Linda Kindred v. Evelyn Townsend ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                         12/07/2022
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    November 17, 2022 Session
    LINDA KINDRED ET AL. v. EVELYN TOWNSEND ET AL.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County
    No. CT-002413-16 Valerie L Smith, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. W2021-01481-COA-R3-CV
    ___________________________________
    This negligence action arises from the collision of Plaintiff/Appellee’s Mercedes
    convertible with a tractor-trailer operated by Defendant/Appellant in the scope of her
    employment. The trial court determined that Appellant was more than 50 percent at fault
    for the accident and apportioned 75 percent fault to Appellant and 25 percent fault to
    Plaintiff/Appellee. The trial court also determined that Defendant/Appellant employer was
    vicariously liable for the damages awarded. Discerning no error, we affirm the judgment
    of the trial court.
    Tenn. R. App. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
    Affirmed and Remanded
    KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD,
    P.J., W.S., and ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., joined.
    R. Scott McCullough and Richard Sorin, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellants,
    Perimeter Transportation Co., LLC, and Evelyn Townsend.
    Brandon L. Flechas and Philip A. Stroud, Southhaven, Mississippi, for the appellees, Linda
    Kindred and Derrick Kindred.
    OPINION
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The morning of July 29, 2015, was dry and clear as Plaintiff/Appellee Linda
    Kindred (“Ms. Kindred”) traveled westbound in the center lane of Holmes Road in
    Memphis, Tennessee, and Defendant/Appellant Evelyn Townsend (“Ms. Townsend”)
    traveled eastbound on the same road. Ms. Kindred was operating a Mercedes convertible
    with the top down; Ms. Townsend was operating a fully-loaded, 73-foot tractor-trailer in
    the scope of her employment with Defendant/Appellant Perimeter Transportation Co., LLC
    (“Perimeter,” and together with Ms. Townsend, “Appellants”). Shortly after 7:00 a.m., the
    vehicles collided at the intersection of Holmes Road and Hickory Hill Road (“Hickory
    Hill”) as Ms. Townsend turned left/north to proceed through the intersection toward
    Hickory Hill.
    On June 13, 2016, Ms. Kindred and her husband, Derrick Kindred (“Mr. Kindred,”
    and together with Linda Kindred, the “Kindreds” or “Appellees”), filed suit against
    Appellants in the Circuit Court for Shelby County (“trial court”). In January 2019, the trial
    court granted the Kindreds’ motion to amend their complaint, and they filed an amended
    complaint on January 25, 2019. In their amended complaint, the Kindreds asserted a
    negligence cause of action against Ms. Townsend and a claim for negligent training and
    supervision against Perimeter. They also asserted a claim of vicarious liability against
    Perimeter under the doctrine of respondeat superior. Ms. Kindred prayed for
    compensatory and consequential damages in the amount of $5,000,000.00, post-judgment
    interest, attorney’s fees, and costs. Mr. Kindred prayed for loss of consortium damages in
    the amount of $2,000,000.00, post-judgment interest, attorney’s fees, and costs. The
    Kindreds also prayed for the matter to be tried by a jury.
    Appellants filed their answer on February 11, 2019. Appellants generally denied all
    allegations of negligence. They asserted that Ms. Kindred was negligent in the operation
    of her vehicle; that Ms. Kindred was negligent per se because she violated Memphis
    ordinances 24-116 and 24-117; and that Ms. Kindred’s negligence was the proximate cause
    of any injuries. Appellants also asserted the doctrine of comparative fault against Ms.
    Kindred and prayed for a trial by jury.
    Following discovery and a failed attempt at mediation in May 2019, the case was
    set to be heard by a jury in April 2020. In March 2020, the parties filed numerous motions
    in limine to limit or exclude testimony, statements, or depositions of multiple witnesses.1
    1
    As an initial matter, we note that, although the parties raise no issue concerning the admission or exclusion
    of evidence, the record transmitted to this Court contains numerous volumes related to the many motions
    in limine made in the trial court, including duplicates of documents filed with those motions. Rule 24 of
    the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure requires the appellant to prepare the record to provide the
    appellate court “a ‘fair, accurate and complete account’ of what transpired at the trial level.” Jennings v.
    Sewell-Allen Piggly Wiggly, 
    173 S.W.3d 710
    , 713 (Tenn. 2005) (quoting State v. Ballard, 
    855 S.W.2d 557
    ,
    560 (Tenn. 1993)). The appellee may designate additional portions of the record that “it deems necessary”
    to our review. 
    Id.
