Stevens v. Linton

229 S.W.2d 510, 190 Tenn. 351, 26 Beeler 351, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 492
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 229 S.W.2d 510 (Stevens v. Linton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Linton, 229 S.W.2d 510, 190 Tenn. 351, 26 Beeler 351, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 492 (Tenn. 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The sole question for our determination in this cause is whether or not the original defendant and cross plaintiff in an automobile damage suit can make a third party a defendant by his cross action when said third party is not a suing plaintiff, by counterpart summons.

*353 Stevens, a resident of Williamson County, Tennessee, filed Iris suit in the Circuit Court of Marshall County, Tennessee, against Sam Linton, Administrator etc., for damages growing out of an automobile accident. Linton in turn filed a plea of the general issue and a counter declaration against the original plaintiff, W. D. Stevens, also joining as a defendant, one W. Gr. Thalman, of Davidson County, Tennessee, and sought to have a counterpart summons in the form of the declaration which he had filed, sent to Davidson County and served on Thalman there'. Thalman, in turn, filed pleas in abatement to which Stevens demurred. The trial judge overruled the demurrer and sustained Thalman’s plea in abatement.

• Our counterpart declaration statutes are embraced in Code, Sections 8745-8749, inclusive. Code, Section 8745 provides in substance that “where the defendant claims a cause of action, against the suing plaintiffs, or any of them, growing out of the same act, accident or transaction (such, for example, as collision of vehicles), the defendant may”, sue the plaintiff by filing a cross declaration within a certain given time. Code, Section 8747, provides in substance that duplicate certified copies or such cross declaration shall be prepared by the clerk and given to the sheriff who shall serve the same on the plaintiff by giving him a copy and “returning and indorsing the fact of service on the other, in the nature of process ”; or by the acceptance of service by the plaintiff’s attorney, etc.

In addition to the excellent briefs and the arguments that we have heard herein, we have made a rather extensive investigation of comparative legislation on the subject of our counterclaim statute. We find upon investigation that the various States that have similar or *354 comparable legislation, that none of these statutes, so far as we can find, are on all fours with our statute. The phraseology and the provisions in these statutes are entirely different and, therefore, we are confined in our determination of the matter to our statute and a proper interpretation of it. In other words, we can find no authority on the subject other than persuasive authorities on the general proposition involved.

The plaintiff in error makes a very strong argument to the effect that in our construction of this counter declaration statute, 8745 et seq., we should construe it in pari materia with Code, Section 8640 et seq., providing for venue and transitory actions and with 8653 of the Code providing for counterpart process. That if we so construe these sections in pari materia the service of process herein on the defendant in error, Thalman, is regular, legal and valid and sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the Circuit Court of Marshall County, Tennessee, over said W. C. Thalman in this case.

The rule of interpretation, in pari materia, is that if divers statutes relate to the same thing, they are all to be taken into consideration in construing any one of them. It must be remembered though that this rule “in pari materia” is applicable only when the terms of a statute to be construed are ambiguous or its significance is doubtful, and the rule is not to be applied to effect a construction contrary to the clearly manifest intent of the legislature.

Prior to the enactment of our counterclaim statute, Sections 8745-8749 we had no such right in this State, that is, to file a counter-declaration in a tort action and bring in or assert an action against the defendant or other parties therein. Obviously, therefore, it is necessary to *355 look to this statute and the terms of it to determine what rights the parties have in filing a cross declaration or cross action in the snit. In the first place it is noted that the only right given by the statnte to file a connter declaration is for the defendant to sne the “suing plaintiff”. The statnte nowhere mentions that they may sne the sning plaintiff or any other parties involved.. It very clearly provides that he can only sne “the sning plaintiffs, or any of them”. It thns seems to ns that the legislature has plainly and clearly limited this cross action to “the sning plaintiffs, or any of them”. The language “or any of them” clearly refers to the plaintiffs and the plaintiffs alone and does not under any stretch of interpretation or imagination bring in other parties unless they are plaintiffs to the original action. Section 8747 of the Code provides that the cross declaration may be served “by delivering to the plaintiff one copy” which is “in the nature of process”. This seems to ns further evidence of the fact that the intention of the legislature was just what it says, that the cross declaration might be filed only against “sning plaintiffs, or any of them”. Since this seems so entirely plain to us we can see no reason at all to apply the rule of construction of in pari materia and construe this statute with the venue and counterpart summons statute above referred to. Here there is no ambiguity in what the legislature meant when it enacted this statute. Since we had no right to take such an action prior to ihe passage of the statute, Sections 8745-8749, we can see no reason why we have the right to hold that a third party, not “a suing plaintiff”, may be brought in to defend the action, even though the suit is based on the identical facts out of which the original action grew.

*356 Tlie very forceful argument is "made that it was the intention of the legislature to let all parties come into the lawsuit, where the facts of their differences grew out of the same accident, and litigate their claims in one lawsuit, so as to prevent a circuity of action or having different lawsuits in different Counties and places over the State. This is purely a matter for the legislature to control and if the legislature desires that these things may he done it is a very easy matter to amend the cross declaration statute by adding the few words thereto. The legislature not having seen fit to do so, we think that we have no right to so interpret the statute and order this done, in a law cause.

This Court in Nunn v. Walker, 186 Tenn. 685, 212 S. W. (2d) 665, 667, said of the statute in question:

“This practice (counter declaration) was unknown to the common law and was, in fact, authorized for the first time by the Code of 1932. If the original Defendant undertakes to avail himself of this right and to follow this procedure, he must do so in strict conformity with the statute.”

This Court in Cotton v. Frazier et al., 170 Tenn. 301, 95 S. W. (2d) 45, 48, referred to these counter declaration statutes. "What was said, referring to Code, Sections 8745-8749, in that suit was obiter dicta but it is particularly applicable to the present situation.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W.2d 510, 190 Tenn. 351, 26 Beeler 351, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-linton-tenn-1950.