DocketNumber: No. 3650.
Citation Numbers: 115 S.W.2d 985, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 500
Judges: Walthall
Filed Date: 3/17/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is a personal injury suit. The suit involves a collision between an automobile driven by appellee W. O. Rehmeyer, plaintiff in the trial court, and an automobile driven by W. W.. Culver, as employee of appellant, O. K. Theater Corporation, defendant in the trial court.
Plaintiff Rehmeyer alleged that about 8 o’clock in the morning of October 22, 1935, he was operating his automobile on highway 80, in Ward county, Tex., driving in a careful manner, in an easterly direction on said highway between Pyote and Monahans; that he was driving said automobile on the south side of the highway; that there was an unusual amount of fog on said morning at that place; that on said highway W. M. Wooten and W. W. Culver, agents of defendant, were operating an automobile of defendant in a westerly direction on said highway; that said agents of defendant were then engaged in the defendant’s business and within the. scope of their employment, namely, placing advertising matter along said highway; “the said agents of the defendant turned their automobile suddenly to the left and across said highway so that they then proceeded in a southerly direction, without giving plaintiff any chance to avoid striking the said automobile; that there was a violent collision of said automobiles which resulted in the injuries to the plaintiff which will be more fully set up hereafter; that the collision and the resulting injuries aijd property damages s.uffered by the plaintiff were the direct result and proximate result of the negligence of the defendant, its agents, servants and employees; that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence in the premises, but exercised due care and diligence to avoid said collision; that as a result of said collision and proximate result of the negligence of the defendant, its agents, servants and employees” plaintiff states damage to his automobile and the personal injuries to himself. In concluding the statement of his personal injuries plaintiff alleges: “That all of the injuries hereinabove described were the direct and proximate result of the negligence of the defendant, its agents, servants and employees.”
Plaintiff then states that prior to his injuries he was a normal,’healthy individual; that he was profitably engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery; states what he was earning per month in such practice; states his reduced capacity to practice his profession by reason of his injuries, both now and probably in the future, and “that all of said injuries and said damage was a direct and proximate result of the negligence of the defendant, its agents, servants and employees.”
Plaintiff prays that he have judgment for his damages, stating the amount.
Defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, special denials, and alleges that “at the said time and on the occasion complained of by plaintiff, its servant and agent in charge of said automobile truck was crossing said highway in a cautious and careful manner; that immediately prior thereto, he had looked, listened and slowed down so as to ascertain if any other vehicle was then in sight or hearing before attempting to cross said highway, and had not seen nor heard anything that would apprise him that an automobile or other vehicle was then near or approaching the place of said crossing, for which reason this defendant is not responsible for the alleged injuries set out in plaintiff’s petition.”
Defendant then pleads that plaintiff failed to keep a proper lookout, careless and wreckless driving of his automobile on the occasion, wreckless rate of speed, failüre of plaintiff to usé ordinary care in operating his automobile in failing to keep it under control, and that plaintiff’s injuries were due to his own negligence.
Defendant prays that it go hence without day and with its costs.
Defendant did not present its general demurrer or have it passed upon by the court, and therefore1 waived it.
The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, to which defendant submitted objections, and a motion for'an instructed verdict in its favor, all of which the court heard and overruled.
After defining the legal terms used in the charge, the court submitted the case to a jury on special issues to be found on a preponderance of the evidence. On issues submitted the jury found:
(1) Defendant’s employee, Culver, on the occasion in question, “turned said automobile suddenly to the left across said highway in such a manner as to cause a collision with the automobile operated by plaintiff.”
(2) Such act in so turning said automobile across said highway by Culver “constituted negligence on the part of the defendant or its said agent.”
(3) Such negligence was the proximate ’ cause of the injuries sustained by the plaintiff.
(4) The jury found and assessed plaintiff’s damages at $4,000.
The jury found that the collision was not an unavoidable accident.
On the jury’s verdict the court rendered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $4,000, found by the jury.
The court overruled defendant’s motion for a new trial, and defendant appealed.
Opinion.
Appellee’s petition, as we view it, undertakes to state a cause of action resulting in a failure on the part of appellant to observe the “Law of the Road,” of this state as enacted and stated in article 801, Revised Penal Statutes of this state, 1925, and the several sections thereunder, especially subdivision (K).
We have concluded that, while the petition is open to objections that could have been made, it sufficiently states a cause of action in the absence of any demurrer, general or special, urged against it. We overrule all propositions relating to the sufficiency of appellee’s petition.
In submitting the case to the jury the trial court submitted the issues of fact substantially in the language of the pleadings, both as to appellee and appellant. The jury found the facts submitted in favor of ap-pellee and against appellant.
The appellee did not allege that the facts pleaded as negligence constituted negligence. ' It has often been held that it is not necessary to allege that the facts pleaded constitute negligence if the conclusion of negligence can be drawn from them. 30 Texas Jurisprudence, p. 790, par., 118, and cases referred to in note 14.
The petition pleaded, in effect, a violation of article 801 of the Penal Code of this state, in that the employee of appellant, in driving his automobile upon the highway, failed to travel upon the right-hand side of such highway, but instead suddenly turned his automobile to the left and across the highway and proceeded in that direction without giving appellee a chance to avoid striking appellant’s automobile.
Appellant undertook to defend its act in so driving its automobile, as we understand its answer, by stating the facts under said article 801, subd. (K), by alleging, in effect, that at said time and immediately prior thereto its driver had looked, listened, and slowed down so as to ascertain if any other vehicle was then in sight or hearing before attempting to cross or come upon the left side of the highway, and had not seen nor heard anything that would apprise him that another automobile was then approaching the place. Appellant insists that' it had the right, in the exercise of ordinary care, to use the highway and to turn across it, and that in doing so it was in the. exercise of its right. Abstractly speaking, appellant did have the right to turn its automobile from the right side on to the left side of the highway, but such right is ¾ qualified right; in doing so it must strictly observe the “.rule of the road,” as stated in the above referred to statute. We have in this state no rule stated in driving a vehicle upon the public highway other than the one above referred to, and the courts, in civil cases, so far as we have observed, under facts similar to the facts in this case, apply the rule stated in testing the rights of parties in the use of the public highways.
We have reviewed, the evidence in connection with the pleadings on both sides. The case as presented is purely a fact case. The evidence, we think, justified the submission of the issues. We have found no reversible error. Appellant’s propositions have each been considered. We need not discuss them severally. They are each overruled.
The case is affirmed.