     However, the inclusion of portions of the trial record that are extraneous to our resolution
    of the issues presented on appeal imposes that duty on the appellate courts. As we previously have
    observed:
    It is too often the case that an Appellant includes all filings made in the trial court and every
    -2-
    The Covid-19 pandemic precluded the scheduled jury trial, and the parties agreed to a
    bifurcated bench trial on the issues of liability and damages.
    The matter was heard by the trial court on August 31 and September 1, 2020. The
    bench trial included testimony of the parties and several experts (both live and by Zoom).
    Redacted depositions of eye-witnesses were submitted to the trial court by agreement of
    the parties.
    By order entered October 12, 2020, the trial court found that Ms. Townsend
    “proceeded into the intersection on a permissive green light and began her turn without
    sufficient space to safely complete her turn.” The trial court determined that Ms. Townsend
    was more than 50 percent at fault for the accident. It also determined that Ms. Kindred
    should have seen the tractor-trailer in the intersection and taken some evasive action to
    avoid the collision. The trial court apportioned 75 percent fault to Ms. Townsend and 25
    percent fault to Ms. Kindred. The trial court entered an award of damages on November
    19, 2021, and amended the order on December 1, 2021. After the application of
    comparative fault of 25 percent, the trial court awarded Ms. Kindred damages for medical
    expenses already incurred in the amount of $536,171.48; damages for future medical
    expenses in the amount of $406,469.22; damages for lost wages and lost earning capacity
    in the amount of $586,754.25; and noneconomic damages for pain and suffering, loss of
    enjoyment, disfigurement, and permanent injury in the amount of $1,443,750.00. After
    application of the statutory limit set out in Tennessee Code Annotated section 29-39-
    102(a)(2), the trial court fixed noneconomic damages at $750,000.00. After finding that
    the Kindreds had divorced in 2018, the trial court awarded Mr. Kindred damages in the
    amount of $500.00 for loss of consortium – reduced on the basis of comparative fault to
    $375.00. The trial court taxed costs to Appellants and entered its order nunc pro tunc to
    November 19, 2021.
    portion of the transcript of the hearing (including arguments of counsel) in contravention
    of the foregoing Rule of Appellate Procedure. The problem with inclusion of extraneous
    filings that are clearly excluded from the appellate record is that it places upon this Court
    a duty that falls to the Appellant – to prepare a correct and complete record on appeal.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 24(b). In making that record, the Appellant should adhere to the mandates
    contained in Tennessee Rule of Appellant Procedure 24(a). This Court endeavors to file
    its opinions in a timely manner; however, when placed in the position of having to review
    volumes of extraneous, unnecessary, and irrelevant filings, our goal is hindered and the
    interests of judicial economy are stymied.
    Vraney v. Med. Specialty Clinic, P.C., No. W2012-02144-COA-R3-CV, 
    2013 WL 4806902
    , at *16 n.1
    (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 9, 2013). We urge the bar to comply with the obligations imposed by Rule 24 as we
    endeavor to thoroughly review the records transmitted to us in a timely manner.
    -3-
    Appellants filed a notice of appeal to this Court on December 16, 2021. Upon initial
    review of the record, we determined that the trial court’s order did not adjudicate the
    Kindreds’ claim of negligent training/supervision against Perimeter, their claims against
    Perimeter based on vicarious liability, or their claim for attorney’s fees.2 We also
    determined that “given the trial court’s failure to specifically state against whom the
    damages were awarded,” we could not discern against whom the judgment was entered.
    Accordingly, we remanded the matter to the trial court on June 24, 2022, “to allow the
    parties an opportunity to obtain a final judgment that brings clarity to the question
    pertaining to the award of monetary damages, namely against whom the award is made,
    and a specific ruling that all claims are resolved.” The parties were afforded thirty days to
    obtain a final judgment in the matter.
    On July 22, 2022, the trial court entered an order styled “order certifying ‘amended
    order awarding damages’ as final judgment pursuant to Rule 54.02 of the Tennessee Rules
    of Civil Procedure.” In its order, the trial court stated that the parties “agree[d] and
    stipulate[d] to the entry of a Final Judgment[.]” It corrected several “scrivener’s errors” in
    its October 2020 and December 2021 orders, including the court’s calculations of the total
    amount of damages awarded to Ms. Kindred. It awarded the Kindreds discretionary costs
    in the amount of $20,575.74; found no basis for an award of attorney’s fees in the matter
    and specifically declined the Kindreds’ prayer for attorney’s fees; and found that the
    Kindreds’ claim for negligent training/supervision had been voluntarily nonsuited in open
    court. The trial court also found that Perimeter “is vicariously liable for the actions of [Ms.
