Ward v. University of the South

354 S.W.2d 246, 209 Tenn. 412, 13 McCanless 412, 1962 Tenn. LEXIS 372
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 354 S.W.2d 246 (Ward v. University of the South) 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
Ward v. University of the South, 354 S.W.2d 246, 209 Tenn. 412, 13 McCanless 412, 1962 Tenn. LEXIS 372 (Tenn. 1962).

Opinion

Mr. Special Justice Howaru

delivered the opinion of the Court. *

In this tort action the plaintiff, as next of kin and duly appointed administrator of the estate of Gareth M. Ward, *415 sued the defendants, University of the South, three of its officials, and Skip Baker, a gunsmith, for damages for the wrongful death of Gareth M. Ward, age 23, who was killed by a bullet fired accidentally from a pistol by Dan-forth Lucien Sawyer, Jr., age 19. The accident occurred in Sawyer’s room in one of the University’s dormitories. Both were students at the University. Ward being a junior and Sawyer a sophomore at the time. Sawyer had previously purchased the pistol from Skip Baker at nearby Cowan, Tennessee. Hereafter, the University and its three officials will be referred to as the University.

Plaintiff’s declaration as amended is in two counts.

The first count alleges that Gareth M. Ward, deceased son of the plaintiff, John M. Ward, was a student at the University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee, and that he and a fellow student, Danforth Lucien Sawyer, Jr., with several other students, roomed in dormitories on the University Campus; that pursuant to the prevailing social life of the University, Ward on the night of March 18, 1959, decided to pay Sawyer a visit at the latter’s room; that upon arrival at Sawyer’s room Ward found Sawyer sitting on his bed toying with a loaded pistol which he had previously purchased from the defendant Skip Baker; that while Sawyer was negligently toying with the pistol he caused it to fire accidentally, fatally wounding Ward.

It is alleged that Sawyer, who was not made a party defendant, was negligently and recklessly handling the pistol, and that he kept it in his room in violation of the published regulations of the University.

It is further alleged that the University was negligent in not preventing students from having firearms in their *416 possession, and in failing to enforce its regulations prohibiting students from having them; that the University knew or should have known of the activities of Baker selling firearms to students at nearby Cowan, Tennessee, and should have taken necessary precautions to prevent them from purchasing firearms from him; that the foregoing acts of negligence of the University were the proximate cause of the death of Ward.

The second count of the declaration alleges that the defendant Skip Baker, of Cowan, Tennessee, was a seller of firearms in violation of the law, and that he was guilty of negligence per se by selling the pistol to Sawyer, who was a minor, in violation of T.C.A. sec. 39-4905; that Baker knew or should have known of the regulations of the University prohibiting possession of firearms by its students, and that he was negligent in not reporting to the University the sale of the pistol to Sawyer; that the aforesaid acts of negligence on the part of Baker were proximate cause of the death of young Ward.

To the declaration the University and Baker filed separate demurrers, in each of which many grounds were the same. The Circuit Judge, after writing and filing a careful opinion with citation of authority, sustained several grounds of each demurrer and dismissed the case, and plaintiff has appealed.

While plaintiff has filed’a statement of the case, brief and argument which, with exhibits, covers approximately 184 typewritten pages in which he charges error in the judgment sustaining the demurrers and dismissing the case, he has not filed an assignment of errors as required by Bule 14 (2) of the Buies of this Court. *417 Moore v. City of Memphis, et al., 184 Tenn. 92, 195 S.W.2d 623. Plaintiff’s failure to comply with, the Rules would alone justify affirmance of the judgment.

Attached to plaintiff’s brief signed by Mr. H. H. Gearinger, of the law firm of Gearinger, Banks & Hutcheson, are several exhibits which are not a part of the pleadings. These exhibits contain extraneous matters and cannot be considered. In disposing of a demurrer, the Court is governed wholly and entirely by the face of the pleading demurred to, and cannot look outside of it to information contained in brief of counsel. Jones v. Ducktown Sulphur, etc., Company, 109 Tenn. 375, 71 S.W. 821; 41 Am.Jur. Sec. 246, pp. 465, 466. Consequently, our review in the instant case being confined exclusively to the face of the declaration, the obvious attempt on the part of counsel to bolster his argument with impertinent matters is highly improper.

Also, Mr. Gearinger, on page 16 of his brief, asserts that Exhibit 8, which cannot be considered for reasons stated, and the declaration as amended “gives the lie to the Trial Judge’s conclusion that ‘The University was not acquainted with all the circumstances.’ ” (Italics ours) This disrespectful assertion impugning the motives of the Trial Judge’s ruling is not counsel’s first offense of this nature; nor is it his first attempt to rely upon impertinent matters in his brief. In Lansford v. Lansford, a divorce case decided just recently by the Eastern Section of the Court of Appeals, petition for certiorari, this day denied, counsel not only attached to his brief several exhibits containing matters never introduced in evidence, but also made several defamatory charges in his brief impugning the motives of the Chan *418 cellor, for which counsel was severely reprimanded by the Court.

Webster’s New International Dictionary, 2nd Ed., 1957, defines the word lie as “a falsehood uttered or acted for the purpose of deception; an intentional statement of an untruth designed to mislead another; anything- which misleads or deceives.” In 53 C.J.S. Lie, p. 823, it says “the word ‘lie’ means an untruth deliberately told; the uttering or acting of that which is false for the purpose of deceiving; intentional misstatement.”

Considered in the light of the foregoing authorities defining the word lie, and as the word is commonly used, there is not the slightest excuse for counsel’s scandalous and impertinent assertion. It is not only an unwarranted defamatory imputation upon the integrity of one of the most able, conscientious and impartial trial judges in the State, but a flagrant violation of all the rules of professional propriety which govern the conduct of reputable members of the bar in their relations to the courts of which they are officers and in which they are allowed to practice.

While it is entirely proper for counsel in his brief to show errors, and apply the law to them, he is not permitted to insert matters which are defamatory, scandalous, impertinent and untrue. Nor will the courts tolerate, either orally or by brief, their use as a vehicle for abuse of the trial judge, or as a forum for an unsuccessful attorney to vent his spite.

5 C.J.S. Appeal & Error sec. 1327, p. 346, 347, clearly states the law bearing on this sort of offense, supported by an abundance of authority, as follows:

*419

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Bluebook (online)
354 S.W.2d 246, 209 Tenn. 412, 13 McCanless 412, 1962 Tenn. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-university-of-the-south-tenn-1962.