special pleas was sustained.

From the order of the trial Court sustaining said demurrer, the defendant, Sealtest, prayed a discretionary appeal, which was denied by the trial Court.

Thereafter, the case was tried before the Circuit Judge and a jury with the result heretofore indicated.

Upon conclusion of the proof presented by plaintiff, the defendant, Sealtest, moved for a directed verdict in its favor upon the same grounds set forth in said special pleas, which motion for directed verdict was overruled.

*718 Sealtest has filed two assignments of error, both of which challenge the action of the trial Court in failing to dismiss the suit upon the theory that there could be no recovery against Sealtest, since the suit had been dismissed as to its employee, Clark, and the statute of limitations had barred any further action against said employee.

The plaintiff concedes that her suit against Sealtest is predicated upon the doctrine of respondeat superior.

Counsel for defendant cites D. B. Loveman Co. v. Bayless (1913), 128 Tenn. 307, 160 S.W. 841 and Stewart v. Craig (1960), 208 Tenn. 212, 344 S.W.2d 761, in support of the assignments of error.

Loveman v. Bayless was a case wherein the plaintiff sued two employees and their employer, and the case against the employer was predicated in part upon the doctrine of respondeat superior. The jury rendered a verdict against the employer and a verdict in favor of the employees, thus exonerating them from all blame.

The Supreme Court held that when the employer is sued solely for misfeasance or nonfeasance on the part of his servants, being liable for their conduct only under the doctrine of respondeat superior, a verdict, permitted to stand in favor of such employees, either in an action where they are sued with the employer, or in a prior action, entitles the employer to a discharge from such claimed liability.

However, the verdict against the employer and the judgment rendered thereon by the trial Court was sustained upon the grounds that the plaintiff insisted there *719 was evidence to support the verdict independent of the doctrine of respondeat superior and there was no assignment of error to the effect there was no such independent evidence to support the verdict.

In Stewart v. Craig, the plaintiff’s suit against the employer was predicated upon the doctrine of respondeat superior. In that case plaintiff accepted a sum of money from the employee, who was operator of the automobile which caused the accident and gave such employee a covenant not to sue. The Supreme Court held that the injured person was barred by law from suing the servant and therefore, he was likewise barred from suing the employer, as his liability was predicated solely on the doctrine of respondeat superior and affirmed the judgment of the trial Court dismissing the suit against the employer.

In Stewart v. Craig, the Supreme Court cited D. B. Loveman Co. v. Bayless, supra, and relied upon it as one of the authorities for affirming dismissal of suit against the employer. We think that the heart of the rule followed in both of those eases is found in the following language of the Court in D. B. Loveman Co. v. Bayless:

“The reason on which the conclusion rests, in cases involving master and servant, is that where the servant by whose act the injury occurred is exonerated it is contradictory and absurd to find the master guilty on the same evidence; that the servant’s liability is primary, that of the master secondary, or derivative, depending wholly on his duty to respond for the fault of his servant in the line of his employment, in the nature of a suretyship; that when the relations between the *720 two are left undisturbed, the master has the right to recover over against the servant for any liability imposed upon the former by the misconduct of the latter, but if the latter be exonerated in an action between him and the injured person, this status is destroyed, and the master prevented from such recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
479 S.W.2d 649, 63 Tenn. App. 714, 1971 Tenn. App. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rankhorn-v-sealtest-foods-tennctapp-1971.