    Townsend] as alleged in Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint.” The trial court denied all
    motions not specifically ruled upon.
    Although not specifically stated in the trial court’s order, we are satisfied that the
    trial court’s determination that Perimeter is vicariously liable for Ms. Townsend’s actions
    amounts to an assessment of damages against Perimeter in this case. Further,
    notwithstanding the trial court’s reference to Rule 54.02 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil
    Procedure, we are satisfied that the trial court has adjudicated all the claims of all the parties
    in this case and that the judgment is now final and appealable pursuant to Rule 3 of the
    Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure. We now turn to the issues.
    2
    Under Rule 3 of the Tennessee Rules Appellate Procedure, we assume jurisdiction over appeals from final
    judgments only. Bayberry Assoc. v. Jones, 
    783 S.W.2d 553
    , 559 (Tenn. 1990). Rule 3(a) of the Tennessee
    Rules of Appellate Procedure provides, in relevant part:
    In civil actions every final judgment entered by a trial court from which an appeal lies to
    the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals is appealable as of right. Except as otherwise
    permitted in rule 9 and in Rule 54.02 Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure, if multiple
    parties or multiple claims for relief are involved in an action, any order that adjudicates
    fewer than all the claims or the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties is not
    enforceable or appealable and is subject to revision at any time before entry of a final
    judgment adjudicating all the claims, rights, and liabilities of all parties.
    -4-
    II. ISSUES
    Appellants raise the following issues for our review, as stated in their brief:
    1) Is the following material Finding of Fact by the trial court erroneous and
    factually unsupported:
    8. Defendant Evelyn Townsend proceeded into the intersection
    on a permissive green light and began her turn without
    sufficient space to safely complete her turn.
    2) Based upon the live and deposition testimony of the witnesses at trial,
    should the trial court have properly found that Evelyn Townsend began her
    left turn with a protected left turn arrow and not a “permissive green light”?
    3) If Evelyn Townsend began her left turn at the intersection with a protected
    green turn arrow, did Evelyn Townsend comply with all applicable duties of
    care for making a left turn at an intersection with a protected left turn arrow?
    4) If Evelyn Townsend began her left turn at the intersection with a protected
    green left turn arrow, did Plaintiff Linda Kindred violate both common law
    and statutory duties of care by entering the intersection and striking Evelyn
    Townsend’s tractor-trailer in the intersection while Evelyn Townsend was
    making a proper and legal left turn?
    5) Is Plaintiff Linda Kindred 100% at fault for this accident based upon her
    breach of both her common law and statutory duties to exercise due care by
    entering the intersection and striking Evelyn Townsend’s tractor-trailer in the
    intersection while Evelyn Townsend was making a proper and legal left turn?
    The issues presented by this appeal, as we consolidate and re-state them, are:
    1. Whether the trial court erred in its determination that Ms. Townsend
    breached her duty of care because the evidence preponderates against the
    trial court’s finding that Ms. Townsend turned into the intersection on a
    permissive green light and not on a protected green arrow.
    2. Whether the trial court erred by failing to apportion 100 percent fault to
    Ms. Kindred because Ms. Kindred breached her duty of care when she
    entered the intersection while Ms. Townsend was making a legal left turn.
    -5-
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    It is well-settled that the plaintiff in a negligence action is required to prove five
    essential elements: (1) that the defendant owes the plaintiff a duty of care; (2) that the
    defendant breached the duty of care by engaging in conduct that falls below the applicable
    standard of care; (3) an injury or loss; (4) that defendant’s action was the cause in fact of
    plaintiff’s injury; and (5) that the action was the proximate, or legal, cause of plaintiff’s
    injury. Cotten v. Wilson, 
    576 S.W.3d 626
    , 637 (Tenn. 2019) (citations omitted).
    The issues raised by Appellants in this case are predicated on their assertion that the
    trial court erred in its determination that Ms. Townsend breached her duty of care because
    the trial court erred by finding that Ms. Townsend initiated her turn on a permissive green
    light and not on a protected green arrow. While the existence of a duty is question of law,
    whether a defendant breached their duty of care is ordinarily a question of fact. Rains v.
    Bend of the River, 
    124 S.W.3d 580
    , 588 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).
