Allied Finance Company v. Gammill

440 S.W.2d 897, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2667
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1969
Docket17013
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 440 S.W.2d 897 (Allied Finance Company v. Gammill) 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
Allied Finance Company v. Gammill, 440 S.W.2d 897, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2667 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

RENFRO, Justice.

This is a rear-end collision case. Suit was brought by J. D. Gammill and wife Juanita against Allied Finance Company and its employee-driver Seth Ward Hin-shaw for damages sustained by Mrs. Gam-mill when her car was struck in the rear by a truck driven by Hinshaw.

Mrs. Gammill will be referred to as plaintiff, and Hinshaw as defendant.

.Plaintiff had been traveling south on Fort Worth Drive in the City of Denton. She stopped at the intersection of Acme Street and Fort Worth Drive with the intention of making a left turn in order to go east on Acme Street. While stopped her car was struck by defendant’s truck.

The jury found: defendant failed to keep a proper lookout, failed to apply his brakes and failed to turn his truck to the right; that each of said acts were a proximate cause of the collision.

Defendant does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to support such findings.

Issue No. 16 inquired of the jury whether “at the time and on the occasion in question Juanita Gammill failed to timely complete her turn on to Acme Street.” Issues 17 and 18 were follow-up issues on negligence and proximate cause.

■ Issues 16, 17 and 18 were not answered by the jury.

Plaintiff objected to the submission, of the three issues, and, after the verdict was received by the court, moved for judgment even though the three issues were not answered.

The court entered judgment for plaintiff, the judgment stating in part, “ * * * Plaintiffs are entitled to * * * Judgment * * * (affirmative answers to 16, 17, 18) would not have been supported by evidence of probative force, * *

No issue was requested or given regarding lookout on the part of plaintiff.

Defendant argues very strongly that a mistrial should have been declared because there was some evidence of probative force to support the submission of the three issues.

Plaintiff testified: on April 20, 1967, about 4:45 P.M. she drove south on Fort Worth Drive in Denton on her way home. It had been raining, but at time of accident was just cloudy. Visibility was good. When she reached Acme where she was to make a left turn she had to stop because of oncoming traffic, that is, traffic coming from the south on Fort Worth Drive and going north. She turned on her left turn indicator. The next thing she knew she was “flying across the highway. * * * There was oncoming traffic and I could not safely make a turn to the left.” Her car finally stopped in a vacant lot across the highway. There was sufficient clearance for the defendant to have missed her by turning to the right.

Defendant Hinshaw by deposition testified: at time of accident rain had “Let down to a drizzle. Streets were slippery and wet.” He was going south on Highway 377 (Fort Worth Drive). He first saw plaintiff stopped at the intersection when he was 110 or 120 yards north of the intersection. He did not know whether her indicator light was on but assumed she was going to make a left turn. “ ‘Well, when I first observed Mrs. Gammill in the intersection I also observed that there was no traffic coming toward us, and I was very unfamiliar with the truck I was driving, of course. That day was the first time I had ever driven it. And I’m not a professional truck driver anyway. And I glanced, after seeing her there and not seeing any traffic *899 coming toward us, I glanced down at my instruments. * * *

“ ‘Glanced at my instruments on the truck. I remember looking down for some reason. I don’t know what I looked at or why, and I had just assumed that she would go ahead and make her turn. And when I looked back up I was about — I saw her again, and the fact that she was still there. I was about fifty yards from her, approxi- , mately fifty yards from her car and she was still in the intersection. * * *

“ ‘ * * * there is a slight grade there, slight grade, and a slight curve to the left, and I stopped, hit my brakes and went into a skid, and I attempted to pull around to the right, you know, and miss her, but I had already lost control of the truck.

“ 'Question: How far away from Mrs. Gammill were you when you noticed her after you glanced from your instruments?

“ ‘Answer: I said approximately fifty yards the second time I observed her.

“'Question: Fifty yards, and she was still stopped there ?

“‘Answer: Yes.

“ ‘Question: And you continued to go forward ?

“ ‘Answer: No, I started stopping right there.

“ ‘Question: But you couldn’t stop in the fifty-yard — in the approximate fifty-yard time?

“ ‘Answer: I’d say—

“ ‘Question: Fifty yard distance, excuse me.

“ ‘Answer: No, not under the conditions. My truck—

“ ‘Question : About what was your speed then?

“ ‘Answer: Twenty-five to thirty miles an hour. I wasn’t speeding. * * *

“ ‘Question: If you had used the proper lookout this collision wouldn’t have occurred, would it ?

“ ‘Answer: Well, under the conditions I don’t know.

“‘Question: All right. You certainly don’t think it’s her fault, do you ?

“‘Answer: No, I don’t say that it was. * * * first time I observed her car stopping in the intersection, * * * there was no traffic coming toward us.’ ” First thing he did after observing her the second time was to hit his brakes, the truck went into a skid and he lost control. His left bumper hit her right rear fender. At time of impact he was traveling IS miles per hour.

As a witness at the trial Hinshaw testified: Highway 377 was in 1967 the main road from Denton to Fort Worth. He was ISO yards back when he first saw plaintiff’s car. The road was wet. Plaintiff was stopped at the intersection. He assumed she was going to make a left hand turn. Highway 377 curves to the left and there is a slight grade south of Acme. On the left hand side of the highway, toward Fort Worth, there are several trees. The trees had leafed-out. A person sitting at the intersection could see further south on the highway than a person coming from under an overpass 150 yards north of the intersection could see. Plaintiff could undoubtedly see approaching traffic from the south that defendant could not see when he was 150 yards back of her. At a distance of 150 yards from plaintiff he looked at the truck instrument panel and did not look up again until he was within 50 yards of plaintiff. He attempted to go to her right but failed. For approximately 100 yards he did not look at the road. He knew plaintiff was still at the intersection the second time he looked. In answer to the question, “And it was just a bad drive on your part, and you were very happy that she wasn’t killed; isn’t that correct?”, he answered, “That is correct.”

*900 He was asked, “Were there any cars coming toward her to keep her from turning?”, to which he answered, “Not the first time I looked, no”, and “when you looked up the second time, then, were there any cars coming toward her that would have kept her from turning?”, he answered, “I was too busy stopping, trying to stop.”

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Bluebook (online)
440 S.W.2d 897, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allied-finance-company-v-gammill-texapp-1969.