204 S.W.2d 535 | Tenn. Ct. App. | 1947
This is a damage suit growing out of the death of J.D. Quarles, the husband of the plaintiff, administratrix, against the defendants, who are the owners and drivers of two automobile trucks.
At the close of all the proof the trial Judge granted a motion of the defendants for a directed verdict in their favor and plaintiff has appealed in error to this Court and assigned errors.
The record discloses that on December 31, 1945, the deceased ran into the back of a truck belonging to the defendant Gregg, which truck was stopped on U.S. Highway 41 about one mile East of Jasper, Tennessee, on a stretch of the highway that was perfectly straight, about ten o'clock at night. The deceased was driving at a high rate of speed and had two men on the front seat of his car with him, an officer was standing on the highway waving a flashlight, a flare was placed on the highway and was burning and the deceased, without slowing down, ran his car by the officer, knocked the flare off the road and hit the back end of the truck.
On the night of the accident a truck belonging to the defendant Scott and driven by the defendant Anderson had been stopped on the highway by two officers of the law and the driver requested to pull a car that had run into a ditch back on the road. He did this and before this truck was moved from where it had stopped another car ran into it from the front and the bumpers of the two cars were entangled. Flares were properly placed and the Gregg truck came up behind the Scott truck and stopped. Proper lights were burning on both trucks. There was no obstruction, and nothing to keep the deceased from seeing these trucks. There was evidence that the deceased had been drinking intoxicating liquor and a whiskey bottle was found in his car. *218
From a thorough examination and careful consideration of all the testimony we can reach but one conclusion: There was no excuse for the deceased running his car into the back of the Gregg truck. There was ample room to pass the trucks on the left side of the highway had he seen them, but deceased, driving very fast, ignored the flares and the officer waving his flashlight and ran head on into the back of the Gregg truck. Only one conclusion can be drawn by reasonable minds and that is that the proximate cause of the accident was the gross negligence of the deceased and that his negligence was such that plaintiff cannot recover. We see no extenuating circumstance in this case that would take it out of the rule in the case of West Construction Co. v. White,
"It was negligence for the driver of the automobile to propel it in a dark place in which he had to rely on the lights of his machine at a rate faster than enabled him to stop or avoid any obstruction within the radius of his light, or within the distance to which his lights would disclose the existence of obstructions. Lauson v. Town of Fon du Lac,
In the case of Knoxville Ry. Light Co. v. Vangilder,
"It is insisted on behalf of defendants in error that they were excused from the rule established by this court in the case of West Construction Company v. White,
"We see no distinction that can be drawn in this case differentiating it from the case of West Construction Co. v. White. The fact that the bright light from the large automobile was shining in the face of Vangilder, and that he was turning a curve where his own light did not shine directly in the way his machine was going around the curve, was a greater reason that he should have stopped or slowed up his machine, so as to avoid running into a place of danger."
These cases were cited with approval by this Court in the case of Harris v. Hendrixson,
"Under the undisputed facts of this case we think the proximate cause of this accident was the failure of the plaintiff, driving a one seated car with three other people, two of them girls, on the seat with him, at a speed of 40 miles per hour, in not slowing up or turning to the left in order to pass the defendant's car, which he, the plaintiff, says was going slowly on the right side of the road, with nothing whatever to keep him from passing except his own speed. He says he didn't think he had time to pull around the defendant's car, when he admits he saw it from a point 567 feet away." *220
We find no negligence on the part of any of the defendants. They did everything that reasonably could be done to avoid an accident. The plaintiff's intestate was guilty of such contributory negligence as bars a recovery and the trial Court did not err in granting the motion for a directed verdict for the defendants.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment of the Circuit Court affirmed and the suit dismissed at the costs of plaintiff and her surety.
Affirmed.
Felts and Hickerson, JJ., concur. *221