    This case was tried without a jury. Accordingly, under Rule 13(d) of the Tennessee
    Rules of Appellate Procedure, our review of the trial court’s findings of fact is de novo
    upon the record with a presumption of correctness unless the evidence preponderates
    otherwise. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Tarrant, 
    363 S.W.3d 508
    , 512 (Tenn. 2012). The evidence
    preponderates against the trial court’s findings of fact when it supports another finding
    “with greater convincing effect.” Hardeman Cnty. v. McIntyre, 
    420 S.W.3d 742
    , 749
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013) (citation omitted). The trial court’s findings of fact must, therefore,
    contain sufficient underlying facts to clearly disclose the basis of the trial court’s
    determinations. Lovelace v. Coley, 
    418 S.W.3d 1
    , 34 (Tenn. 2013) (citations omitted).
    Because the trial court is in in the best position to observe the witnesses and assess their
    demeanor, we will not reverse a trial court’s findings based on its assessment of witness
    credibility absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. Wells v. Tennessee Bd.
    of Regents, 
    9 S.W. 3d 779
     (Tenn. 1999) (citations omitted). We likewise review a trial
    court’s allocation of fault de novo upon the record with a presumption of correctness. Cross
    v. City of Memphis, 
    20 S.W.3d 642
    , 645 (Tenn. 2000).
    IV. ANALYSIS
    We begin our discussion by noting that neither party disputes that every driver has
    a duty of care to exercise caution. Furthermore, Ms. Kindred has not appealed the trial
    court’s allocation of 25 percent fault to her. Moreover, Appellants do not challenge the
    amount of damages awarded by the trial court. Rather, Appellants’ argument in this case,
    as we summarize it, is that Ms. Townsend did not breach her duty of care because she
    initiated her turn while the traffic signal governing her lane of traffic was a green arrow,
    and her turn was protected; the arrow turned yellow after Ms. Townsend entered the
    intersection; and Ms. Townsend had no way to know how much time would elapse between
    the protected green arrow and the permissive green ball. Appellants assert that the trial
    -6-
    court erred in determining that Ms. Townsend entered the intersection when the light was
    a permissive green, thus negating its determination that Ms. Townsend was at fault. They
    assert that because Ms. Townsend was not at fault for entering the intersection on a
    protected green arrow, Ms. Kindred is 100 percent at fault for her injuries.
    On the other hand, Ms. Kindred asserts that the evidence does not preponderate
    against the trial court’s findings. She further asserts that, “[e]ven if [Ms.] Townsend
    entered the intersection before receiving a permissive green ball, it does not change the
    outcome.” In support of this argument, Ms. Kindred cites Tennessee Code 55-8-129(a),
    which states, in pertinent part: “The driver of a vehicle within an intersection intending to
    turn to the left shall yield the right-of-way to any vehicle approaching from the opposite
    direction which is within the intersection or so close thereto as to constitute an immediate
    hazard.” With these arguments in mind, we turn to the trial court’s judgment.
    The trial court heard testimony from eight witnesses:
    1. Plaintiff Ms. Kindred;
    2. Defendant Ms. Townsend;
    3. Officer Lakandus Cole (“Officer Cole”), a patrolman with the Memphis Police
    Department who responded to the accident on July 29, 2015;
    4. Matthew Pitts (“Mr. Pitts”), a civil engineer who is the program manager for traffic
    signals and markings for the Traffic Engineering Department of the City of
    Memphis;
    5. Robert Lawrence Cole, Sr. (“Mr. Cole”), who operates Trucking Experts, Inc., and
    establishes commercial trucking safety programs;
    6. Michael Conley (“Mr. Conley”), who the parties stipulated to be an expert in
    trucking safety and the operation of a commercial motor vehicle;
    7. Brent Munyon (“Mr. Munyon”), Ms. Kindred’s accident reconstruction expert;
    8. Brady McMillen (“Mr. McMillen”), Ms. Townsend’s accident reconstruction
    expert.3
    The trial court also considered the redacted deposition testimony of three eye-witnesses to
    the accident – Jennifer Sims, Stanley Sims (apparently unrelated to Jennifer Sims), and
    Tamina Hester – all of whom were driving westbound on Holmes Road when the accident
    occurred.
    We note that Mr. Pitts’ testimony regarding the timing of the lights at the
    intersection of Holmes Road and Hickory Hill is not disputed. The turn north/left onto
    Hickory Hill from the eastbound lanes of Holmes Road is protected by a green arrow for a
    3
    The record is inconsistent regarding the spelling of this witness’s name – it appears as both “McMillen”
    and “McMillan.” The parties use “McMillen” in their briefs. We accordingly will adopt that spelling here
    – with apologies to Mr. McMillan for any error.
