"{\"id\": \"8531658\", \"name\": \"McClellan v. Tennessee Electric Power Co.\", \"name_abbreviation\": \"McClellan v. Tennessee Electric Power Co.\", \"decision_date\": \"1938-11-25\", \"docket_number\": \"\", \"first_page\": \"58\", \"last_page\": \"64\", \"citations\": \"174 Tenn. 58\", \"volume\": \"174\", \"reporter\": \"Tennessee Reports\", \"court\": \"Tennessee Supreme Court\", \"jurisdiction\": \"Tennessee\", \"last_updated\": \"2021-08-10T22:19:35.884272+00:00\", \"provenance\": \"CAP\", \"judges\": \"\", \"parties\": \"McClellan v. Tennessee Electric Power Co.\", \"head_matter\": \"McClellan v. Tennessee Electric Power Co.\\n(Knoxville,\\nSeptember Term, 1938.)\\nOpinion filed November 25, 1938.\\nRehearing denied January 21, 1939.\\nWilkerson & WilkersoN, of Chattanooga, for plaintiff in error.\\nBrown & Spurlock, of Chattanooga, for defendant in error.\\nThis case reprinted and annotated in 120 A. L. R. 928.\", \"word_count\": \"1497\", \"char_count\": \"8602\", \"text\": \"Mr. Chief Justice Creen\\ndelivered the opinion of the Court.\\nThis is a suit for damages to recover for injuries sustained by the plaintiff while riding as a passenger on a bus of the defendant. The case was tried on a stipulation of facts and the trial judge rendered a judgment for defendant, from which the plaintiff appealed in error to this court.\\nBriefly stated, the facts are that this bus was being operated by defendant as a common carrier and that plaintiff was a passenger thereon. During the progress of the trip, the motorman lost consciousness and consequently lost control of the vehicle. The bus ran out of the highway into a pole on the side of the street, and the shock of this collision threw plaintiff out of his seat on to the aisle and floor. He sustained somewhat painfnl injuries for which, he sues.\\nIt is agreed that this particular motorman never suffered an attack of this sort before, that previous to the accident and thereafter he passed physical examinations and nothing wrong was found with him. That he had been in the employ of the defendant for some time, and that an examination after the accident disclosing him to be in good physical condition and indicating that his fainting was caused by some temporary condition, he was retained in the defendant's service. The stipulation of facts contains nothing pointing to negligence of the defendant in employing this motorman or retaining him in its service prior to the accident.\\nUnder these circumstances, the defendant insists that it exercised due care in the selection \\u00f3f the operator of this bus, that it had no reason to anticipate that the operator would suffer such an attack and in short that there is nothing to convict the defendant of the slightest negligence.\\nThis case has been submitted by counsel for the parties as though it was a simple case in tort. The case, however, is one by a passenger against a carrier for breach of contract of carriage. Under- a number of previous decisions, we think the trial judge reached the wrong conclusion.\\nIn Pullman Palace Car Company v. Gavin, 93 Tenn., 53, 23 S. W., 70, 21 L. R. A., 298, 42 Am. St. Rep., 902, the court adopted the following from Wood on Master and Servant, Section 321:\\n\\\"In that class of cases where the master owes certain duties, either to third persons or the public, whether the same arise from contract or statutory obligations, a dif ferent rule of liability exists from that which prevails when the liability sonnds entirely in tort. When, by contract or statute, the master is bound to do certain thing's, if he intrusts the performance of that duty to another he becomes absolutely responsible for the manner in which the duty is performed, precisely the same as though he himself had performed it, and that without any reference do the question whether the servant was authorized to do the particular act. Where the master, by contract or operation of law, is bound to do certain acts, he cannot excuse himself from liability upon the ground that he has committed that duty to another, and that he never authorized such person to do the particular act. Being bound to do the act, if he does it by another he is treated as having done it himself; and the fact that his servant or agent acted contrary to his instructions, without his consent, or even fraudulently, will not excuse him.\\\" [page 57.]\\nThe case before us seems to fall directly under the authority of Knoxville Traction Company v. Lane, 103 Tenn., 376, 53 S. W., 557, 46 L. R. A., 549. In that case a female passenger on a street car was wantonly approached and insulted by a motorman who at the time was drunk. Proof for the company showed that the motorman had not been drunk before and that the company was not guilty of any negligence in employing him or retaining him in its service. ' Not being guilty of any such negligence, it was argued that the Traction Company did not in any sense authorize the injury complained of and did not ratify wrongs perpetrated by its servant and therefore could not be held liable for his unlawful act. Among other things, this court said [page 383]:\\n\\\"The contract to carry passeng'ers is not one of mere toleration and dnty to transport the passenger on its cars, bnt it also includes the obligation on the part of the carrier to guarantee to its passengers respectful and courteous treatment, and to protect them, not only from violence and insults from strangers, but also against violence and insults from the carrier's own servants.\\\"\\nIn Knoxville Traction Co. v. Lane the court approved the language quoted above from Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Gavin, supra. The quotation just made from Knoxville Traction Co. v. Lane is reproduced and approved in Memphis Street Railway Co. v. Shaw, 110 Tenn., 467, 75 S. W., 713, and Neville v. Southern Railroad Co., 126 Tenn., 96, 146 S. W., 846, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.), 995.\\nIf the obligation of a carrier to its passenger is such as to make it liable for a willful injury inflicted by its servant upon the passenger, such an obligation must also carry liability for an unconscious injury inflicted by the carrier's servant upon the passenger. A willful act and an insensible act of the servant are alike beyond any implied authority of the master in the prosecution of his business. See Hunt-Berlin Coal Co. v. Paton, 139 Tenn., 611, 202 S. W., 935. The same reasons which have induced this court to hold a carrier liable for wilful torts of its servants require the conclusion that the carrier is liable for the insensible acts or omissions of its servants when such an act or omission is a breach of the contract of transportation. The master himself would be liable for such a breach.\\nViewing the case as one in contract, we do not have occasion to consider the liability of the master for a simple tort of his servant committed during a period of unanticipated unconsciousness or mental aberration.\\nIn a note to Neville v. Southern Railroad Co., supra, as reported in 40 L. R. A. (N. S.), 995, many cases are collected in accord. See also, 10 C. J., 888. The rationale of onr decisions which we follow herein is that the carrier as part of its contract of transportation must protect the passenger from all tortious acts of its employees and that for a breach of this contract, however occasioned, a passenger may recover. Commenting on decisions of this and other courts above referred to, it is said, 10 C. J., 889, \\\"While the carrier cannot be.regarded as an insurer of the safety of the passenger in all events, under this doctrine it may be regarded as insuring that the passenger will not be injured through the negligent or willful acts of its employees while engaged in performing a duty which the carrier owes to the passenger.\\\"\\nIt was stipulated between the parties plaintiff should have recovery for $300 if he was successful in this suit. Judgment for that sum is accordingly entered here, with costs.\"}"