274 S.W.2d 821 | Tenn. Ct. App. | 1954
Appeal by Charles Jones, d/b/a Orange Mound Undertaking" Company, from a judgment of
The deceased, who was 39 years of age and employed at a salary of $300 per month with the Railway Express Company, was killed on the morning of January 14, 1953, while walking across Lamar Avenue, in Memphis, Tennessee. She was struck by an ambulance owned by the defendant, Charles Jones.
At the time of the fatal accident the ambulance was being driven by John Brown, accompanied by James Duckett, both employees of the defendant, Jones, and was enroute to John Gaston Hospital on an emergency call to pick up an unidentified woman, who was in the ambulance at the time Miss Agnew was killed.
The negligence of the driver of the ambulance, Brown, as the proximate cause of the death of the deceased is not questioned on this appeal.
The primary question presented to this Court by the several Assignments of Error is whether or not there was material evidence to support a verdict by the jury imposing liability on the defendant, Charles Jones.
The defendant, Jones, testified that Brown was employed solely to help around the undertaking establishment while going to school under the G. I. Bill of Rights to learn embalming, and to help clean up and to answer the "telephone. Jones further testified that he had given express and explicit instructions to Brown not to drive any of the vehicles belonging to the undertaking establishment. Jones also testified that he had three ambulance drivers who were licensed drivers and who were regularly employed as such, among them James Duckett, who was on duty at the time of the fatal accident.
Donald Thomas testified that he was a nephew of Charlie Jones and the Manager of the undertaking establishment,- that Brown was employed only to work around the undertaking establishment, to answer telephone calls, to clean up, and to learn embalming under the G. I. Bill of Bights; that Brown had no authority to drive any of the funeral or ambulance equipment; and that he also knew that Brown had no driver’s license and was not authorized to drive. Thomas, the General Manager, further testified that on the morning in question Duckett was in charge of the business when the emergency call came to pick up the unidentified woman, but that Duckett was hired only for the purpose of driving ambulances and had no authority to sell caskets or do anything else pertaining to the management of the business. Thomas further testified that he felt that Brown was not capable of driving an ambulance and that is the reason he did not authorize him to drive. Thomas stated that Brown had permission to sleep at the undertaking establishment, but was not required to do so.
James Duckett, the regular ambulance driver of Charles Jones, testified substantially as follows: He was 27 years old; that in January 1953 he was employed by Charlie Jones to drive ambulances, hearses, etc., for the Orange Mound Funeral Home, and that on the night of January 13, 1953, and the morning of January 14, 1953, he was on duty at the Funeral Home and was awakened and informed by Brown that there was an emergency
Other testimony indicated that the wheels of the ambulance skidded something over 100 feet and that she was knocked or carried some fifty feet down the road from the point of impact and was almost instantly killed, and that the ambulance was going at a very rapid rate of speed at the time it struck her.
.Plaintiff-in-error, Jones contends that the presumptions of agency raised by ownership or registration of a vehicle involved in an accident are rebuttable and that, in substance, the evidence conclusively shows that Brown had no authority to drive said vehicle and was not acting within the scope of his employment and authority at the time of the collision, and that, therefore, the owner, Jones, was not liable.
Our Courts have stated that the statutory presumptions of agency created by proof of registration disappear when positive evidence of the ownership and operation of said automobiles is introduced, and testimony may not be disregarded arbitrarily or capriciously, and the testimony of a witness,- who is not discredited in any of the modes recognized by law, must be accepted as true. Phillips-Buttorff Mfg. Co. v. McAlexander, 15 Tenn. App. 618, 625, 627.