    -7-
    maximum of 14 seconds, and a yellow caution arrow appears for three seconds before the
    light turns to a green for eastbound and westbound traffic on Holmes Road.4 Thus, the turn
    is protected for a maximum of only 17 seconds. When the light governing the lane for the
    turn north from eastbound Holmes Road onto Hickory Hill cycles from a yellow arrow, the
    light for the westbound traffic on Holmes Road turns green instantaneously.5 Ms.
    Kindred’s testified that she did not see Ms. Townsend’s tractor-trailer – or the tractor-trailer
    that turned north immediately before Ms. Townsend.6
    We also note that the trial court found Mr. Cole’s testimony regarding the standard
    of care for driving commercial trucks to be “of no value” on the question of liability and
    appears to have disregarded it. We further note that the trial court observed that the
    testimony of the three eye-witnesses to the accident differed, but that they all saw Ms.
    Townsend proceed into the intersection “regardless of what color her arrow or light may
    have been.” The trial court concluded that a reasonable person should have observed the
    tractor-trailer and taken some evasive action, and the court assessed 25 percent fault to Ms.
    Kindred. With these observations in mind, we turn to the trial court’s findings that: (1)
    Ms. Kindred proceeded through the intersection on a green light; (2) Ms. Townsend
    proceeded into the intersection on a permissive green light and began her turn without
    sufficient space to safely complete her turn; and (3) Ms. Townsend was more than 50
    percent at fault for this accident.
    In its October 2020 order, the trial court “[took] issue with” Ms. Townsend’s
    credibility “as to the color of the light during the events leading to this accident.” The trial
    court noted Officer Cole’s testimony that, immediately after the accident, Ms. Townsend
    stated that Ms. Kindred ran the light. It further noted that Ms. Townsend “indicated [at
    trial] that she was wrong about her initial statement that [Ms. Kindred] ran the light.” The
    court stated that it was unable to “equate [Ms. Townsend’s] testimony with that of either
    expert witness.” The trial court noted that Ms. Townsend testified that she “saw [Ms.
    Kindred], but believed she would stop” and concluded that Ms. Townsend “[did] not know
    what color her light was when she made her turn.”
    The trial court cited Mr. Munyon’s testimony that, assuming Ms. Townsend’s
    statements were true, “[h]is reenactment of the accident showed that with a green arrow
    [Ms. Townsend’s] truck was still 60% in the turn lane.” The trial court further noted that
    4
    Under Tennessee Code Annotated section 55-8-110(7), three seconds is the minimum time exposure for
    a yellow light when a traffic signal successively displays green, yellow, and red lights for the direction of
    motorists.
    5
    We observe that Mr. Pitts testified that some traffic lights in Memphis have a timing delay, but the light
    at the Holmes Road/Hickory Hill intersection does not. No cause of action has been asserted against the
    City of Memphis in this case.
    6
    We observe that the observations of the eye-witnesses differed with respect to whether the vehicle
    preceding Ms. Townsend was another tractor-trailer or two cars. However, Ms. Townsend testified that a
    tractor-trailer turned immediately before her.
    -8-
    Mr. Munyon “went on to state that when [Ms. Townsend’s] light turned to a yellow arrow,
    her truck was still pointed straight when the light turned to a green ball.” The court stated
    that Mr. McMillen “presented a similar demonstration to the [c]ourt, but indicated that it
    contained a glitch in the software which caused an error. His testimony indicated among
    other things, that there was no reason that [Ms. Kindred] should not have seen [Ms.
    Townsend], and that she bears responsibility for the accident.” The trial court found Mr.
    Munyon’s testimony “to be more likely than that of Mr. McMill[e]n[]” and held that Mr.
    Munyon was “thus a more credible witness.” The court noted that the experts used different
    rates of acceleration and, therefore, came to different conclusions. The trial court found
    Mr. Pitts to be “wholly credible” and found that, “taken as a whole,” the evidence
    demonstrated that Ms. Kindred proceeded through a green light, and Ms. Townsend
    “proceeded into the intersection of a permissive green light and began her turn without
    sufficient space to safely complete her turn.”
    On review of the record, we agree with the trial court that the depositions of the
    three eye-witnesses shed no light on the question of whether Ms. Townsend initiated her
    turn into the intersection on a protected green arrow, or a yellow arrow. We also observed
    that the depositions are somewhat contradictory regarding various details of the traffic flow
    at the time of the accident – including which lane Ms. Kindred was traveling in and whether
    Ms. Kindred was stopped at the red light on Holmes Road before the light turned green.
