Roberts v. Thomas H. Smart Motor Car Co.

4 Tenn. App. 271
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 12, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 271 (Roberts v. Thomas H. Smart Motor Car Co.) 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. Thomas H. Smart Motor Car Co., 4 Tenn. App. 271 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

At the last term of the court this cause was stricken from the docket' for the reason the appeal was not perfected according to the conditions specified in the judgment granting an appeal. In other words, the plaintiff in error was allowed thirty days in which to perfect her appeal, by executing an appeal bond. It appeared that this entry was made November 19, 1925, and the appeal bond was not executed until some fifty-seven days after this entry. On June 12, 1926, which was within ten days after the cause was dismissed and stricken from the docket, the plaintiff filed a petition suggesting a diminution of the record and reciting that by oversight the clerk of the circuit court of Shelby county had written November 19, 1925 as the date on which the appeal was granted when the true date was December 19, 1925, as shown by the original record, and the petition prayed that the cause be reinstated. This petition was accompanied by the affidavit of the clerk and a true copy of the record showing that it was heard on December 19, 1925, instead of November 19, 1925. Counsel for defendant admit that the appeal was perfected in time and it was a clerical error in copying the transcript. For some reason unexplained, the record was not called to the attention of the court after the petition was filed to reinstate the case until the present term of this eourt. The motion to reinstate is sustained and the cause is redocketed and we will proceed to determine the same upon the merits of the appeal.

Plaintiff instituted a suit for malicious prosecution in the circuit Court of Shelby county on August 5, 1925, against' the two defendants, the Thomas II. Smart Motor Car Company, a coi'po-ration, and Thomas H. Smart, individually. She alleged that she was maliciously and without probable, cause arrested on a State’s warrant issued by Frank W. Davis, Justice of the Peace of Shelby county on the 6th day of February, 1924; that plaintiff was carried before said Justice of the Peace by a deputy sheriff where she was *273 bound over to the criminal court of Shelby county; that she gave bond; that she was indicted by the grand jury of said county on the 2nd day of May, 1924; that she was tried in Division 1 of the criminal court of Shelby county and was acquitted, and that the prosecution was wholly ended. The declaration made the usual allegations of suffering, of great pain and mental anguish, humiliation, embarrassment, degradation, etc. The defendants filed a plea of not guilty. The cause was heard before Judge Laughlin and a jury at the November term, 1925, of the circuit court and at the conclusion of all the evidence the court sustained a motion for a directed verdict and dismissed plaintiff’s suit. She filed a motion for a new trial on one ground; — -that is, the court erred in granting the defendant’s motion for peremptory instructions.

The plaintiff has assigned three errors in this court. The first error is, in substance, the same error as complained of in the motion for a new trial; the second error being that the court erred in failing and refusing to consider the notes which plaintiff testified about at the trial and which are marked Exhibits “A,” “B,” “C,” “D,” “E, ” “F,” and “G-,” which plaintiff offered on her motion for new trial. The third assignment is “The court erred in holding as a matter of law plaintiff was hiding the car from defendants within the purview of the conditional sales statutes.”

As to the second assignment of error, it' appears that the notes sought- to be introduced are not in the bill of exceptions, and they were not offered in evidence at the trial or on the motion for a new trial and the record shows that the • court did not' consider them in passing on the motion, and of course we cannot consider the same upon this appeal. Appellant will be confined to the alleged error upon which the motion for a new trial was predicated. Matthews v. Crofford, 129 Tenn., 541; and the rules of this court by Bule 11, Subsec. 4 as found in 151 Tenn., page 815.

There were but three witnesses examined in the lower court, Mike • Cohen, the clerk of the criminal court, read the indictment against plaintiff and the verdict of the jury acquitting her. Mrs. Ed Bob-erts, the plaintiff testified, and Mr. Earl King, an attorney, and who advised the defendant Thomas H. -Smart of the defendant corporation to have Mrs. Boberts arrested.

It appears that the plaintiff, purchased an automobile from the Smart Motor Company, trading in a used car, paying some $200 cash, and executing a number of deferred monthly notes, each note being for $35. At the time she made the purchase from the defendants she executed a conditional sales contract, title to the Hupmobile being retained by the seller pending the payment of the deferred notes. Plaintiff testified that a few days before her note which matured January 1, 1924, was due she called at the *274 office of the defendant to negotiate for getting an extension of the January note. One Mr. Creath, who plaintiff testified she understood was the sales manager of the defendant company, agreed with her that she might take up the January note when she paid the February note. It appears that prior to February 1st, or about January 26, 1924, a man named W. F. Landrum filed a bill in the chancery court of Shelby county, asserting an interest in the automobile in question, and prayed for an attachment, which was issued. It appears that Landrum had been paying court to the plaintiff, had boarded in her home, had given her the first automobile that she owned (a Ford), which was designated as a Christmas gift. It appears that the Ford, by trade or exchange was converted into a Nash, and by process of exchanging automobiles, or the evolution of the automobile exchange business, where the mind desires a better and a higher priced car, the Nash was converted along with $200 of Landrum’s money into the Hupmobile, which car was the cause of this litigation. Plaintiff testified that she learned Mr. Landrum who had represented himself to be a widower had a living wife in the State of Kentucky and her attitude towards Mr. Landrum evidently became cold and indifferent when she made this discovery. Mr. Landrum quit boarding in her home and started a lawsuit for the car. She testified that she visited the office of the-defendant company about the time the Landrum lawsuit started and tried to pay her January and February notes by making a tender of $70 ; that Mr. Creath refused to take the $70, said that the notes were not in his hands, and referred her to someone else. She did not tender the interest due on the January note but Creath, so the plaintiff testifies, asked that the plaintiff return the automobile, which the plaintiff refused to do. Creath told the plaintiff that Mr. Smart was out of the city and that he and Mr. Earl King had had some conversation about the matter before Mr. Smart left the city; that Smart would be back in two or three days and that they would see the plaintiff then. A letter was introduced bearing date of January 14, 1924, calling on plaintiff for the car or the money due. The clerk in his transcript states that this copy of the letter from the defendant to plaintiff had been mislaid. Plaintiff denied receiving this letter. Part of the pleadings in the Lambuth suit are in the transcript, and part could not be located.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Boyce v. Early-Stratton Co.
10 Tenn. App. 545 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-thomas-h-smart-motor-car-co-tennctapp-1926.