Thomas v. Williamson

431 S.W.2d 287, 58 Tenn. App. 444, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 306
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 23, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 431 S.W.2d 287 (Thomas v. Williamson) 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
Thomas v. Williamson, 431 S.W.2d 287, 58 Tenn. App. 444, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 306 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinions

SHRIVER, P.J.

This is a suit by plaintiff below, defendant-in-error bere, for damages for personal injuries received by bim wben riding as a passenger or guest on tbe rear of a motorcycle wben it collided beadon with tbe automobile owned and operated by Myra A. Tbomas, defendant below, plaintiff-in-error bere.

Tbe parties will be referred to hereinafter as plaintiff and defendant as they appeared in tbe Court below, or by name.

The case was tried before tbe Honorable Richard F. LaRoche, Special Judge, and a jury, in tbe Circuit Court of Rutherford County and resulted in a verdict and judgment of $10,000.00 in favor of plaintiff, from which defendant has appealed in error and filed assignments.

The facts are virtually undisputed, tbe question raised by tbe assignments being whether or not the Trial Judge should have directed a verdict for tbe defendant because of proximate contributory negligence of the plaintiff which bars bis recovery as a matter of law, and whether it was error for tbe Trial Judge to refuse to include in bis charge to tbe jury certain special requests of defendant.

As hereinabove stated, tbe essential facts are not in dispute and may be summarized as follows:

On September 10,1966, as is alleged in tbe declaration, plaintiff was riding as a passenger on tbe rear of a motorcycle being operated by Silas A. Haggard, Jr., and they were proceeding in a westwardly direction on Hoover’s G-ap Road in Rutherford County wben they collided with tbe automobile owned and operated by the defendant at a point about 2 miles East of State Highway No. 231.

[447]*447Plaintiff was 38 years old at the time, while the owner of the motorcycle was a yonng man 19 years old. They had been dove hunting, and about 5:00 P.M., after having milked the cows and completed some chores at plaintiff’s home, got on the motorcycle and proceeded towards the home of the Haggard boy some 4 miles away. As they drove westwardly on Hoover’s Gap Eoad they passed Jim H. Johnson and two other men, who also had been dove hunting, and waved to them, and, after proceeding around a curve in the road, they came to a stretch of road which was straight and level for about seven-tenths (7/10) of a mile. They were driving along on this straight stretch of smooth black-top road which is eighteen (18) feet wide with gravel shoulders some two feet in width on each side, when defendant, Myra A. Thomas, driving alone in her automobile and proceeding Eastwardly on said road, came around a curve and proceeded into the aforesaid straight stretch of road. She saw the motorcycle with Haggard and defendant riding on it approaching toward her on their left side of the road, in her lane of travel. Both vehicles continued in a straight line toward each other and Miss Thomas testified without contradiction that, as the motorcycle advanced toward her and continued on her side of the road, she thought at first that maybe the boys were playing a prank but continued to think that they would pull over to their side of the road. Finally, when the motorcycle was only about a car length away she cut her car to the left in an effort to avoid the collision but it was too late and the motorcycle crashed into the right front bumper and fender of her car throwing both the motorcycle riders off to their left side of the road. The driver of the motorcycle died the following morning as a result of his injuries while plaintiff sustained five broken ribs, a broken arm, a [448]*448broken leg and foot, a broken pelvic bone and a deep scalp wound, some of which injuries were permanent in nature.

Mr. Johnson, above referred to, who arrived at the scene of the accident four or five minutes after it happened, testified as to the position of the car, the motorcycle and the injured men. The car was on its left side of the road, as the defendant testified, but the debris and scuff marks on the road led from a point on defendant’s right side of the road to the point where the car was stopped after the accident.

The defendant declined to estimate how fast she was driving at the time of the accident but did say that she was continuing at the same . speed, did not apply her brakes, sound her horn, or take any other measures to .avoid the accident except that, as hereinabove stated, she pulled to her left when the motorcycle was about one car length away.

There were no eye witnesses to the accident except the defendant, inasmuch as the plaintiff testified that he was not looking and never saw the automobile before the collision.

The plaintiff testified that, as they proceeded down .the road, he was sitting behind the driver and braced himself in his position by putting his feet on some foot rests which were provided for that purpose, and, while there was no rear set on the motorcycle, he sat on the. rear between two ‘ ‘ saddle bags ’ ’ and rested his right arm on one of them. When asked if he knew which side of the road the motorcycle was traveling on he replied that he did not. He also testified that he didn’t know the position of defendant’s automobile at or before the collision because he was not looking and never saw it. When asked [449]*449what he was doing he stated: “I was fooling with the radio”. He went on to state that he had a transistor radio which he was trying to tune in and that as he held it in one hand and tried to tune it with the other, his attention was on the radio and, therefore, he did not see whether the motorcycle was on its left side or not or what caused the accident. He stated that he was thrown to his left side of the road and over against a barn. He was asked if he and the driver of the motorcycle were talking and he said that they were not, that he had said nothing at all to the driver and had not protested in any way at the way the motorcycle was being driven. In fact, “I never said a word to him.”

He did testify that he had ridden on this motorcycle with Silas Haggard a number of times before and denied • on cross-examination that Haggard had ever driven at excessive speed or recklessly so far as he knew.

From the foregoing facts was it the duty of the Trial-Judge to direct a verdict for the defendant as is insisted by plaintiff-in-error here?

The assignments do not raise the question of proximate negligence, if any, on the part of the defendant Miss Thomas. Under the first assignment, it is insisted that plaintiff, by his own testimony, is shown to have been guilty of such proximate contributory negligence, as a matter of law, that his recovery is barred, and this confronts us with a very close and difficult question.

"We start with the rule which has been stated and restated in numerous cases by this Court and the Supreme Court, and which is so well stated in the case of Poole v. First Nat. Bank of Smyrna, 29 Tenn.App. 327, [450]*450196 S.W.2d 563, in an opinion written by Judge Felts. In that case it was said that the Trial Judge and the Appellate Courts on review are required, in determining a motion for a directed verdict, to look to all the evidence, to take the strongest legitimate view in favor of the opponent of the motion, to allow all reasonable inferences from it in his favor, and to discard all countervailing evidence, and, if then, there is any dispute as to any material determinative evidence, or any doubt as to the conclusion to be drawn from whole evidence, the motion must be denied.

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Related

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55 F.R.D. 190 (E.D. Tennessee, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
431 S.W.2d 287, 58 Tenn. App. 444, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-williamson-tennctapp-1968.