    However, all of the eye-witnesses testified that: (1) the light was green when Ms. Kindred
    entered the intersection; and (2) the cab of the tractor-trailer operated by Ms. Townsend
    was in the intersection when she and Ms. Kindred collided.
    At the August 31, 2020 hearing, Ms. Kindred testified that she is a licensed practical
    nurse and that she was on her way to work when the accident occurred. Ms. Kindred
    explained that she was traveling in the westbound center lane of Holmes Road, that the
    collision occurred “[i]n the middle of the intersection” with Hickory Hill, and that she
    drove the route on her way to work five days a week. Ms. Kindred stated that she was
    aware that traffic came from the other direction and that traffic also turned left across the
    intersection. She testified that she saw four or five cars in the left and right lanes as she
    approached the intersection, that there was no one ahead of her in the center lane, and that
    she was unable to tell whether there were any vehicles in the turn lane of the eastbound
    lanes. Ms. Kindred stated that the light was red as she approached the intersection, that it
    changed from red to green “maybe about 4 seconds” before she reached the intersection,
    that she was traveling at a rate of 45 miles per hour, and that she did not slow down before
    entering the intersection. When asked whether she could see Ms. Townsend’s tractor-
    trailer, Ms. Kindred stated that she “could see” the turn lane but was focused straight ahead.
    When asked whether she saw the tractor-trailer that crossed the intersection ahead of Ms.
    Townsend, Ms. Kindred replied: “There was not a tractor-trailer anywhere in the lane that
    I was driving in.” She asserted that she “never saw anything in the intersection. Period.”
    She also stated that she was focused on her lane of travel and that “nothing said that [she]
    could not enter that intersection.” Ms. Kindred acknowledged that she was eating a yogurt
    -9-
    during her commute but maintained that she only “took bites” while her vehicle was
    stopped.
    At the September 1, 2020 hearing, Ms. Townsend testified that she had been a
    commercial truck driver since 2012 and that she began working for Perimeter in December
    2014. She testified that she had not been in an accident previously, that she was trained to
    enter a turn through an intersection on a protected green light, and that she “would never
    turn on a yellow light.”
    Ms. Townsend also testified that she had slept in her truck at the Perimeter yard off
    Holmes Road on the night before the July 2015 collision, that her tractor-trailer carried a
    40,000-pound load on the day of the accident, and that it weighed approximately 80,000
    pounds. She testified that she left the Perimeter yard at 7:00 a.m. on the day of the collision.
    Ms. Townsend explained that she drove off the Perimeter yard three or four times a week,
    and that she turned left/north from Holmes Road onto Hickory Hill – carrying a full load –
    at least once a week.
    Ms. Townsend testified that, on the morning of the collision, another tractor-trailer
    was in front of her and stopped at the light as she entered the left turn lane to turn onto
    Hickory Hill. She stated that she was coasting behind the other truck, that the light changed
    from red to green, and the other truck turned before she reached it. She stated that the first
    truck blocked her view of the overhead light, but she could see the light on the pole at the
    left corner. Ms. Townsend stated that when the light turned green, the truck ahead of her
    turned and she “started escalating [her] speed to make the turn.” She testified that she “still
    had a green protected light, arrow to turn[]” when she reached the stop bar,7 that she never
    came to a complete stop, that she started to turn her wheel as soon as she crossed over the
    line, and that she could see the light turn yellow while she “was in the middle of [her] turn.”
    Ms. Townsend stated that she was scanning the traffic and that Ms. Kindred’s vehicle
    “caught [her] eye because [she] saw a car coming.” She stated that she “just thought it
    wasn’t going to stop[,]” although all the other vehicles coming in her direction were
    stopped at the intersection. Ms. Townsend asserted that, although she previously had
    maintained that Ms. Kindred drove through a red light, she later realized that she looked
    away from the yellow light when she saw Ms. Kindred’s vehicle and that she did not know
    that the light had changed to a green ball.
    Ms. Townsend repeatedly stated that she began her turn on a green protected arrow
    and that she was past the first lane of westbound, on-coming traffic when the light turned
    yellow. When asked whether “that would put [her] less than ten feet from the point of
    impact when [her] light turned to yellow,” Ms. Townsend stated: “I don’t know where it
    would put me.” She stated that, although she was past the first lane of oncoming traffic
    7
    A “stop bar” is a thick white line on the road that is the barrier for entering an intersection. If the
    front tires of the vehicle cross the stop bar, the vehicle is in the intersection.
