Roberts v. Hickson

343 S.W.2d 108, 48 Tenn. App. 73, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 23, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 343 S.W.2d 108 (Roberts v. Hickson) 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
Roberts v. Hickson, 343 S.W.2d 108, 48 Tenn. App. 73, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 108 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

AVERY, Presiding Judge (W. S.).

This suit was originally filed by Geneva Lee Roberts, plaintiff, against Linda Van Allen Houstoun Hickson, Lawrence Orson Houstoun, Jr., and Norman Sprague, in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, for alleged damages resulting from physical injury alleged to have been caused by an assault upon the said Geneva Lee Roberts. Before the case was *75 tried, the ease was non-suited as to Linda Yan Allen Houstoun Hickson.

The case was tried in Division III of the Circuit Court before Hon. A. 0. Holmes, Judge, to a jury, and there was a verdict for the defendants. The plaintiff; below is plaintiff-in-error here and for convenience she will be designated in this opinion as “plaintiff”, and the defendants-in-error here will be designated “defendants” or by their respective names.

An appeal from the verdict and judgment of the Court below was granted, perfected, and errors have been assigned. The case was heard by this Court on the 14th day of April, I960 and is disposed of by this opinion.

The issues made below and in this Court, together with the Assignments of Error and the contention of the parties, requires that the declaration and the pleas, both of which are short, be copied into this opinion.

The declaration is as follows:

“The plaintiff sues the defendants for the sum of Twelve Thousand and Five Hundred Dollars ($12,-500.00) as damages, both actual and exemplary, and for cause of action alleges the following matters:
‘ ‘ The defendants willfully and maliciously assaulted and beat the plaintiff about the face and body on August 14, 1958, in Shelby County, Tennessee, as a direct and proximate of which acts of the defendants the plaintiff received multiple contusions and cuts about her face and body, injuries in the cervical region of her spine, suffered and is still suffering excruciating pain, both physical and mental, and is permanently injured. She further alleges that she *76 was hospitalized and is still under treatment by doctors, which treatment will continue for an indeterminate time in the fntnre.
“Wherefore, the plaintiff snes the defendants and demands a jury to try her action. ’ ’

There is a not guilty plea, and upon motion made and granted, special pleas were filed, and these are as follows:

“Come the defendants and, pursuant to order of Court to plead their defenses specially to the Declaration filed against them in the above cause, say:
“That they deny they willfully and' maliciously assaulted and beat the plaintiff about the face or body. They deny that the plaintiff received multiple contusions or cuts about her face and body or injuries in the cervical region of her spine or that she suffered or is still suffering excruciating pain, physical or mental, or is permanently injured. They deny that she was hospitalized or is still under the treatment of doctors as a result of any conduct of the defendants.
“The defendants deny that they are guilty of the matters, wrongs and things complained of in the plaintiff’s Declaration, in the manner and form therein alleged, or in any other manner and form.
“The defendants aver that at the time and place complained of these defendants had assisted Mrs. Linda Hickson, the sister of the defendant, Lawrence Orson Iioustoun,. Jr., in obtaining her minor child. That they had taken the child, returned to their automobile, and had entered the same and were in the process of driving from the scene when the plain *77 tiff, who was an interloper in the premises and who had no moral or legal obligation with respect to the welfare of the child, threw herself on the moving vehicle in an attempt to prevent the defendants and the aforesaid Mrs. Hickson from leaving the scene. That any injuries received by the plaintiff or damages resulting therefrom were the direct and proximate result of the unlawful, negligence and careless conduct of the plaintiff.
“The defendants deny that they were at fault in the premises.
“And Now, having plead their defenses specially to the plaintiff’s Declaration, the defendants pray to be hence dismissed with their reasonable costs. ’ ’

This suit grows out of an estrangement between the original defendant, Linda Yan Allen Honstonn Hickson, and her husband, David Hickson, which involves the custody of their baby child, Leslie Hickson, who was at the time of the incident complained of, about 15 months old. It is insisted that while this baby child was in legal custody of the plaintiff, who is a sister of the child’s father, David Hickson, the defendants, Lawrence Orson Honstonn, Jr., and Norman Sprague, together with the baby’s mother, took the child away from the plaintiff and in doing so committed an assault upon her, by which she was injured.

The defendants, said Honstonn and Sprague, both lived in New Jersey at the time. They flew to Memphis, rented an automobile, and together with the child’s mother, went out to the home or apartment where the plaintiff lived and where the child was on the 13th day of August, 1958, where the mother of the child went in the *78 house and stayed an hour or two, while the two men defendants sat in the car behind some bushes or shrubbery obstruction out of view of the house, and then on August 14, 1960 they went out again to the same place, stopped the automobile behind some shrubbery, and the mother went into the room where the child was, picked her up and started back towards the car before plaintiff knew she was there, and the plaintiff undertook to get the baby away from her, was unable to do so, and contends that she was assaulted as she undertook to retake the child, from which place the defendants, together with the child and the child’s mother, drove to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, boarded a plane there and flew back to New Jersey.

It is the contention of the plaintiff and her attorney that the legal custody had, by proper order of the Chancery Court, been given temporarily to the father, David Hickson, and his mother who were living at the time in an apartment alongside that of the plaintiff, and that by direction of the father, who was at work and with the permission of his mother, the child was at the moment when taken left in the custody of the plaintiff who had authority to resist the taking away of the child, even by its mother and the two defendants.

On the hearing, counsel for plaintiff introduced, as a part of her evidence, the Order of the Court by which he insisted the plaintiff had legal custody of the child through permission from its father and the paternal grandmother, and which is a Consent Order in the following words:

“In this cause, The complainant having filed a Bill of Divorce, and the Defendant having filed an answer and cross-bill, and having therein a request *79

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Bluebook (online)
343 S.W.2d 108, 48 Tenn. App. 73, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-hickson-tennctapp-1960.