Baumler v. Hazelwood

347 S.W.2d 560, 162 Tex. 361, 4 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 506, 1961 Tex. LEXIS 676
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1961
DocketA-8095
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 347 S.W.2d 560 (Baumler v. Hazelwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baumler v. Hazelwood, 347 S.W.2d 560, 162 Tex. 361, 4 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 506, 1961 Tex. LEXIS 676 (Tex. 1961).

Opinion

*362 MR. JUSTICE GREENHILL

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a damage suit arising out of a collision on Highway 77 north of Dallas in which Hazelwood was killed. Baumler brought the suit against the administratrix of Hazelwood’s estate, and she brought a cross action against Baumler. The jury found Hazelwood guilty of negligence and Baumler guilty of contributory negligence. Judgment was entered that both parties take nothing. Only Baumler appealed. The judgment was affirmed by the Dallas Court of Civil Appeals, 339 S.W. 2d 75. The only question before us is whether there is any evidence to support the answers of the jury as to Baumler’s contributory negligence; i.e., the jury findings that Baumler was traveling at a greater rate of speed than a person of ordinary prudence under the circumstances, and that his speed was a proximate cause of the accident. We find that there is no evidence to support the finding that Baumler’s speed was a proximate cause.

The accident occurred about 1:30 a.m. on a Sunday morning. The night was clear and bright. There was a moon. The highway, U. S. Highway 77, was a concrete two-lane highway with a white line painted down the center and clearly visible. At the point of collision, the highway was smooth, straight, and level. There were gravel shoulders 6 or 8 feet wide leading into ditches on both sides of the highway. The highway runs north and south.

Baumler was driving north from Dallas in the east lane of the highway. Hazelwood, accompanied by a female companion, was driving in the opposite direction, i.e., south toward Dallas. Their cars collided, left-front fender to left-front fender. Hazel-wood was killed almost instantly. The lady accompanying Hazel-wood did not take the witness stand. While Baumler was permitted to testify about other matters, he was not permitted to testify as to the collision itself. The testimony was excluded by the trial judge because of the provisions of the Dead Man’s Statute; i.e., that the accident was a “transaction with the deceased” under Article 3716, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes Annotated. The correctness of this ruling is not before us. 1 There were no other eye witnesses, so the evidence before us consists mainly of the condition of the cars, condition and acts of the par *363 ties before and after the collision, pictures taken at the scene, and the evidence left after the crash.

Since this is a “no evidence” case, the relevant testimony will be reviewed.

Baumler testified that he left a cafe in Dallas and proceeded out Highway 77 in his right-hand lane. He at no time got on the left-hand side of the road. He had recently been discharged from the Navy in good health and with 20-20 vision. He was driving a new car, a Ford purchased by him a few months before the accident. It had about 6000 miles on it. It was in perfect mechanical condition. The tires were good. As he drove north on Highway 77, he had his lights on, low beam. He testified that he had not been drinking, and there was no evidence that he had.

Mr. Roy Perry, Baumler’s employer at the time of the collision, was telephoned when the accident occurred. He hurried to the scene and described it as follows: there was oil, water, glass, and chrome scattered 12 to 20 feet. There was debris on both sides of the highway. He placed the point of the impact at 2-1/2 to 3 feet on the east [Baumler’s] side of the highway. There were scrapes of gouge marks in the highway made by “a bumper, spring or something” from Hazelwood’s car. The gouge marks began 2 or 3 feet on the east [Baumler’s] side of the highway, and continued across the west side to Hazelwood’s car which was in the ditch some 40 or 50 feet from the point of impact. He found some tire marks “just before the impact.” You could follow Baumler’s tire marks from the point of collision to the place where it stopped in the ditch on the west side of the highway some 40 or 50 feet from the debris in the highway.

Vernon Mikel, ambulance driver, picked up Hazelwood and the lady with him. He testified that it was about 33 steps or 100 feet from the debris down to Hazelwood’s car in the ditch.

Billy Gober was driving in the same direction as Baumler and came upon the scene shortly after the collision. He testified that there was dirt and glass on both sides of the centerline. He noticed drag marks or scrape marks on the highway made, perhaps, by a frame or metal object, evidently from Hazelwood’s car, starting close to the debris, beginning 6 inches to a foot on the east [Baumler’s] side of the highway and extending off at *364 an angle to the west. He testified that there were “about 15 or 20 feet” of skid marks in the east [Baumler’s] lane, and there were some skid marks to the north in the west [Hazelwood’s] lane. He didn’t know how far, “they might have been 10 feet [long], something like that.” He didn’t remember the skid marks well. He just remembered marks on both sides of the highway. Both cars came to rest in the ditch on the west side*

George Thompson, who came on the scene after the collision, said that “there was debris along the east side of the road”; it was “between the middle of the east lane and the shoulder of the road.” He didn’t see any marks on the payment, no skid marks or scratches. He was not sure about the debris, but he remembered none on the west [Hazelwood’s] side.

Baumler’s Ford, which was in the ditch to the north of the point of collision and on the west side of the highway, was farther from the debris than Hazelwood’s Dodge, which also came to rest in the west ditch to the south of the point of collision.

Patrolman Henry Campbell of the Dallas Sheriff’s Department went to the scene immediately after getting a radio call. He testified that although there were lights of other cars, and although he looked diligently with his flashlight, he could find no skid marks for either car. He did find gouge marks on the pavement at the point of impact, but he did not measure them. He remembered the gouge marks as being on the west [Hazel-wood’s] side; but upon being shown photographs of the highway showing the marks, he could see that they were on both sides. He found glass and dirt on the highway. There was debris on both sides of the centerline. He regarded the center of the mass of glass as the point of impact. He thus established that the point of impact was “almost directly on the center stripe of the road; * * * most of the debris seemed to be on the west side of the highway toward where the cars had both gone into the ditch.” He measured 66 steps from what he regarded as the point of impact to Baumler’s Ford and 33 steps to Hazelwood’s Dodge.

Gene Gauss, a professional free-lance photographer, had his car equipped with police radio-receiving equipment. He arrived at the scene within 10 minutes of the crash. His pictures were introduced in evidence. Some of them show the condition of the cars, both rather heavily damaged, particularly in the left-front *365 portions. Others show the highway shortly after the crash with people still standing around. These pictures show the gouge marks beginning a little on the east [Baumler’s] side of the highway and curving at an angle off to the west and south.

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Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.2d 560, 162 Tex. 361, 4 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 506, 1961 Tex. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baumler-v-hazelwood-tex-1961.