    - 10 -
    when the light turned yellow, she did not know how long the light would stay yellow. She
    also stated that she had passed through the intersection “hundreds, if not thousands” of
    times but did not know the timing of the light or how long the turn arrow stayed yellow
    before cycling to a green ball. Ms. Townsend further testified that she shifted gears and
    escalated her speed as she made the turn, but she did not know “how fast [she] was going.”
    During the 2020 hearing, the parties stipulated that Messrs. Munyon and McMillen
    were qualified forensic accident reconstructionists. Mr. Munyon testified that he and an
    assistant visited the scene of the accident and took measurements and photographs. Mr.
    Munyon testified that, pursuant to Ms. Kindred’s instructions, he based his opinions on the
    assumption that the statements made by Ms. Townsend in her deposition – with the
    exception of the color of the traffic light – were true. Accordingly, Mr. Munyon based his
    opinions on the assumptions that:
    1. another tractor-trailer was at a “dead stop” at a red light at the stop bar when Ms.
    Townsend “came up to make a left-hand turn[.]”
    2. that Ms. Townsend was behind the stopped tractor-trailer but never came to a
    complete stop
    3. that Ms. Townsend was coasting at approximately two miles per hour as she
    approached
    4. that the light changed from red to a green arrow while she was coasting
    5. that the first tractor-trailer immediately entered the intersection when the light
    turned to a green arrow
    6. that Ms. Townsend followed the first tractor-trailer at a distance of approximately
    one car length, or 20 feet.
    Mr. Munyon testified that, based on the deposition of Mr. Pitts, he also assumed that
    the protected turn arrow stayed green for the maximum 14 seconds. He testified that, at 14
    seconds – when the light turned yellow – 60-to-65 percent of Ms. Townsend’s truck was
    “still in the turn lane.” He further testified that the intersection is 150 feet across and that
    the front of Mr. Townsend’s truck would have been 32 feet beyond the stop bar when the
    light turned yellow. Mr. Munyon testified that, when the light cycled to a permissive green
    ball, Ms. Townsend traveled an additional 52.2 feet to the collision point and that 20.2
    seconds elapsed between the time the light turned from red to a green arrow and the time
    the truck collided with Ms. Kindred’s vehicle. He further testified that, when the light
    cycled to yellow, Ms. Townsend could have come to a complete stop in 5.27 feet. Mr.
    Munyon testified that, assuming Ms. Townsend’s statements were true and assuming Ms.
    Kindred was traveling at 45 miles per hour, Ms. Kindred would have been 144 feet from
    the stop bar when the light turned from red to green.
    Mr. Munyon also testified that, given the point of impact in the intersection and the
    timing of the lights, if he had based his calculations on Ms. Kindred’s statements that the
    light changed approximately 4 seconds before she reached the stop bar (traveling at a rate
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    of 45 miles per hour), Ms. Townsend’s truck would not have crossed the stop bar when the
    light turned from a green arrow to yellow. He testified that, assuming Ms. Kindred’s
    statements to be true, Ms. Townsend’s truck would have been, at most, 32 feet into the turn
    lane before the light turned from a green arrow to yellow.
    Mr. Munyon also testified that Mr. McMillen made his calculations using a
    “substantially faster” rate of acceleration for Ms. Townsend’s truck. He testified that Mr.
    McMillen assumed Ms. Townsend was traveling at 22 miles per hour at the point of impact
    and at 15 miles per hour when her tractor trailer reached the stop bar. According to Mr.
    Munyon, using Mr. McMillen’s rate of speed and in view of Mr. Pitts’ testimony regarding
    the timing of the traffic lights, Ms. Townsend’s truck would not have crossed the stop bar
    when the signal changed to green.
    Mr. McMillen testified that he reviewed the accident reports and the depositions of
    the parties, the witnesses, and Mr. Pitts, and that he visited the scene of the accident to take
    measurements. Mr. McMillen opined that, given the distances and rates of speed, “Ms.
    Kindred would have had enough time to apply her brakes and taken some type of evasive
    action and could have possibly – could have even stopped had she been attentive to the
    movement of the traffic in front of her.” With respect to the traffic light governing Ms.
