Ayo v. Robertson
This text of 207 S.W. 979 (Ayo v. Robertson) 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.
Opinion
This appeal proceeds from a $2,500 judgment entered by the court below in favor of appellees against appellants upon a jury’s verdict. The verdict was returned for $3,000, but $500 of that amount was remitted before entry of the judgment.
While most of the assignments presented are at least subject to some of the objections interposed against them, since their evident purpose is to call in question the fundamental sufficiency of the pleadings and proof to support the judgment rendered, In the indulgence of a preference to slough off the trappings of mere procedural matters and get down to the merits of causes, we conclude to consider them.
It is first said the judgment is void, being for personal injuries to the wife in a suit therefor brought by herself and merely joined pro forma by her husband, because such damages constitute community property, and so cannot be recovered by the wife in that character of suit. We do not so understand the law. By Act of March 15, 1915, chapter 54, § 1, Acts of 34th Legislature, p. 103 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1918, art. 4621a), it is provided:
•“All property or moneys received as compensation for personal injuries sustained by the wife shall be her separate property, except such actual and necessary expenses as may have accumulated against the husband for hospital fees, medical bills and all other expenses incident to the collection of said compensation.”
The next contention is that neither the pleadings nor proof support the judgment, in that J. O. Robertson was solely a pro for-ma, not a real party to the suit, hence had no recoverable right of any sort involved therein, and the court erred, both in telling the jury they might find the reasonable value to him of his wife’s lost services, and in permitting any recovery at all in behalf of either for such physical pain and mental anguish as might be suffered by Mrs. .Robertson in the future, because there was no evidence reasonably indicating that she would probably so suffer.
When the statement of facts is looked to, we think the further objection that the proof failed to indicate the probability of future suffering upon Mrs. Robertson’s part likewise fades. Not only she herself, but one of the doctors, testified to such permanent injuries as would ordinarily and according to common experience produce future pain.
After a careful consideration of all assignments, the conclusion is reached that none of them point out reversible error, and the judgment is, accordingly, affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
207 S.W. 979, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayo-v-robertson-texapp-1918.