Austin Road Company v. Ferris

492 S.W.2d 64, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1973
Docket17377
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 492 S.W.2d 64 (Austin Road Company v. Ferris) 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
Austin Road Company v. Ferris, 492 S.W.2d 64, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2106 (Tex. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

BREWSTER, Justice.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Austin Road Company, from a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Leo Ferris, in the amount of $80,108.21. The trial was before a jury.

*67 The suit was for damages for personal injuries allegedly sustained by Ferris when his car was in collision at a Fort Worth street intersection with defendant’s truck which was at the time loaded with 600 gallons of asphalt.

The jury found all of the liability issues against the defendant and those findings are not questioned on this appeal.

In line with the jury verdict plaintiff was awarded by the judgment (1) $25,000.-00 for loss of earning capacity in the future ; (2) $10,000.00 for loss of earnings in the past; (3) $22,000.00 for physical pain and mental anguish in the future; (4) $10,000.00 for physical pain and mental anguish in the past; (5) $6,088.21 for doctor and hospital and dental bills plaintiff incurred in the past; and (6) $7,020.00 for future medical expense.

Defendant in his first four points of error attacks the first four jury findings which we have numbered one through four in the next paragraph above. Defendant urges a separate point as to each of the four findings, the point as to each of the findings being worded the same, to-wit: that there is no evidence or in the alternative wholly insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding and that such finding is so against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly wrong.

In defendant’s fifth point of error he contends that each of the jury findings that he complains of in his first four points, and which we have numbered one through four in the fourth paragraph of this opinion, is so excessive that the jury could only have been motivated by bias, prejudice, passion or some other improper motive in assessing each of such items of damages.

In his sixth point of error defendant says that if this Court does not reverse and render for the reasons urged in his first five points that we should require plaintiff to make a remittitur of a substantial amount with reference to each of the four complained of items of damages referred to in those five points.

The test which we are required to follow in determining the “no evidence question”, which is a law question, is stated by the Supreme Court in Renfro Drug Co. v. Lewis, 149 Tex. 507, 235 S.W.2d 609 (1950) as follows: “In seeking to determine whether there is any evidence to support the judgment and the . . . findings of fact incident thereto ‘it is proper to consider only that evidence most favorable to the issue and to disregard entirely that which is opposed to it or contradictory in its nature.’ ”

There the evidence in the record must be viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict.

That test does not apply where the questions involved relate to whether the evidence was sufficient to support jury findings.

In determining the question of whether the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s answer to an issue or the question of whether the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence is such that the jury’s answer to a certain issue is unjust it is this Court’s duty to consider all of the evidence in the record, including that which is contrary to the verdict. Fisher Construction Company v. Riggs, 160 Tex. 23, 325 S.W.2d 126 (1959).

The Court of Civil Appeals in passing on the questions referred to in the last paragraph above has the duty to consider and weigh all of the evidence, both for and against the issue, and to set the judgment aside if it concludes that the verdict is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of all the evidence as to be manifestly unjust, regardless of whether there is some evidence to support it. Watson v. Prewitt, 159 Tex. 305, 320 S.W.2d 815 (1959).

The evidence showed that the plaintiff, Leo Ferris, was an attorney. He was 34 *68 years old at wreck time. He was licensed to practice law in 1961. The wreck in question occurred on November 13, 1969, about 2½ years before the trial. On the occasion in question Ferris was alone in an Oldsmobile Cutlass when defendant’s truck loaded with 600 gallons of asphalt ran into the left side of plaintiff’s front left fender in a street intersection. Defendant’s truck was heavy when loaded and it was driven into the intersection traveling at about 30 miles an hour and the brakes of that truck were not applied until it got within four or five feet of plaintiff’s car. After striking Ferris’ car the truck went on down the street 50 or 60 feet and Ferris’ car was caused to spin around and further out into the intersection than it was when hit.

In the wreck Ferris’ head struck some part of the car, his mouth hit the steering wheel, he was knocked unconscious and following the wreck the seat belt was putting a lot of pressure on him and at the scene following the wreck he was gasping for breath. He was carried to St. Joseph’s Hospital and stayed from November 13, 1969, to November 16, 1969. The wreck occurred on a Thursday and beginning the following Monday he sat through a court trial for over three days, he having engaged another lawyer to do the trial work for his client, but the client insisting that he be present during the trial. At the hospital plaintiff’s head, neck, arms, shoulders, mouth and eyes hurt. His teeth hit the steering wheel and dislodged an eight-unit permanent bridge that he had in his mouth, fracturing some of the porcelain facings and loosening the teeth the bridge was anchored to and fracturing one of the anchor teeth. The dentist visited plaintiff each day during his original stay in the hospital and found plaintiff to he suffering excruciating pain and numbness in his anterior nasal aperture and canine eminence. The bridge being knocked loose in the wreck caused his bite to be off and this produced pain. The dentist lacked the equipment in the hospital to there remove the bridge. He tried and much pain was caused so this had to be delayed until Ferris got out of the hospital. The bridge was then cut out, a temporary, one prepared, a root canal done on an anchor tooth that was fractured, and a new eight-unit permanent bridge was later constructed and installed.

Plaintiff had had some left ear trouble early in life but it had not bothered him in recent years much. He did have a scar on the left ear drum before the wreck. He also had before the wreck a mild divergence of his vision (cockeyedness) for which he had been operated in 1955 while in the Army.

His family doctor, Dr. George Moore, saw him in the hospital following the wreck and Ferris was semi-conscious and had blood in his left ear canal and tenderness to palpation of his neck and head. Dr. Moore’s diagnosis was cerebral concussion (bruise on the brain), a myofascial strain, which is associated with neck injuries, and a hole in his left ear drum, his eyes were bothering him (double vision), and he had some amnesia. Dr. Moore arranged for his dentist, an ear specialist, and an opthalmologist to see Ferris.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
492 S.W.2d 64, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-road-company-v-ferris-texapp-1973.