Banana Supply Co. v. Driskell

250 S.W.2d 595, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1628
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1952
Docket12427
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 250 S.W.2d 595 (Banana Supply Co. v. Driskell) 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
Banana Supply Co. v. Driskell, 250 S.W.2d 595, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1628 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This is a plea-of-privilege case. Appel-lee brought this suit 'in one of the district courts of Harris County against appellants, husband and wife, who did business under the name of Banana Supply Company, to recover damages on account of the following accident, which happened in Harris County on August 17, 1950: One Jiminez, an employee of appellants, acting in the scope of his employment, was driving toward Houston on Highway 290 in a 1947 G. M. C. tractor, to which a trailer was attached, and in which he was transporting a load of potatoes. On the highway about three miles from Fairbanks toward Houston appellants’ driver met appellee who was driving his automobile from Houston, where he was employed, toward Fairbanks, where he lived. When, or just before, the two vehicles passed, the outside wheel of one of the dual wheels on the right side of appellants’ trailer became unfastened and rolled down the highway behind the trailer and collided with appellee’s automobile going in the opposite direction, causing, ap-pellee alleged, the damages he sued to recover.

Appellants duly filed their plea-of-privilege to be sued in Bexar County, where they resided. Appellee controverted their plea in due form, relying on Subd. 9, Art. 1995, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., to retain venue in Harris County. The venue contest was tried by the court without a jury and he rendered judgment overruling appellants’ plea. No conclusions of fact or law were requested and none have been filed.

From the court’s judgment overruling their plea-of-privilege, appellants prosecute this appeal, predicated upon three points, presenting: That the evidence was insufficient (1) to show that an affirmative trespass was committed by appellants or their servant in Harris County, or (2) to show •that a crime or an offense had been committed by appellants or their servant in Harris County, or (3) to show that there was any causal connection between any affirmative trespass committed by appellants or their servant in Harris County, and the accident in question.

We note from the statement of facts that, aside from certain formal evidence which we deem it unnecessary to refer to, the only evidence introduced consisted of (1) a letter from Cooper Dewey, Sr., resident engineer of the Texas Highway De *597 partment, addressed to appellee's counsel and which was admitted by consent to show ,a portion of U. S. Highway 290 over which appellants’ driver passed prior to the accident, (2) the testimony of appellee, and (3) a portion of the deposition of appellants’ driver, Jiminez, introduced by appel-lee.

The letter from Mr. Dewey disclosed that ■on the 17th of August, 1950, certain repair work was done on Highway 290 between Waller and. Hockley (which are towns between Hempstead and Fairbanks), which necessitated traffic passing over the highway between said towns to detour onto the shoulder of the highway where the work was under way. That this section of the highway so under repair was approximately a mile and a half in length.

The portion of appellants’ driver’s deposition introduced by appellee showed that there was a governor on appellants’ truck which limited its top speed to approximately 42 miles per hour; further, that according to his instructions, he checked his truck-trailer at intervals of from 50 to 75 miles; and that prior to the accident he had last checked his truck-trailer at Hempstead and the wheels were then found to be in good condition. (Hempstead, we judicially know, is the county seat of Waller County, and approximately 50 miles distant from Houston). According to appellants’ driver, he did not know that the wheel had become detached or that it had collided with appellee’s automobile until after he was overtaken on the highway by appellee and so notified."

After the accident the driver found that the lugs of the wheel which became detached had snapped off and were not worn down. He testified that it was the duty of the company mechanic at San Antonio to check over the lugs at fifteen-day intervals and if he found them worn down or loose he put in new ones. Appellants’ driver further testified that he did not know what caused the lugs to snap off.

The following questions which had been asked appellants’ driver by appellee’s counsel and his answers thereto, were introduced into evidence from the aforesaid deposition:

“Q. And you figure that the rough shoulder there and jumping around may have sheared the bolts there? A. I think that that is what caused it — I don’t know.
“Q. Well, I realize you don’t know. .
* * ⅜ * * *
“Q. That is the best way you can figure out they came off? A. Yes, sir.
⅜ ⅛ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
“Q. Did it seem rough to you? A.
It was pretty rough.
“Q. How fast can you drive on that shoulder? A. Well, you don’t drive that truck fast on the shoulders there. You stop and start your trucks as slow as you can to go by that piece there, that shoulder there.
⅜ $ ⅜ ‡ ⅜ ⅜
“Q. What I am getting at and I " want to make it clear, is that you didn’t stop and check all of your lugs and your tires after you got back up on the highway until this accident happened? You checked your tires before you got off on the shoulder, is that correct? A. I was looking for a station so that I could check them again, sir, on account of that was a pretty rough place. Before I got to that filling station to where I was going to check them, that is when Mr. Driskell came and stopped me.”

We also take judicial notice that there are a number of small towns between Hockley and Fairbanks. — The wheel did not come off until the driver had continued on beyond Fairbanks toward Houston for a distance of about three miles.

Appellee relies upon some 17 grounds of negligence which he plead. It would require too much space to copy them into this opinion, so we have undertaken to. summarize them in the following four categories: (1) That appellants’ truck driver was operating their vehicle along a public highway at a rate of speed in excess of what *598 a person of ordinary prudence in the exercise of ordinary care would have done under the same or similar circumstances, (2) that appellants’ driver violated the law in permitting a portion of the vehicle to be on the left side of the highway, (3) that appellants were liable for their driver’s negligence in permitting a defective trailer to 'be on a public highway in violation of the law, and (4) that they were liable for the operation of the vehicle upon the public highway with a wheel which was known to their employee, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have been known to him, to be defective and not in operating condition.

Appellants make no contention that ap-pellee’s pleadings are not sufficient to allege an offense-and an act of affirmative negligence committed by their driver in Harris County so as to fix venue in Harris County under Subd. 9, Art. 1995.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W.2d 595, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banana-supply-co-v-driskell-texapp-1952.