Auto Sales Co. v. Bland

194 S.W. 1021, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 456
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1917
DocketNo. 694.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 1021 (Auto Sales Co. v. Bland) 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
Auto Sales Co. v. Bland, 194 S.W. 1021, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 456 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

WALTHADD, J.

R. L. Bland brought this suit against B. S. Cook and the Auto- Sales Company, a partnership composed of A. H. Eicke and W. H. Bray, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained to his automobile in a collision in which his automobile was wrecked and its various parts broken and injured.

Appellee alleged in substance that he resides in Taylor county, and that appellants reside in Nolan county; that Eicke and Bray were engaged in the business of selling automobiles under the firm name of Auto Sales Company, and that Cook was employed by them as agent to assist them in said business and in the demonstration of cars for them, and is their sales agent; that the Auto Sales Company sent one of its cars into Taylor county by Cook, and that Cook was demonstrating said car in Taylor county as agent, and within the scope of his employment as agent, and was attempting to sell said car to a prospective purchaser in Taylor county for said Auto Sales Company, and that the prospective sale of the car, or some other car, was the business which brought Cook into Taylor county at that time; that while Cook was demonstrating sáid car, and while driving west on the public road near Trent, Taylor county, and while acting as said agent, he met appellee’s wife .driving east on said public road in an automobile; that Cook saw 'appellee’s car while more than 100 yards distant, and by the use of ordinary care could have avoided a collision, but that instead of remaining in the road, and instead of driving to the right, as is the custom, he drove his car to the left, and turned out of the road, and ran into and against appellee’s car, causing the damage to appellee’s car complained of.

Cook and Eicke and Bray filed separate answers. Each answered by general denial,' and each specially denied that Cook was the agent of the Auto Sales Company. The answers alleged that there was an agreement between Cook and the Auto Sales Company, whereby Cook was to have the use of one of the company’s demonstrating cars within such territory as was not covered by other agents, Cook not to receive a salary, but a commission upon sales effected by him; that the company had an agent at Trent, and Cook had no authority or right to demonstrate or sell ears for the company at Trent; that Cook used his own judgment and acted without restriction, except that he should not negotiate sales in such territory as was covered by the company’s regular agents. Cook alleged that on the day in question W. E. Cap-erton requested him to come to Trent to assist him in selling a newspaper plant, and that, having a prospective buyer for a car west of Trent, he went to Trent at such request, at his own volition, and not at the instance of the appellant company; that soon after starting from Trent, and while in the west part of the town, and while driving on the north side of the road, he saw appellee’s car approaching and keeping to the north side of the road, and was led to believe that the car was going on a road leading obliquely from the main road to the northeast and did not conclude to the contrary until after said car had passed the fork of said road and continued in his direction, and yet on the north side of the road, and, seeing no movement of the approaching car to turn to its right, he, to avoid a collision, started to leave the north side of the road, and just as he was making that movement appellee’s wife, driving the approaching car, threw her car to the right and directly across the road in front of his car, causing such injuries to appellee’s car as occurred. Cook alleged that his movement to the south side of the road, after seeing that appellee’s car was holding to the north and smooth side, was for the purpose of accommodating appellee’s car to the smooth part of the road and himself passing over a less used part of the road. He denied that he was guilty of negligence and that the collision was caused by the negligence of appellee’s wife in the manner of handling her car.

Eicke and Bray further alleged that Cook had no authority from them to make sales in territory assigned to their agent at Trent; that they had nothing whatever to do with his trip to Taylor county, and knew nothing of it until after the occurrence; that 'Cook on that trip was on business matters pertaining to himself and not to them; that he was not *1023 acting for or representing them, but was then at Trent at the instance of Caperton in regard to other business matters.

Upon special issues submitted to them, the jury found that Cook was the agent of the Auto Sales Company in driving the automobile at the time it collided with plaintiff’s car; that the collision was caused by the negligence of Cook; that plaintiff’s wife was not guilty of negligence which contributed to cause the collision; the jury assessed the damages caused by the collision at $100.

[1] The portions of the charge to which the assignments are directed are as follows:

“To enable the court to decide this case, the same is submitted to you on special issues, and you will answer the following questions: (1) Was the defendant E. S. Cook an agent of the defendant Auto Sales Company in driving the automobile of said company at the time it collided with plaintiff’s ear?”

The contentions are that the expression in the charge, “at the time it collided with plaintiff’s car,” states affirmatively that Cook’s' car did collide with the plaintiff’s car, conveying the idea to the jury that Cook’s car was the aggressive ear, and that the charge was upon the weight of the evidence; and that the expression in the charge, “to enable the court to decide this case,” indicates to the jury how the several issues presented shall be answered. We think the expressions quoted from the charge are not to be commended, and are subject to the criticisms made, but the question arises: Are they sufficient to require the reversal of the judgment? Cook in his answer states substantially that, supposing the plaintiff’s car would continue on the north side of the road, where he says it was, he left the north side and turned his car into a road leading straight forward west and to the south of that part of the road then occupied by plaintiff’s car “which was on the north curvature of the road.” In his testimony he says:

“I turned out where the cars struck. It was about 20 or 25 feet I think from where I turned out to the point where we collided. ⅜ * ⅜ I did turn out of the main beaten road.”

Cook was mistaken in his supposition that plaintiff’s wife would continue to drive her car on the north side, if she was on the north side at the time he turned his car to the south. We conclude that, both from his pleading and his testimony, Cook was acting on "what he supposed plaintiff’s wife would do, and that, while he thought to give her the smooth road, “because she was a lady,” he did just what was the dangerous and the wrong thing to do. While the assignment and the propositions thereunder point out technical errors, they are not such as, under the pleadings and proof, should reverse the case. The assignment is overruled.

[2] The trial court gave the following charge:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 1021, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auto-sales-co-v-bland-texapp-1917.