Airline Motor Coaches, Inc. v. Bennett

184 S.W.2d 524, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1012
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1944
DocketNo. 4257.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 524 (Airline Motor Coaches, Inc. v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Airline Motor Coaches, Inc. v. Bennett, 184 S.W.2d 524, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1012 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

MURRAY, Justice.

W. B. Bennett and his wife, Mrs. Elva Bennett, were driving in their automobile with Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Campbell, driven by Mr. Campbell, on highway 59 on June 23, 1943, when the automobile was in a collision with a bus of Airline Motor Coaches, Inc., which occurred in Polk County, Texas, a short distance south of the Trinity River bridge. Mr. Bennett was killed in the wreck and Mrs. Bennett was severely injured. The bus was headed south towards Houston and the automobile in which the Bennetts were riding was proceeding in a northerly direction away from Houston. The collision occurred in the late afternoon at the north entrance to a slough bridge a short distance south of the main bridge across the Trinity River. Mrs. Elva Bennett brought suit against the bus company for damages for the injuries sustained by her and for damages for the death of her husband, and she was joined in the suit by W. B. Bennett, Jr., a minor son of the deceased by a former marriage, who sued by next friend for damages for the death of his father. They alleged that the bus driver operated the bus on his left-hand side of the road; that such bus driver failed to keep a proper lookout and that the bus driver failed to have the bus under proper control; that each of such acts was negligence and all of same were proximate causes of said collision. Among other defenses, the bus company defended upon the ground that Mr. and Mrs. Bennett owned the car involved in the accident and together with Mr. and Mrs. Campbell were on a joint mission; that there was intoxicating liquor in the automobile in question; that one or all of the occupants of the car were intoxicated and that while the bus was proceeding on its side of the highway in a careful and prudent manner, the collision was caused when the automobile suddenly changed its course and ran into the bus. Upon a jury verdict, the findings in which supported the contentions of the Bennetts, judgment was rendered against the bus company for $18,500 in favor of Mrs. Elva Bennett and $1,000 in favor of W. B. Bennett, Jr., and the bus company has perfected its appeal to this court.

The testimony is conflicting in regard to the position of the two vehicles immediately before and at the time of the collision. Some of the witnesses, particularly the passengers on the bus who testified, placed the bus on its right-hand side of the road until after the actual collision with the automobile. Other witnesses who were near-by at the time of the collision said the bus had either veered .or glanced from a guard rail to the left-hand side of the road and there struck the automobile. The fact issues were properly submitted in the court’s charge to the jury and the jury’s findings, which supported the contentions of the Bennetts, are supported in the testimony. The appellant in its brief makes no complaint of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings of the jury and brings forward only one complaint to one portion of the court’s charge.

The appellant’s first eight points complain of various statements and arguments by attorneys for appellees on the trial and in its ninth point it complains of the action of the trial court in permitting counsel, while examining the jury panel at the opening of the trial, to ask prospective jurors *526 whether they would be influenced or prejudiced by the fact that liquor was found in the car of appellees. In its tenth point appellant complains of the wording of the special issue submitted on the question of damages. By its eleventh point the appellant complains of the action of the trial court in refusing to consolidate this case with another cause then pending in the same court, J. F. Campbell v. Airline Motor Coaches, Inc.

While the witness Dr. Foster was testifying in regard to ’ his treatment of Mrs. Bennett, he was asked several questions by counsel for appellant, Mr. Henry Strasburger, as to why the broken bones in Mrs. Bennett’s leg had not healed, and he stated that he did not know the reason for this failure to heal, but that short, stout persons, such as Mrs. Bennett, had greater trouble in obtaining union in bones than thin persons. Counsel then asked the doctor if he had tested her blood to see if that had anything to do with it. Later in argument to the jury one of the attorneys for appellees criticized Mr. Strasburger for asking the question, and used the following words: “Mr. Strasburger, would you cast that kind of insinuation on an innocent lady without a thing to justify it?” Later his cocounsel made further argument to the jury and further criticized Mr. Stras-burger for asking the question ■ about a blood test of Mrs. Bennett. We believe counsel was not in error in commenting upon how his adversary was conducting his case. We overrule this contention of appellant in view of the holding in City of Waco v. Killen et al., Tex.Civ.App., 59 S.W.2d 940.

Appellant’s second point complains of repeated references by appellees’ counsel to the fact that one of counsel was from Dallas and contends that such conduct was appealing to the prejudice of a local jury against the attorney because he was from Dallas. The portion of the argument complained of is set out in bill of exception No. 3, and is too long to be quoted here. A number of able attorneys had participated in the trial of the case on both sides of the controversy, some from Houston, some from Dallas. Mr. Foreman, one of the attorneys for appellees, in his argument referred to different attorneys, where they were from, said the bus company had gone to Dallas and hired Mr. Strasburger’s firm and sent him down there as the ace in the hole, and made several references to the type of duties which he thought would be assigned on the trial to different members of appellant’s various attorneys participating. No objection was taken to the argument at the time. We have read the entire argument and find nothing so prejudicial and inflammatory which could not have been cured by an objection and some instruction to that effect by the court. We find no prejudicial error in the argument presented which will warrant reversal.

The third point complains of that portion of the argument of one of appel-lees’ attorneys in stating in regard to Mr. Henry Strasburger, one of appellant’s attorneys, that “the only corn Henry ever thinned was up in about the 15th story of the Waldorf Hotel, and I bet he thinned that with ginger ale.” The third point complains of the portion of the argument of appellees’ counsel as an unjustified attack upon Mr. Henry Strasburger, one of counsel for appellant. Mr. Strasburger in his argument said a farmer would understand that if a man claimed to have planted 100 acres of cotton in November and picked 100 bales in January, the jury would know he was a liar. Mr. Foreman, one of the attorneys for appellees, in his argument referred to such argument, “talk about farmers, I bet the only corn Henry ever thinned was up in about the 15th story of the Waldorf Hotel, and I bet he thinned it with ginger ale.” While we are unable to follow the reasoning and do not approve counsel’s argument complained of, we are at the same time unable to agree with the .contention of the appellant that such remarks resulted in harm to it upon the trial.

When the witness D. W. Hicks, a Texas Highway Patrolman, was on the witness stand, having been called by the appellant, he was asked to describe what he had found at the scene of the accident with reference to marks on the surface of the bridge.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 524, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/airline-motor-coaches-inc-v-bennett-texapp-1944.