Smith Packing Co. v. Tinnin

340 S.W.2d 929, 47 Tenn. App. 590, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 1, 1960
StatusPublished

This text of 340 S.W.2d 929 (Smith Packing Co. v. Tinnin) 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
Smith Packing Co. v. Tinnin, 340 S.W.2d 929, 47 Tenn. App. 590, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

I

SHRIVER, J.

The parties will he referred to as they appeared in the Court below.

This is a suit for $100,000 damages brought by plaintiff, Grace Ellen Tinnin, against the defendants Smith [592]*592Packing Company and Jesse Painter for the death of Jake Tinnin, husband of plaintiff, who was killed when a truck belonging to the defendant Packing Company and operated by an employee, Jesse Painter, backed into the deceased husband of plaintiff, pinning him against a loading platform and thus crushing him to death.

The case was tried in the Second Circuit Court of Davidson County before the Honorable Byrd Douglas and a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $25,000, from which judgment the defendants, after their motion for a new trial was overruled, prefected their appeal in error to this Court and have assigned errors.

II

It was admitted that the truck in question was owned by the defendant and was being operated on its business by an employee at the time of the accident.

The declaration is in four counts, the first count being based on common-law negligence. The second count alleges violation of certain city ordinances dealing with backing vehicles and reckless driving. The third count is based on an alleged violation of the statutes prescribing limitations on backing. The fourth count is based on alleged violations of statutory provisions dealing with the duty of motorists to pedestrians, defining reckless driving, and setting forth requirements for lighting devices such as backup lights, reflectors, rear view mirrors, etc.

The defendants filed a plea of the general issue.

The deceased, Jake Tinnin, was a livestock dealer and farmer 68 years of age. He weighed about 200 to 210 [593]*593pounds and was blind in one eye. He was killed about ten to’clock A. M. on November 24, 1958, when crushed against a loading platform on the premises of the defendant Smith Packing Company, which platform was located about 18 feet east of the sidewalk along Third Avenue North, near the Stock Yards in Nashville. After the truck was moved following the accident, the body of the deceased was found lying in the passageway leading from the street to the loading platform and was about three and a half or four feet west of the platform. The premises of the defendant Packing Company are located at 807 Third Avenue North.

It is shown that the alley or passage which led from the open sidewalk on Third Avenue, No., to the loading platform of defendant was left open in order that trucks could move in and out in loading and unloading livestock. Said passage was 10 feet wide and about 18 feet long.

One one side of said passage or driveway was the wall of the building occupied by Smith Packing Company, while on the other side was a wall made of large posts and slats of lumber separating the said passage from cattle or stock pens. At the end of same and away from the sidewalk was the loading platform in question, beside which was a gate leading on into the area behind the loading platform, which gate was shown by the proof to be closed at the time the accident occurred.

The truck in question was 7% feet wide, thus leaving a total space on both sides of the truck between the bed thereof and the walls on either side of 2% feet so that if the truck were equally distant from both walls there would be about 15 inches of space on each side, but if the truck were not at an equal distance from both sides as, [594]*594of course, it was not, then, there was less space on one side and a little more space on the other side.

The passage into which the truck backed from the street was so situated that one could not see into it unless he were almost directly in front of the opening thereto. This is true because the building of Smith Packing Company was against the sidewalk on one side, while a wall of sheet metal along the inner edge of the sidewalk leading up to the entrance to this passage was on the other side, which effectively obstructed the view from the street unless one was so situated as to look straight into said passage.

At the time of the accident defendant Painter stated that he was hauling a load of hogs from the pens down on Harrison Street to the unloading chute on Third Avenue. He was driving a 1945 model truck. It had no light on the back of it and did not have a rear view mirror. The driver was in the truck alone, and it being Monday morning, the streets were crowded with other trucks which were parked along the curb on the east side of Third Avenue bumper to bumper. There was much activity and much noise with cattle bellowing, pigs squealing, stock traders hollering to each other and all of that. The driver pulled up past the passage in which he proposed to back and stopped his truck, whereupon a policeman at the corner held up traffic while he was backing into said passage. Another employee testified that he held up traffic on the other side, although the driver said that he did not know whether there was someone holding up traffic behind him or not. After pulling some 30 or 40 feet beyond the passage or driveway, he stated that he could not see into the passage but that he gauged his [595]*595backing operation by looking np at a telephone pole that stood just at the south entrance to same, and, by looking up at this telephone pole, he could gauge the position of his truck and back in in that manner. He stated that he was looking up at the telephone pole as he backed in. He heard someone holler but he thought they were in the engine room of Smith Packing Company so he backed all the way to the loading platform. He then jumped out of the truck to discover that he had crushed or run over Mr. Tinnin.

Mr. K. W. Tinnin, a brother of the deceased, testified that he had been with the deceased all morning, having come in with his brother on the truck, and that they had disposed of some cattle at the Stock Yards. He and his brother then went to a bank on Whiteside Avenue near the Stock Yards where his brother cashed a check. They then came back to Third Avenue North, turning south on said street proceeding toward town, or southwardly, toward Smith Packing Company. After proceeding some 25 or 30 feet southwardly on Third Avenue from the intersection of Whiteside Avenue, and reaching a point about that same distance from the entrance to the passage in question, the witness stopped to talk to some oiie that he knew, while his brother, Jake Tinnin, continued to walk on down the sidewalk in the direction of the alley or passage where he was killed. The witness said that the last time he saw his brother before the accident, he, the brother, was still on the sidewalk right close to the alley or passage where the loading platform of the Smith Packing Company is located.' He stated that he had his back toward the alley in question when he heard some one holler and recognized his brother’s voice. He stated, “He was just hollering, you could have heard him from [596]*596here to the stock yards, if it had been quiet”. He stated that when he looked, “Well this here truck was coming in there real fast and getting in that alley, backing up” —“It was backing up in that alley with a load of hogs, backing off from Third Avenue into this chute.”

He further stated that his brother kept hollering and that he naturally went up that way and when he got there the driver got out of the truck and they found his brother lying on his back in a dying condition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.2d 929, 47 Tenn. App. 590, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-packing-co-v-tinnin-tennctapp-1960.