White v. White

9 Tenn. App. 654, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 1, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 654 (White v. White) 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
White v. White, 9 Tenn. App. 654, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 126 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

The plaintiff, E. L. White, brought this action in the circuit court of Madison county, against E. R. White, seeking damage which it is alleged the plaintiff sustained while traveling as a passenger or an invited guest in an automobile belonging to the defendant, E. R. White, and which was being driven and operated at that time by the wife of the defendant as his agent and servant. After the suit was brought, the plaintiff, E. L. White, died from the effects and result of the injuries, and this ease has been since, and now is being prosecuted by his widow, Mrs. Pattie White on behalf of herself and her children and heirs at law of the deceased, E. L. White.

There are three counts to the declaration. The first sets out the facts relied on to show common law negligence. The second merely claims in addition that the car was running more than thirty miles an hour, the rate allowed by law. The third, that the'car' was used as a family car. This third count was practically ignored in the trial, and no exception taken in regard to it, so it may be considered as eliminated. The defendant pleaded not guilty. The case has been before the court and jury three times. There were two mistrials because the jury could not agree and on the third trial a verdict was returned in favor of the defendant, from which the plaintiff has appealed.

There is not much controversy about the facts.

In the early part of October, 1926, A. C. White had a communication to the effect that an uncle who resided in Culleoka, Maury county, Tennessee, was sick and that he wanted the said A. C. White to visit him. This fact was told to E. L. White by his brother A. C. White, and in conversation these two brothers agreed that if they had some way to go, they would pay a visit to this uncle.

After this conversation, E. L. White was at the place of business of his son, E. R. White, the defendant, and told him about the conversation with A. C. White and the communication with his relatives in Maury county, and stated to the defendant that he would like to go. The defendant then asked plaintiff why he did not go, saying that he could not carry him himself, but that he would get his wife to take them in his, defendant’s car. Then the defendant called his wife and asked her to take his automobile and go with them on the trip, and to take them wherever they wanted to go. The defendant then called Mrs. James Talbot, a daughter of A. C. White, and asked her to go with them tojwhich she agreed. The next morning, the party consisting of E. L. White, A. C. White, Mrs. E. R. White, wife of defendant, and Mrs. Talbot, departed for *656 Culleoka in Maury county in the automobile of the defendant. The automobile was a five passenger two-seated six cylinder gas propelled, high powered ear and was known under the trade name as a Buiek Sport Model. Mrs. White drove the entire trip to and from Culleoka. Mrs. Talbot occupied the front seat with the driver, and the two elderly gentlemen occupied the rear seat. This formation was maintained throughout the entire trip. The plaintiff was an old man of seventy-nine years of age and his brother was a little older than he. Neither of these knew anything about the operation of the ear; neither ever having driven one, and the plaintiff, it is shown, never rode in one to any great extent.

E. R. White did not go on the trip, but asked his wife to drive the party in his car. He was asked whether his father and uncle were to use the car as they saw fit for the purpose of making the trip, and answered “yes, they had my consent to use it as they saw fit.” “You didn’t undertake to try to control and direct the use of it at any time after it left your possession, did you?” “No, sir.”

Mrs. E. R. White was asked if Mr. E. L. White had become dissatisfied with the manner in which she was driving and asked her to relinquish the operation of the car if she would have done so, and she said she would if he had asked her to.

After the party had spent two nights and one whole day in Maury county, they started to their homes in Jackson by public road, which crosses the Tennessee at Savannah, and while they were traveling along a straight stretch of road some few miles west of Savannah, the driver observed a wagon and team, coming toward them along a long level stretch of road, driven by a man coming meeting them, and some distance in front. The team was on the opposite side of the road which was wide enough for them to pass in safety, the road being more than twenty-one feet wide at this place, and she slowed or cheeked the speed down to about eighteen or twenty miles per hour for a short distance. This was done in order to determine whether the team would frighten and when it seemed to the driver of the éar, Mrs. E. R. White, wife of defendant, thht they would not frighten, she began to accelerate her speed and by the time she had gotten to and was passing the team she was traveling at a speed of at least thirty-five miles per hour. About the time the automobile approached near the team, the mules suddenly turned, throwing the end of the tongue of the wagon toward.the side of the auto. Thereupon in order to try to prevent a collision, the driver, Mrs. White, quickly turned the automobile to the right and away from the'wagon and applied the brakes, and the automobile continued on into the ditch on the right hand side of the road, a” distance of about four ear lengths, where it stopped so suddenly *657 and with such violence that the plaintiff’s intestate was thrown violently against the side or door of the car and fractured his hip and received the injuries for which this suit is brought. The stopping of the car'was so sudden and violent as to throw A. C. White up against the top of the car.

Defendant, on each trial moved for a directed verdict at the close of the proof, preserved wayside bills of exception as to the first and second trials and now presents a,petition for 'writ of error and assigns error on the refusal by the court of said motions.

Plaintiff’s first assignment is that there is no evidence to support the verdict, but in the brief it is merely stated that this assignment will be discussed subsequently in connection with other related subjects. Therefore, we will not give the first assignment any separate consideration.

We will first consider the eighth assignment, because it involves one of the main controversies in the case. It is as follows:

“The court erred affirmatively and prejudicially against the plaintiff in the general charge as follows:
“ ‘It is contended by the defendant that the plaintiff borrowed the automobile in which to go upon a personal mission wherein the defendant had no interest; that the plaintiff being unable to drive the car, defendant asked his wife who was a competent and skilled driver to drive said car on said trip; that she did so solely for the accommodation of the plaintiff; that when he loaned said car to the plaintiff defendant resigned for the time being and while said car was being used by the plaintiff, full and entire control thereof and full and entire control of his wife in the operatibn thereof on said trip; that on said trip said car was being operated and driven for the sole accommodation and subject solely and entirely to the direction and control of the plaintiff, and while being so operated said ear was.

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Related

Wallis v. State
546 S.W.2d 244 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1976)
Myers v. State
470 S.W.2d 848 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 654, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-white-tennctapp-1929.