However, as expressed by Judge Felts in Good v. Tennessee Coach Co., 30 Tenn. App. 575, 209 S. W. (2d) 41, 44, the enactment of Sections 2701 and 2702 did not affect the pre-existing general rule of the common law that proof of the master-servant relationship between the owner and the driver of an automobile could be made by circumstantial evidence. The general rule was announced as follows:
“* * * That common law rule was, and still is, that a prima facie case of respondeat superior, or the relation of master and servant, may be made by evidence of these circumstances: (1) that defendant was owner
Likewise, from H. G. Hill & Co. v. Squires, 25 Tenn. App. 164, 153 S. W. (2d) 425, 427, the following quotation is made with approval from the unpublished case of Pinnacles Sales Co. and Bill Renfro v. Sam Pat Thompson, Admr., Knox Law, decided January 1940, and writ of certiorari denied by the Supreme Court, to wit:
“In that case the court said: ‘The presumption of law disappears in the face of substantive evidence to the contrary, provided the evidence is not impeachable from the record, but circumstantial evidence may contradict the positive testimony and corroborate the presumption. If this were not the fact it would be impossible to convict the defendant when he was of a mind to deny proven circumstances. The inference arising from the circumstantial evidence is of higher evidential quality than a mere presumption of law; a logical and legitimate inference arising from proven circumstantial facts cannot be destroyed as a matter of law by the positive testimony of witnesses; there is then established a conflict of testimony to be determined by the jury.*434 We do not think it necessary to enter into a review of the authorities to establish this point. ’ ’ ’
In the case at Bar the defendant, Jones, admitted owning the ambulance; he admitted that Brown was regularly employed by him; and the proof is clear that at the time of the accident the ambulance was being operated under conditions resembling those which normally attended its operation in Jones’ business. We think these facts made out a prima facie case of respondeat superior and it was for the jury to decide whether or not they believed the testimony of the defendant, Jones, and his witnesses that the said Brown was driving said ambulance without authority, express or implied, from Jones and over the objections of Duckett.
In our opinion the Trial Judge properly overruled the Motion for a Directed Verdict at the close of all the proof. See also McMahan v. Tucker, 31 Tenn. App. 429, 216 S. W. (2d) 356.
The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and we think there was material evidence not only to support the verdict of the jury on the theory that the driver, Brown, had express or implied authority from the owner, defendant, Jones, to drive said ambulance at the time of the collision, but also there is material evidence to support a verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff on the theory that the ambulance driver, Duckett, was guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s intestate in that he permitted Brown to drive the ambulance when he knew he had no driver’s license and was incompetent to drive said ambulance on the streets of Memphis. See Elkin Motor Co. v. Ragland, 6 Tenn. App. 166; Greer
Assignment of Error No. 1 must be overruled.
Assignments of Error No. 2, No. 3, No. 4, No. 5, and No. 6 relate to the failure of the Trial Judge to grant several Special Requests on the trial below. We have considered these several requests, together with the charge actually given by the Trial Judge. In our opinion, the charge as given by the Court substantially covered the matters contained in these several requests and properly presented to the jury the issues to be determined. It does not affirmatively appear that the errors complained of affected the results of the trial, and said Assignments are overruled. Code Section 10654.
Also, Assignments of Error, No. 7, No. 8, No. 9, No. 10, and No. 11 insist that certain portions of the Judge’s charge were error. Prom our consideration of the charge as a whole, together with the evidence and the pleadings and the entire record, it does not affirmatively appear that the errors complained of affected the results of the trial, and they are respectfully overruled. Code Section 10654.
Assignment of Error No. 12 insists that the Trial Judge should have granted a Motion for a New Trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. It appears that Police Captain Brasher testified on direct examination that he talked with the defendant, Jones, after the accident. Jones denied that he had ever seen Captain Brasher. After the trial Captain Brasher admitted that he was probably wrong in his testimony that he had talked to Jones himself, but that he had talked to a representative of the Orange Mound Undertaking Company, probably Donald Thomas. It appears, however,
Some of the questions by the jurors to the ambulance driver, Duckett, indicate that they doubted his story that Brown was driving against his (Duckett’s) will and over his strenuous objections, and the Trial Judge, in overruling the Motion for a New Trial, indicates that he found Duckett’s testimony along this score hard to believe. From our reading of the record, we, too, think that the evidence preponderates against the testimony of Duckett on this point.
He had ample opportunity, when the ambulance stopped to pick up the patient, to take charge of the ambulance as he said he was required to do. He didn’t take charge of the ambulance, and the very thing happened which he should have anticipated if he permitted an incompetent person to drive the ambulance over the streets of Memphis; namely, that some person might be run down and killed.
It results that all Assignments of Error must be overruled, and judgment will be entered in this Court in favor of the plaintiff below against the plaintiff-in-error, Jones, for $25,000, together with interest from October 26, 1953, the date of overruling the Motion for a New Trial. The plaintiff-in-error and surety on his appeal bond will pay the costs of this appeal.