Young v. Gregory Bus Line

1 Tenn. App. 282, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 282 (Young v. Gregory Bus Line) 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
Young v. Gregory Bus Line, 1 Tenn. App. 282, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 45 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

Mrs. George Young, the plaintiff below, has appealed from a judgment rendered against her for costs in the eireuit court of Shelby county.

She instituted a suit against the defendant, a corporation, alleging that she was injured while a passenger on one of' defendant’s busses *283 in Memphis, Tennessee, and that the defendant was guilty of negligence in that when the plaintiff was about to alight at her place of destination in the city of Memphis, the chauffeur on said bus •suddenly started the same forward, throwing the plaintiff violently to the concrete pavement or street, and injuring her knee and •other parts of her person and that she sustained serious injuries •and suffered great mental pain and. anguish. The defendant filed pleas of not guilty and contributory negligence.

The cause was submitted to a jury in Judge Ben L. Capell’s division. After the examination of witnesses, argument of counsel and charge of the court, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff seasonably filed her motion for new trial, which was overruled and disallowed, prayed and was granted an appeal to this court, perfected the same, and has had signed and filed a proper bill of exceptions. In this court she assigns the following errors:

“First: The trial court erred in declining to instruct the jury that Mrs. George Young was the witness of defendant, by reason of the fact that on December 10, 1924, eight or nine days before the trial of the case, defendant formally took the deposition of this witness, and failed or declined to either introduce same or offer said witness on behalf of defendant, after plaintiff had brought her into court by subpoena.

“Second: The court erred in allowing, over plaintiff’s objection, defendant to contradict Mrs. Young (properly its witness), and especially as to the bus being that of the defendant, Gregory Bus Line.

“Third: The court erred in refusing to give to the jury the following special instructions, offered on behalf of plaintiff: ‘The court, instructs you, gentlemen of the jury, that on December 10, 1924, eight days before the trial of this cause, that defendant took the deposition of Mrs. George Young, as a witness in the case; and that on the trial of this cause, defendant offered neither the deposition in the evidence nor placed witness on the stand in its behalf, and that by reason of the fact that the defendant took said witness’ deposition before the trial of this cause, said defendant thereby made her its witness, and was, and is, bound by all that she testified to on the witness stand; and the jury is hereby instructed to disregard all testimony given by defendant’s witnesses in contradiction of the testimony of the plaintiff, Mrs. George Young.

“ ‘In other words, all testimony to the effect tha't the bus in which plaintiff took passage, and from which she attempted to alight when she was injured, tending to show that it was not a Gregory Bus Line bus, will be disregarded by the jury. Said witness testified that the bus in which she was riding, was a Gregory *284 Bus Line bus, and defendant cannot contradict this by the other witnesses in its behalf, introduced for this purpose. Defendant is bound by the testimony of Mrs. George Young, and defendant cannot attack her evidence’ as her testimony is to be taken as true against defendant.’ ' '

“Fourth: The court erred in not including in his general charge to the jury, instructions to the effect that Mrs. George Young was a witness of defendant, and it was bound by her testimony, because of the fact that it had previously, on the ,10th day of December, 1924, taken her deposition.

‘ ‘ Fifth: The verdict of the jury was contrary to the law and the evidence and, in view of the testimony in the case, was the result of prejudice and caprice on the part of the jury.”

Thus it will be seen there is no assignment that there is no material evidence to sustain the judgment of the lower court.

Mrs. Young testified that she was out near Raleigh Tennessee, some seven or eight miles from Memphis looking at some suburban property, and a bus operated by the defendant company came along and she and her sister boarded the same and rode into the city of Memphis, and alighted about the corner of Washington and Front Streets, and that she received the injury as heretofore - stated, and alleged in the declaration; that she was riding on a certain bus which she described and it had the name of the Gregory Bus on the windshield. She testified that the driver of the bus, soon after she became a passenger, told her that every day he went by Cheerfield Farm. She informed the chauffeur that she would take passage some day and go to Cheerfield Farm; which is in the locality of Raleigh, a village in Shelby county, Tennessee. Cheer-field Farm, being placed from three-quarters to a mile and a half' from the main road, running from the city of Memphis to the village of Rosemark which is near Bolton College in Shelby county. It appears that the defendant operates fifty-two busses out of Memphis through Northern Mississippi, Eastern Ai'kansas and at various points in Shelby county. In July, 1924, at the time of the accident complained of, the defendant operated two busses and a sedan ’ automobile from- Memphis to Rosemark. These two busses were known in the record as busses Nos. 24 and 26. They were different in makeup and color to the bus described by the plaintiff and her sister. They did not pass in their route from Memphis to Rosemark by Cheerfield Farm. Two other lines of busses, one owned by Collum and one by Baker, operated a bus similar to the one described by the plaintiff, and that bus passed by Cheerfield Farm. One of defendant’s busses was brought near the Court House at the time of the trial, and known as bus No. 27. It was shown to be an exact duplicate of bus 24 and bus 26, but these busses were *285 out making their trips at the time of the trial and bus 27 had just come in an$ the president and chief operator of the defendant company had bus 27 brought to the Court House, and by consent of all the parties the court and jury viewed and examined said bus. The defendant further proved by the three drivers, men who were operating the busses along the Rosemark route, on July 9, 1924, the day of the accident that no, accident happened with any of their passengers on that day, and none of these drivers recall having the plaintiff as a passenger on the day she alleged she was 'injured. The proof shows that whenever an accident happened a report was made on the same day. These drivers, or chauffeurs, were in the employ of the defendant during the summer of 1924. C. E. Osborn and William Osborn, brothers, operated the two busses, ad.E. T. Watkins the s’edan automobile for the defendant, from Memphis to Rosemark. So, it appears that the jury was warranted in finding that the plaintiff had made a mistake as to whose bus she was an occupant on the day of the injury. She testified that it was the first time she ever rode in a bus.

The appeal is based upon the alleged error of the court in regard to whether or not Mrs. Young’ was a witness for* the defendant or was a witness in her own behalf. It appears that the defendant took the deposition of the plaintiff a few days before the trial, and it is insisted through the first four assignments of error that, by reason of the defendant taking the deposition of Mrs.

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11 Tenn. App. 129 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 282, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-gregory-bus-line-tennctapp-1925.