Wilson v. Gadd

13 Tenn. App. 6, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 17, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 6 (Wilson v. Gadd) 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
Wilson v. Gadd, 13 Tenn. App. 6, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 122 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

This cause was before this court on appeal by the defendant below, I. B. Wilson at a former term of this court and the cause was reversed by this court in an opinion .delivered by Mr. Justice Heiskell, which opinion was filed at the January term, 1927 of this court. The cause was reversed, assignments of error as to the court’s charge being sustained and the cause was remanded to the Circuit Court of Shelby county for a new trial. Petitions for certiorari were filed by both parties. The Supreme Court on June 10, 1927, denied both petitions. A petition for a re-hearing was denied by the Supreme Court June 27, 1927.

Upon the second trial there was a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $1000. The defendant entered a motion for a new trial which was overruled. He has appealed and assigned nineteen errors. These errors will be grouped in four groups.

Assignments 1 and 2 go to the question that there is no material evidence to support the verdict; there should have been a directed verdict for the defendant.

Assignment No. 3 raises the question of the preponderance of the evidence being in favor of the defendant. This assignment is overruled because this court does not weigh the evidence upon ap *8 peal from a jury’s verdict to ascertain who has the weight or preponderance in the trial below.

Group No. 2 is comprised of assignments No. 4 to No. 7 inclusive. These assignments all complain of certain evidence admitted over defendant’s objection.

Group No. 3 is comprised of assignments 8, 9 and 10, which complain as to certain excerpts in the court’s charge hereafter referred to as being errors.

Group No. 4 is composed of assignments 11 to 18 inclusive. These complain of nine special requests offered by the defendant which were refused to be charged by the trial judge.

The 19th assignment of error complains of the verdict being-excessive.

This court’s opinion in the former case is reported in Yol. 4, Court of Appeals, page 582. At the second trial which is now being considered upon this appeal, the facts were practically identical with the facts established at the former trial and we quote from said opinion, which is a part of the present transcript, as follows:

This was an action for an alleged slander. It was originally brought against I. B. Wilson and C. G. Dean, as individuals and as partners, trading as the Quality Laundry; but upon motion at the close of the plaintiff’s proof it was dismissed as to C. G. Dean, as an individual.

And at the close of all the proof, after motion had been made, a voluntary non-suit was taken as to the partnership. The suit thereafter remained against I. B. Wilson, as an individual.

The declaration alleged that the plaintiff in error, Wilson, said of and concerning the defendant in error that “one of the drivers of the Success Laundry, Inc., of Memphis, Tennessee had taken a bundle of laundry off a truck belonging to the Quality Laundry in the alley back of the old Hill home, and that the driver’s name was Gadd. ” The declaration also alleged that the meaning of said language used by Wilson was that defendant had stolen said bundle of laundry and was guilty of larceny.

To this declaration there was filed a plea of not guilty.

There was a trial by a jury and a verdict for the plaintiff below for the sum of $3500.

It is undisputed in the record that one Hamilton was the driver of a laundry truck belonging to the Quality Laundry, of which I. B. Wilson, the- nlaintiff in error, was one of the owners. On October 5, 1925, Hamilton drove his truck into an alley back of what is or was known in Memphis as the old Hill home, located on Madison Avenue just east of Third Street.

In this alley, at the time Hamilton drove in and stopped, were *9 a wagon and two horse team, with no driver, and the Success Laundry truck, of which Gadd, the defendant in error, was the driver, who, at the time, was just entering the same or some nearby house a little ahead of Hamilton, both drivers being in the vicinity to collect laundry.

Hamilton, the driver of the Quality Laundry truck, remained in the house to which he had gone some ten or fifteen minutes.

When he came back to his truck, Gadd and his truck, and the team and wagon had left, and a bundle of laundry which Hamilton had left on the fender of his truck was also gone.

Thereupon Hamilton went immediately to a telephone, called up Wilson at the Quality Laundry and reported the facts to him as stated above, except Wilson was not advised at that time that Gadd was the driver of the Success Laundry truck. This information was given to Wilson when Hamilton reached the laundry shortly afterwards.

Wilson, from the Quality Laundry, called for Mr. Harrison, owner of the Success Laundry, but Harrison was not in.

Shortly after Hamilton had reached the Quality Laundry, Mr. Harrison, at the Success Laundry, answered Mr. Wilson’s previous call, and there was a conversation between the two — Harrison and Wilson — about the disappearance of the bundle of laundry. Tt was out of this conversation that this lawsuit grows.

It is shown, by Mr. Harrison himself, that the best of feeliu'" and fellowship existed between him and Mr. Wilson, and the two laundries worked in harmony with each other when either needed the assistance of the other.

It is further shown that laundry was at that time, taken by tlm wrong laundry driver, and sometimes it was intentionally done, and that there was nothing unusual in the interested parties looking into it.

Up to this point there seems to be no controversy about any fact stated.

There is a conflict, however, between Harrison, who testified the plaintiff below, and Wilson, the defendant below, as to th^ language, used by Wilson over the telephone.

Mr. Harrison substantially supports the allegation of the declaration as to what was said.

Wilson, on the other hand, says he did not say what Harrison savs he did; that he did not charge or intend to charge that Gadrl had stolen the laundry, but “related the circumstances of the trucV and Avagon being in the alley, and the bundle of laundry being gone, and told him it was Gadd’s truck that Avas in the alley, and a.sked him to look and see Avhen Gadd came in if he got the laundry, or if he could find out anything about it.

*10 We held on the former appeal that the cause should have been submitted to a jury. This court also held that it was necessary for the plaintiff to allege in his declaration, special damages to support a charge where the words used were not slanderous per se.

The Supreme Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Cook, in a memorandum opinion filed June 14, 1927, in a petition for cer-tiorari, said:

“We do not concur in the conclusion that the innuendo or inducement used to characterize words of double meaning as defamatory destroys the character of the imputation if the words used reasonably convey an accusation of an infamous offense. Newell, Slander & Libel, 769.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 6, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-gadd-tennctapp-1930.