Wilkerson v. the Joyce-Watkins Co.

5 Tenn. App. 356, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 356 (Wilkerson v. the Joyce-Watkins Co.) 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
Wilkerson v. the Joyce-Watkins Co., 5 Tenn. App. 356, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The defendants below, Tom and Frank Wilkerson, have appealed from a judgment rendered against them for $1,000 in favor of the Joyce-Watkins Company, a corporation, and hereinafter called the plaintiff, which judgment was rendered by the Circuit Judge holding the circuit court of Hardin county, without the intervention of a jury. The suit was begun by summons and a declaration was filed containing four counts. It was alleged that the plaintiff owned a large body of timbered lands in Hardin county —1384 acres — and that the defendants knowingly, intentionally, negligently and wilfully set out fire on the plaintiff’s premises, or near the same so that the fire spread to its lands, and the defendants negligently permitted the fire to reach the lands of plaintiff, and said fire burned over four or five hundred acres of said lands of plaintiff, damaging the timber thereon, to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $2500. The plaintiff did not, in its declaration, call for a jury. Defendants filed a plea of not guilty, and neither did they demand a jury. It appears that the defendants are father and son — Tom Wilkerson being the father of the defendant Frank Wilkerson.

The cause was heard before the Circuit Judge on the 15th of November, 1926. After the judgment was rendered some three days after the trial begun, the defendants filed a motion for new trial, which was heard and overruled, and they prayed and were granted an appeal to this court, and have assigned six errors.

The sixth error is that the court erred in failing to sustain the motion for new trial. This assignment is overruled because it is too general, the assignment of error must state some specific error relied on. Madison Land & Loan Co. v. F. H. Hammond et al., Vol. 2, App. Rep., 423.

By the first and second assignments of error it is insisted that the court was in error in not allowing the defendants a trial by jury.

The third and fourth assignments of error insist that there is no material evidence to support the findings of the court as to any liability, but if there is a legal liability against the defendants there is no evidence to support the amount of such liability as found by the court.

The fifth assignment claims that the court, erred in not granting a new trial because of newly-discovered evidence obtained after the trial in the circuit court.

As to the first and second assignments of error we quote from the record, as follows:

*358 ‘'Plaintiff announced ready for trial; thereupon TI. P. Wood, one of the attorneys appearing for the defendants in the absence of Edwin DeFord, one of the attorneys of record for defendants, the said IT. P. Wood being the .only attorney present, and appearing for defendants at the time, announced that defendants were ready for trial. Thereupon the witnesses were called and sworn and the rule being called for were sent out. The said Edwin DeFord, one of the attorneys of record for defendants, and who was acting for the day as attorney-general pro tem, and was in the grand jury room at this time working with the grand jury, in the building, but not in the circuit court room, was called, at the request of the said H. P. Wood, and immediately appeared in court; after a brief conference held by H. P. Wood and Edwin DeFord, sole attorneys for defendants, said attorneys then moved the court to allow them to amend their plea so as to ask for a jury to try the issues in the case and said motion was disallowed and overruled by the court. ’ ’

It appears that the summons in the instant case was issued June 10, 1926. The declaration was filed July 14, 1926, and the plea of the defendants was filed July 15, 1926. The declaration and the plea were both filed during the regular July term of the circuit court of ITardin county. The case was at issue and ready for trial at the regular November term, 1926.

The first assignment of error is controlled by Shannon’s Code, sections 4611, 4612 and 4613, being chapter 4 of Acts of 1875 and chapter 22 of Acts of 1889.

The Acts of 1875, chapter 4, section 1, provides that either party in any original civil suit, desiring a jury, shall demand the same in his first pleading tendering an issue triable by jury, and in all other suits the demand must be made within the first three days of the trial term. If no such demand is made in the first pleadings tendering an issue, in an original suit, it is made the duty of the clerk to place the cause on the docket to be styled the “non-jury docket,” and a failure to demand a jury as provided by' the a'ct shall be deemed and held conclusively an agreement of the parties to submit all issues and questions of fact to the decision of the judge without a jury.

The second section of the a'ct provides for the keeping of two trial dockets, one to be styled “non-jury docket,” and the other “jury docket.” However, the Supreme Court has expressly held, that the failure of the clerk to keep such dockets in no way affects the mandatory provisions of the act as to the demand for a jury.

The Act of 1875 was amended by chapter 220 of the Acts of 1889, and the only amendment to the original act is, to provide that in all suits, either party - desiring a trial by jury must call for the *359 same on the first day. of any term at which the suit stands for trial, and have an entry made on the trial docket that he calls for a jury, and unless such demand is made, and entry thereof on the trial docket, it shall be the dirty of the court to try the case without a jury.

This amendatory act has been construed by the court in several eases, and it was held that a demand made in the pleadings was sufficient. However, the provision of the original act, that unless a demand was ma'de in accordance with the directions of the act, the right to a trial by jury was conclusively waived.

In Garrison v. Hollins Burton & Co., 2 Lea, 684, the Act of 1875 was held constitutional.

In Railroad v. Scales, 2 Lea, 688, it was held that the amendment could be made at the issue term.

In Travis v. Railroad, 9 Lea, 231, it was held that, upon failure to demand a jury in the pleadings an amendment would not be allowed so as to make such demand, at a term subsequent to the issue term.

It was held, in Railroad v. Foster, 10 Lea, 351, that, where the pleadings did not demand a jury a trial nevertheless before a jury, new trial granted, amended declaration filed without demand for jury, then another trial before a jury over the objection of the defendant, the fact that there had been one trial by jury did not authorize the second trial by jury, and the defendant was not estopped to object to the jury. It was upon the error of the court in allowing the trial by jury that the case was reversed.

In Railroad v. Martin, 85 Tenn., 134, it was held that the demand for a jury trial, under the Act of 1875, must be made to the court and not the clerk, in cases other than original suits.

In Gleaves v. Davison, 85 Tenn., 380, the court held that the ordinary conclusion to the country, in a plea, was not a sufficient demand for a jury under the Act of 1875, but that the plea must go further, and in terms make the demand for a jury if the pleader desired the issues tendered to be .tried by a jury.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 356, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkerson-v-the-joyce-watkins-co-tennctapp-1927.