Woody v. Ball

5 Tenn. App. 300, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 300 (Woody v. Ball) 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
Woody v. Ball, 5 Tenn. App. 300, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This suit was brought by Nannie E. Ball, ad-_ ministratrix, against R. E. Boring and wife, Annie Boring, and Oscar Woody in 1925, to recover $10,000 as damages for personal injuries sustained By W. A. Ball, who was struck and painfully injured in September, 1925, by a motor bus being used for the transportation of school children over one of the public highways in Knox county about one mile east of the Farragut school, on the highway leading from Kingston Pike to Concord, Tennessee. It is alleged that Ball was struck by the bus while walking along the public highway when the bus was being operated by the defendant’s inexperienced servant engaged in the business of the defendant and in a negligent and careless manner without fault upon the part of Ball, and because of said injury received in this negligent manner the said Ball died. An attachment for the motor bus was issued upon the ground that it was operated in violation of the’ statute, but after the- hearing of the proof in the case the court sustained a plea to the attachment and dismissed the same. It also developed on the hearing that R. E. Boring and wife had no interest in the motor bus, or the contract for the transportation of the school children, and upon a motion the verdict was directed as to them. At the same time the court directed a verdict upon the question of the inexperience of the driver, holding that there was no proof that the driver was not experienced. It developed during the trial of the case that the defendant Oscar Woody had a contract with Knox county for the transportation of school children over a designated route on Kingston Pike, about eight miles in length, the school building being located near the center of the route. And it further appears that a man by the *302 name of Fox had a like route, running from the same school building — that is the Farragut school, leading over the road to Concord, and on the morning of the accident the driver of Woody’s bus, having delivered his children to the school building, and the man’s bus who operated the bus over the Fox route having broken down, requested the driver of the Woody bus to run the Woody bus over his route and bring in the children for him. And due to this request, without the knowledge or consent of Woody, the young driver took Woody’s bus over the Concord route, collecting the children, and upon his return, and while going down a steep hill the deceased, Ball, walked out in the road, and, probably because of the loss of his left eye, did not see the bus approaching and made a step forward and was struck by the protruding body of the bus, the wheels and fender of the front part of the bus having passed him. He was knocked unconscious, and by reason of the injury he died the following day.

The plaintiff for some reason has not sued Fox or those operating the bus line from the Farragut school building to Concord. He elected to sue the Borings and Woody. The Borings have been dismissed, and Woody defends upon the ground that his servant stepped apart from his duties and was at the time of the accident engaged in an undertaking of Fox, while the operator of Fox’s route, and not an undertaking of the master.

The case presents this sole question, but we find that there is evidence of the negligent operation of the bus, entitling the case to gó to the jury. We do not think it necessary to discuss this phase of the case, because we believe the parties rely upon the question above made as the defense to the action.

It is not contended that Woody knew of the act of his driver in taking the bus over the route of Fox, nor that it was a part of his duty to do so, but it is insisted that Woody later ratified the act of his servant, because he did not reprimand him when he learned of the accident, nor discharge him. The driver was a boy sixteen years of age. We might say here the excuse given by Woody was a reasonable one, he says the boy was in trouble because of the accident, and it would have done no good to reprimand him after the accident. He had employed the boy by an arrangement with the boy’s father, and we do not think the fact that- he retained him in his services was a ratification of the acts causing injury. So the case turns upon the question of whether -the boy at the time of the accident was acting for the master in the scope of his employment, or had stepped aside and was acting for himself, or another, in a matter beyond the scope of his authority.

This question was presented upon the motion for a directed verdict, but the learned trial judge was of the opinion that since *303 chap. 162, Acts 1921, made the fact of the proof of the ownership of the automobile, which was admitted, prima facie evidence, and raised the presumption that the said automobile was being operated and used with the authority, consent and knowledge of the owner in the very transaction out of which the injury or damage, or cause of action, arose, that the statute itself created substantive evidence, and therefore under the “any evidence rule” there was evidence that the car was being operated by the authority, knowledge and consent of the owner at the time of the accident, which evidence made a question for the jury. This question is earnestly pressed by counsel representing the plaintiff below, and it is insisted that since chap. 59, Acts 1923, provides that proof of registration of ownership of a motor propelled vehicle shall be prima facie evidence that such automobile or truck was being operated by the servant for the owner’s use and benefit, within the scope of his employment; therefore the statute goes further than creating a presumption, hut raises substantive evidence. Hence the trial judge correctly submitted the case to the jury, notwithstanding the actual proof by all the parties was that the driver of the Woody bus, without the knowledge or consent of the owner, had, at the réquest of the operator of the Fox route, gone over it for the purpose of . bringing in the children for the operator of the bus of the Fox route.

We do not think any such result was contemplated- or intended by the act of the legislature. The policy of this law, as has been defined, was to cast the burden upon the party who was best able to prove facts, these facts being generally in the possession of the defendant and not the plaintiff. When the uncontradieted facts once show the ownership in another, or that the servant was on business other than that for the master, and then by reason of the statute should the ease be submitted to the jury, in order that it might exercise its caprice and find for the plaintiff when the actual facts were all in favor of the defendant? If this were true, then if a thief stole a ear the owner could be held liable for injury done by the thief, or a person could without authority register a motor vehicle in the name of another and make the other responsible for his misdeeds, or masters might in all instances be held liable for the acts of the servant when they stepped aside from their duties and were acting beyond the scope of their authority. It might be said that juries could be depended upon to liberate defendants when the facts, were as above stated. But it is not the province of the jury to be judge of the law, and it is now held that where the facts are undisputed, it is a question for the court to apply the law. Other reasons might be given in support of the statement that the legislature did not intend by these acts to *304

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 300, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woody-v-ball-tennctapp-1927.