194 S.W.2d 241 | Tenn. | 1946
(1, 2) In its petition to rehear, the railroad complains, first, that by denying the petition for certiorari without *528
a written memorandum, this Court failed to comply with Section 9924 of the Code. This case is not "determined" by this Court, but by the court of appeals, so that section of the Code has no application. Since passage of Chapter 100 of the Acts of 1925, practice by this Court of denying petitions for certiorari to the court of appeals without memorandum has been long established and frequently approved. Beard v. Beard,
We think this case presents no more than factual questions of negligence and contributory negligence upon which there has been a concurrence by the jury, the trial judge and the court of appeals. No rule is more firmly established in Tennessee than that such concurrence, if supported by material evidence, is binding on this Court.
In the declaration it was alleged that defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to maintain the crossing in accord with the duty laid upon it by secs. 2657-2660 of the Code. These sections apply to all "public road *529
[crossings]," and impose a duty wholly separate from and independent of duties imposed at "designated crossings" under Section 2628 of the Code. It is, therefore, immaterial to the result whether the railroad was also guilty of neglect of its duties under Section 2628, since we find that the verdict of the jury, so far as negligence of the railroad is concerned, is supported by abundant evidence that the railroad was guilty of negligence under Sections 2657-2660 of the Code. TennesseeCentral R. Co. v. Umenstetter,
The proposition in the petition to rehear that the plaintiff's intestate was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, is equally untenable. Declaration by the Court that Powers was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, would only be justified if the actions or conduct of Powers, immediately prior to the accident, was made clear in the record by undisputed evidence from which all reasonable minds would be forced to conclude that such actions or conduct constituted proximate contributory negligene. Philip Carey Roofing Mfg.Co. v. Black,
Though we sympathize with the insistence of learned counsel whose able arguments have fallen on deaf ears in the trial court and in the court of appeals, in their iteration of those arguments here, we find no reason to justify modification of our order denying the writ of certiorari, and we feel that the petition for rehearing must also be denied. *531