    Townsend’s turn, Mr. McMillen stated:
    And just based off the calculations of her movement in the time from where
    she entered the intersection and her testimony about the other commercial
    vehicles in front of her moving through when the light cycled, the
    calculations said that it would have, but it also revealed that it would not have
    been a green turn arrow long before it would have cycled to yellow to warn,
    you know, those that are in the protected turn that their turn won’t be
    protected anymore. It’s a cautionary light that the light goes to green. The
    other question was if you look at—one of the things we don’t know for
    certain is we don’t know and I don’t know if anybody will ever know where
    Ms. Townsend or Ms. Kindred for that matter, where they were specifically
    at the collision, in the collision site, at the moment that the light turned
    yellow.
    Mr. McMillen testified that he “believe[d] that Ms. Townsend had entered the
    intersection under a protected green and it had gone to yellow while she [was] entering into
    the intersection.” Mr. McMillen also testified that he “wouldn’t disagree” that the light
    had been green for 4.2 to 4.5 seconds before Ms. Kindred arrived at the collision site and
    that Ms. Kindred would have traveled for approximately .75 seconds from the time she
    entered the intersection until the collision. On cross-examination, Mr. McMillen testified,
    in relevant part:
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    Q. Mr. McMillen, with all due respect, I’m asking you simply based on your
    understanding of how the traffic lights work. Do you understand that when
    the light for traffic coming in the direction of Ms. Kindred was a green light,
    the turn lane traffic simultaneously would have a green ball, not a green
    arrow and not a yellow arrow? Can you agree?
    A. I would agree with that, yes.
    Q. Therefore, if Ms. Kindred had a green light for 4.2 to 4.5 seconds before
    the collision, during that same 4.2 to 4.5 seconds with 100 percent certainty
    that truck would have had a solid green ball, not a green arrow and not a
    yellow arrow, correct?
    A. That’s correct.
    Q. And tell me, please, 4.2 to 4.5 seconds before the collision, where was the
    Perimeter truck?
    A. Based on the testimony, I believe that it would have been at the stop bar.
    Q. Would have been at or behind the stop bar not based on the testimony, sir,
    based on your own calculations, isn’t that correct –
    A. At the stop bar.
    Q. –because you calculated that that truck went from the stop bar to the point
    of collision in 4.2 to 4.4 seconds, correct?
    A. That’s correct.
    Q. And if, in fact, for 4.2 to 4.5 seconds prior to the collision that truck
    would have had a solid green ball, then when the arrow changed from
    yellow to the solid green ball, according to your own calculations, that
    truck would have been at or behind the stop bar, correct?
    A. That’s what I said, at the stop -
    Mr. McMillen also testified that he “would agree” that Ms. Kindred did not enter
    the intersection on a red light. When asked his opinion regarding the cause of the accident,
    Mr. McMillen stated:
    I think there’s multiple factors in this. Causation by both drivers. I think
    that Ms. Townsend entered the intersection at a time when she could not have
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    completed a left turn without blocking the westbound traffic, and I also
    believe that Ms. Kindred approached the intersection without reducing her
    speed or any awareness of what was happening in her path in front of her and
    adjusting her driving behavior accordingly.
    In a non-jury case, “the record comes to us with a presumption of correctness as to
    the trial court’s factual determinations that we must honor unless the evidence
    preponderates otherwise.” Phillips v. United Services Auto. Ass’n, 
    146 S.W.3d 629
    , 631
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004) (citations omitted). The evidence in this case clearly demonstrates
    that the traffic light governing Ms. Townsend’s left turn cycled from a protected green
    arrow to yellow at least seven-to-eight seconds before the collision occurred. On review
    of the record, particularly: (1) the testimony of Messrs. Pitts, Munyon, and McMillen
    regarding the timing of the traffic light signals, and (2) the distances traveled by Ms.
    Kindred’s and Ms. Townsend’s vehicles from the respective stop bars to the point of
    collision, we conclude that the evidence does not preponderates against the trial court’s
    findings that: (1) Ms. Townsend attempted a left hand turn from Holmes Road onto
    Hickory Hill when her turn could not be safely completed, and (2) at the time of Ms.
    Townsend’s turn, the traffic light for oncoming traffic on Holmes Road had changed to
    green. Furthermore, the evidence does not preponderate against the trial court’s
    apportionment of fault in the amount of 25 percent against Ms. Kindred and 75 percent
    against Ms. Townsend.
    V. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed. Any remaining
    issues raised by the parties are pretermitted as unnecessary to our disposition of this matter,
    and the case is remanded for such further proceedings as may be necessary and are
    consistent with this opinion. Costs on appeal are taxed to the Appellants, Evelyn Townsend
    and Perimeter Transportation Co., LLC, for which execution may issue if necessary.
    s/ Kenny Armstrong
    KENNY ARMSTRONG, JUDGE
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