Blanton v. E. & L. Transport Co.

203 S.W.2d 312, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 985
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 1947
DocketNo. 5772
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 203 S.W.2d 312 (Blanton v. E. & L. Transport Co.) 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
Blanton v. E. & L. Transport Co., 203 S.W.2d 312, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 985 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This is a common law action for damages filed by the appellant A. W. Blanton against the appellees, E. & L. Transport Company a and Sam & Ed Auto & Truck Parts, both being corporations. The damages sued for consisted of personal injuries to appellant and damage to his automobile which resulted from a collision on June 14, 1943, near Gainesville in Cooke County. The E. & L. Transport Company owned and operated a truck with a large trailer that was equipped to transport airplane wings, the truck and trailer together being about seventy-five feet in length, and will be referred to herein as the van. Sam & Ed Auto & Truck Parts owned and operated a truck equipped with wrecker machinery suitable for retrieving and transporting to its shop in Dallas automobiles and other vehicles that had been wrecked or disabled on interior highways, and will be referred to as the wrecker truck. On the occasion in question the wrecker truck was towing a burned automobile from someplace in Oklahoma north of Gainesville to Dallas when a severe rainstorm arose from which water was blown into the motor and caused it to cease operation, or “drown out,” and it stopped on. the highway in a valley between two hills, the brows of which were some fourteen hundred feet apart. The van was transporting airplanes from Detroit, Michigan to Fort Worth over the same highway and was some distance behind the wrecker truck. Appellant with three companions was traveling north in his automobile. Shortly before reaching the stalled wrecker truck the driver of the van veered to his left for the purpose of passing the wrecker truck and, before the rear end of the van cleared the east side of the highway, appellant met it and a collision ensued between his automobile and the van. Appellant alleged negligence on the part of the owners of the wrecker tru'ck and the van and they in turn alleged contributory negligence on his part and also that the collision was an unavoidable accident.

The case was submitted to a jury upon eighty-six special issues, only a few of which were answered by the jury and, except as to the question of unavoidable accident, those which were answered were [314]*314fragmentary and incomplete. An example of the fragmentary character of the verdict is the answer to the 38th special issue, in which the jury found that appellant Blanton had knowledge of the position of peril in which the driver of the van was at the time he was in the act of passing the wrecker truck but failed to find that appellant did, or did not, use the means at his command to avoid the accident. Special Issue Number 82 was as follows: “Do. you find from a preponderance of the evidence that, as between A. W. (Bob) Blanton and E. & L. Transport Company, the accident in question was not unavoidable, as the term ‘avoidable accident’ is herein defined? In the event your finding is in the affirmative, the form of your answer should be ‘It was not the result of an unavoidable accident,’ but in the event your finding is otherwise, your answer should be ‘No.’ ” To this special issue the' jury answered “No”.

Special Issue Number 83 was in exactly the same terms as Number 82, except that, it referred to Sam & Ed Truck & Parts, Inc., and the jury returned the same answer to it.

After the verdict was returned and received by the court appellant filed a motion in which he Urged the court to declare a mistrial and the appellees filed a motion in which they prayed that judgment upon the verdict be entered in their favor, denying appellant any recovery. The motion of appellant was overruled and the motion of the appellees was sustained. Judgment was accordingly entered by the court in which appellant was denied a recovery and the costs adjudged against him. He filed and urged a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, to which he excepted and from which he perfected an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth District and the case was duly transferred to this court by the Supreme Court.

■The case is presented here upon' eight assignments of error which, in substance, present three controlling issues. Appellant contends, first, that the court erred in entering judgment against him because the jury failed to answer any of the special issues submitted to it which would have determined his right to recover upon his allegations of negligence; secondly, that there was no evidence to support the verdict of the jury in which the accident was found to be unavoidable; and, thirdly, that the negative answers to the questions of unavoidable accident were the result of a unanimous mistake of the jurors, in the nature of a clerical error, in announcing and transcribing the verdict as to Issues 82 and 83.

The testimony showed that the motor of the wrecker tru'ck was equipped with a hood with vents in the sides to admit air and assist in keeping the motor cool; that a short time before descending the hill from the north a hard rain had fallen and the wind blew water through the vents onto the motor and, when it reached a point about half-way between the two hills, it ceased to operate, or “drowned out,” and the wrecker truck came to a stop on the west, or right hand, side of the paved highway. When the van reached the brow of the hill, the driver observed the stalled wrecker truck in the valley and when he reached a point some eighty or ninety feet from the wrecker truck he glanced ahead and, observing no vehicles or traffic approaching from the south, he steered his truck to the left, or east, side of the highway for the purpose of passing the stalled wrecker truck. When he reached the point alongside the wrecker truck he observed appellant’s automobile near the brow of the hill to the south and approaching from that direction. Two witnesses who were in the wrecker truck and the driver of the van testified that shortly after starting down the hill toward them appellant’s automobile began to skid, first to his left and then to his right, and there .was abundant evidence to establish the fact that the collision occurred as a result of the skidding of appellant’s automobile. At the time of the collision the truck that was pulling the van had passed around the stalled wrecker truck and had resumed a straight course on the west side of the highway, but the van had not completely negotiated the turn and resumed its straight course. The testimony showed, however, that there was a graveled shoulder on the east side, of the highway from five to eight feet in width and several feet of the paved [315]*315portion of the highway adjacent to the shoulder that was not occupied by any portion of the van and that, had appellant’s automobile proceeded down the highway without skidding, there was ample space for it to pass the van and avoid' the collision. It was shown a heavy rain had fallen only a few minutes before the collision and that the highway was wet and slippery. Appellant testified that, when he observed the van coming around the stalled wrecker truck, he applied the brakes to his car and it swerved or skidded slightly. One of his companions testified that he felt the vibration of the car when appellant applied his brakes and that the car “wiggled, kind of slid on the wet pavement.”

An unavoidable accident has many times been defined by our courts as being a catastrophe or accident which is not the result, in any degree, directly or remotely, by the want of that care or prudence which the law holds every person bound to exercise.

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W.2d 312, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanton-v-e-l-transport-co-texapp-1947.