Moncada v. Snyder
Decision Date | 25 May 1939 |
Docket Number | No. 10778.,10778. |
Citation | 129 S.W.2d 817 |
Parties | MONCADA v. SNYDER. |
Court | Texas Court of Appeals |
Appeal from District Court, Harris County; Norman Atkinson, Judge.
Suit by D. A. Snyder against Antonio Moncada and another for injuries sustained in an automobile collision. From judgment of $5,060 for plaintiff, the named defendant appeals.
Affirmed.
Roy L. Arterbury and Ernest H. Folk, both of Houston, for appellant.
Allen, Helm & Jacobs, Wm. States Jacobs, Jr., and Arthur P. Terrell, all of Houston, for appellee.
This appeal is from a $5,060 judgment against appellant and in favor of the appellee, entered by the 11th district court of Harris County on November 13 of 1937 upon a jury's verdict in response to special issues, as well as upon independent findings of the court itself from the pleadings and what it recites to have been "the undisputed evidence."
This further statement as to the nature of the cause, as well as its reaches both below and here, found by this court to be correct, is taken from the appellee's brief:
Appellant Moncada inveighs against this adverse result to him below upon these grounds:
(1) The answers to the jury, together with the uncontroverted testimony of the appellee himself and his own witnesses, show conclusively as a matter of law that he was guilty of contributory negligence which was the proximate cause of the collision, hence was not entitled to the recovery so awarded him;
(2) The jury's answers to special issues 23 to 26, inclusive, designed to elicit whether or not the appellee was guilty of such negligence as asserted in (1) supra, and which acquitted him thereof, were contrary to all the evidence and should, for that reason, have been set aside on appellant's request;
(3) The trial court reversibly erred in allowing appellee's counsel, over appellant's objection made at the time, to make this closing argument to the jury:
At this point the defendant objected to the argument, saying in open court:
(4) A new trial should have been granted the appellant, because, on the hearing of his motion therefor, it was made to reasonably appear, first, that the jury had been put on notice that there was an insurance company interested as a defendant in the suit they were trying, and second, that, throughout the trial, the appellee's counsel had sought "to acquaint the jury, by suggestion and indirection, with the fact that the defendant (appellant) was protected with indemnity-insurance and that therefore some insurance company was the real party in interest representing the defendant."
None of these presentments, it is determined, should be sustained. In the opinion of this court no contributory negligence is shown; upon the contrary, agreeably to the evident trend of the statement so quoted with approval supra from the appellee's brief, it is found that the jury's verdict on the four issues appellant relies upon for the establishment of contributory negligence (Nos. 1, 3, 10 and 18), taken in connection with the others on that subject, all of which had sufficient support in the evidence, plainly determine that controversy against appellant rather than in his favor; the fatal vice in his position is his failure to allow for the other driver's right to assume that he himself would remain on his own proper side of Fannin Street and continue there in the course he was going along that side when the appellee first saw him, rather than to, as he was shown to have done, suddenly, negligently, and in violation of law, veer to his left, and then, at about 50 miles per hour, bear down along the wrong side of Fannin, after so having given the appellee every reason for believing that he could clear that side of Fannin without any danger; there is no answer to this obvious situation anywhere in appellant's brief.
It is true he essays one, in his subsidiary contention that the jury found the appellee to have been in a position of peril before the collision, in answering issue No. 18 that way; but that was inconclusive and abortive, in that there was no essential complement to it by a further finding that the appellant had discovered such peril within a time and distance that, by the exercise of due care, he himself could have avoided the collision; indeed, it was expressly found that he had not discovered such peril at all, hence this mere brutum fulmen got him nowhere.
In short, these answers of the jury — to issues on that phase of the case the appellee had requested — simply defeated his effort to additionally fasten on appellant the violation toward him of the new duty arising as on a discovery of his peril, without in turn, by any reflex consequence, convicting him of contributory negligence; the essentials of such a flare-back were wholly missing — no like inquiry as to whether the appellee also failed to discover his own peril in time to avoid injury having either been submitted or requested — hence that whole question passed out of the case under the presumptions that it was all settled favorably to the judgment rendered arising pursuant to R.S. Art. 2190, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 2190; Ormsby v. Ratcliffe, 117 Tex. 242, 1 S.W.2d 1084; Jenkins v. Northwestern Pipe & Supply Co., Tex.Com.App., 299 S.W. 857; Rio Grande, E. P. & S. F. R. Co. v. Dupree, Tex.Com.App., 55 S.W.2d 522; Embrey v. W. L. Ligon & Co., 118 Tex. 124, 12 S.W.2d 106; Rose v. O'Keefe, Tex.Com. App., 39 S.W.2d 877; Stewart v. Byrne, Tex.Com.App., 42 S.W.2d 234; Malley v. Union Indemnity Co., Tex.Com.App., 12 S.W.2d 1002.
Wherefore, the unreal issue of discovered peril being out, both because one essential element of it was not submitted, and the jury found the other that was submitted against the injured party, the case was finally determinable upon the issues of primary negligence and contributory negligence. Dallas Ry. & Terminal Co. v. Bankston, Tex.Com.App., 51 S.W.2d 304; Smith v. Galveston-Houston Elec. Ry. Co., Tex.Com.App., 277 S.W. 103.
As indicated supra, on the issues of contributory negligence — which were very searching in effect —...
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