Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Schutt

2 Tenn. App. 514, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 514 (Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Schutt) 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
Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Schutt, 2 Tenn. App. 514, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 51 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

The defendant in error, Mrs. Eleanor P. Sehntt (hereinafter called plaintiff), suffered serious and permanent personal injuries on February 2, 1923, as the result of a collision between an automobile in which she was riding as an invited guest and a box car of plaintiff in error, Tennessee.Central Railway Company (hereinafter called defendant), which was standing on a grade crossing of Twelfth Avenue North over a switch track of defendant, in the city of Nashville.

The case was tried to a jury in the first circuit court of Davidson county, and the jury found the issues in favor .of the plaintiff and assessed her damages at $3000; whereupon judgment was rendered for plaintiff and against defendant for $3000 and costs. A motion for a new trial seasonably made by defendant was overruled, and defendant thereupon prayed an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals, which was granted by the trial court and perfected by the defendant.

The defendant has tendered sixteen assignments of error in this court, all of which are grounded on matters presented to the trial judge in the motion for a new trial, and the case has been ably argued by the learned counsel for both parties at the bar and in elaborate briefs and written arguments.

The first assignment is that “the court erred in refusing to grant defendant’s motion for peremptory instructions to the jury to return a verdict for the defendant at the close of all the evidence in the case;” and the second assignment is that “there was no material evidence to support the verdict.”

The two assignments above quoted call for an examination of the record from substantially the same viewpoint. Southern Railway Co., v. Lewis & Adcock Co., 139 Tenn., 37, 44; F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Connors, 142 Tenn., 678, 688. If the first assignment of error be sustained, the plaintiff’s suit will be dismissed here. If the first assignment had been omitted, and the second assignment should be sustained, the case would be remanded to the circuit court for a new trial. This is the only practical difference in the effect of the first and second assignments of error. If there was evidence to take the case to the jury, there was evidence to support the verdict of the jury. Hence, our disposition of the first assignment, whether it be sustained or overruled, will render further consideration of the second assignment unnecessary.

*516 The plaintiff is a married woman and the mother of a large family of children. She was in her fiftieth year at-the time she suffered the injuries for which she has sued in this case, and at that time and for a number of years theretofore she lived in North Nashville, at No. 1816, 4th avenue North.

During the afternoon of February 2, 1923, plaintiff went to the home of her brother, Lee Chumley, who lived in a different and distant neighborhood, to-wit: at No. 1800' Hayes avenue, near St. Thomas Hospital in the western part of the city.

Lee Chumley was not at his home on the occasion of plaintiff’s visit above mentioned, but his wife was there, and was hostess. Plaintiff traveled on the street car when she went from her home to Lee Chumley’s residence. She remained at the Chumley home until about nine o ’clock at night. It was a very dark night and was “drizzling rain.’’ Lee Chumley owned a “Ford Sedan” which was at the Chumley home and evidently subject to the orders of Mrs. Chumley. Mrs. Chumley offered to have her son, Otto Chumley, take plaintiff (and some others) home in the Chumley car, which offer was accepted, and it was on this journey that the collision occurred which gave rise to this lawsuit.

Otto Chumley drove the car from the Chumley home to the scene of the collision. He had been driving automobiles about two and one-half years and was a competent automobile driver. In addition to Otto. Chumley, the driver, there were four persons in the automobile. Miss Sherman was on the front seat with Otto. Plaintiff and her young daughter, Eleanor, and Miss Allen were on the rear seat — -plaintiff sitting in the middle, plaintiff’s daughter on plaintiff’s left, and Miss Allen on plaintiff’s right.

After leaving- the Chumley home at the corner of Hayes street and Eighteenth avenue, the automobile proceeded north on Eighteenth avenue to 'Church street, east on Church street to Twelfth avenue, and north on Twelfth avenue to the point where Twelfth avenue crossed the aforementioned switch track of defendant, and where a box car loaded with brick was standing across Twelfth avenue in the path of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding. The automobile was driven head-on into the side of the box car. The front wheels and a part of the radiator of the automobile went under the side of the box car. The box car was not moved until the automobile and its occupants had been taken from their perilous situation, but, as a result of the collision, plaintiff was thrown forward in the automobile and her leg was broken at or near the knee — the bone being fractured in two places.

Otto Chumley, the driver, was familiar with the route he was traversing, but plaintiff was not accustomed to travel over Twelfth *517 avenue and did not know that she was in the vicinity of a railroad crossing until the collision occurred.

The track on which the box car was standing at the time of the collision was known as the “main switch lead” of the defendant, and which diverged from defendant’s main line at or near Van Blarcom Station in West Nashville, and extended eastward, across the intervening avenues, including Twelfth avenue North, to First avenue; and from this main switch lead a number of spur tracks led to industries served by the defendant. This switch lead was not a part of the defendant’s main line, and no road engines pulling passenger and freight trains were used on that track. It was used only by switch engines engaged in switching operations, and while there was a considerable volume of freight handled over that track, the proof is that “a very liberal average” of the engines crossing Twelfth avenue North at the place of the collision was six in each twenty-four hours.

Twelfth avenue North is a well-paved street, and is the main artery of travel between the western and northern portions of the city of Nashville; but the proof discloses the presence of only two vehicles on Twelfth avenue North, in the vicinity of the Tennessee Central' Railway crossing, at the time of the collision, viz: the automobile in which plaintiff was riding and an automobile driven by the witness Devaney, who had stopped a few feet north of the track to await the removal of the car which obstructed the crossing, and was standing, at that point when the car in which plaintiff was riding collided with the south side of the box car.

The box car with which the Chumley automobile collided was one of a train of about fifteen cars coupled together, which train was being moved back and forth on the main switch lead and some of the various spur tracks as a part of switching operations necessary and proper in the usual course of defendant’s business as a common carrier of freight.

In the vicinity of the Twelfth avenue crossing, t6e general direction of the switch lead was east and west.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 514, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-central-railway-co-v-schutt-tennctapp-1926.