Blood v. Patco Lumber Co.

466 S.W.2d 429, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2956
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1971
DocketNo. 15661
StatusPublished

This text of 466 S.W.2d 429 (Blood v. Patco Lumber 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
Blood v. Patco Lumber Co., 466 S.W.2d 429, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2956 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

BELL, Chief Justice.

This is a suit for damages resulting from the death of Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Lind-berg who were killed in a truck and automobile accident. Charles S. Blood, the paternal grandfather, sued as next friend of the minor child, Anthony Charles Blood, the son by a former marriage of Mrs. Lind-berg. Jo Ann Lindberg Patterson, the mother of the minor children, Paul Lind-berg, Jr., Joseph Rex Lindberg and Pamela Jo Ann Lindberg, her minor children born to her marriage with Paul E. Lindberg, sued as their next friend. The defendants were Pateo Lumber Company and Melvin Zwahr. The suit against Zwahr was settled by an agreed judgment after a severance. After a jury verdict favorable to appellee on the issue of negligence, the court rendered judgment that plaintiffs take nothing against Pateo.

Mr. and Mrs. Lindberg were passengers in an automobile driven by Thomas Palermo in a westerly direction on Farm Road 1462. His automobile, a 1963 Oldsmobile, was in collision with a truck belonging to Pateo which was loaded with lumber and which was being driven by Patco’s agent, William Cofield. Palermo was not a party to the suit.

The appellants plead various specific acts of negligence on the part of Cofield and also discovered peril. The appellee’s answer is not in the transcript. However, an unchallenged statement in appellee’s [430]*430brief is that no contention has been made that either of the deceased was guilty of negligence. Too, no issues on their negligence were submitted to the jury.

The jury, in response to issues of primary negligence, asserted against Cofield, answered as follows:

1. Failed to find that after Cofield saw Palermo’s Oldsmobile on the wrong side of the road he failed to make such application of the brakes as a person of ordinary care would have made.

2. Failed to find that after Cofield first saw Palermo’s vehicle on the wrong side of the road he operated the truck at a greater rate of speed than a person of ordinary care would have done.

3. Failed to find that Cofield, on the occasion in question, failed to swerve the truck as a person of ordinary care would have done.

4. Found that Palermo drove his automobile at a rate of speed in excess of that which would have been driven by a person of ordinary care.

5. Failed to find that such act of Palermo was the sole proximate cause of the collision.

6. Failed to find that Zwahr backed his car from the Bergen driveway onto the highway.

Appellants requested the court to submit issues on discovered peril and presented properly worded issues encompassing such theory. The court refused.

Appellee’s theory is that discovered peril was not raised because: (1) there was no contention and no evidence that Mr. or Mrs. Lindberg were guilty of any act of contributory negligence nor was any imputable to either of them and the doctrine of discovered peril is not applicable unless some negligent act of plaintiffs, or those from whom they derive their cause of action, placed the injured party in a perilous position; (2) discovered peril was not raised by the evidence because the evidence shows conclusively appellee’s driver could do nothing after the deceased persons were in a perilous position to avoid the collision, or, what is a variation of this, that the driver had no last clear chance; and (3) the primary negligence issues submitted in effect covered the theory of discovered peril.

The evidence shows that Palermo was driving his Oldsmobile west on the highway about 4 o’clock on the afternoon of November 27, 1966. It was a clear day and he was facing the sun, though he says he had his sun visor down to protect his eyes. Cofield was driving east on the highway. The highway was paved with asphalt, the paving being 20 feet in width. There are wide gently sloping shoulders on either side. They were made of shell and were covered with grass. The surrounding country was flat. The road runs almost due east and west and for some substantial distance east and west it is straight.

Palermo testified he was driving 70 miles per hour which is the speed limit. As he was driving west a pickup truck backed out of a driveway to his right and he swerved to his left to miss it. He then pulled back to the right and the vehicle started to skid. The last thing he remembered was trying to turn his car to the right and saw a flash. It seemed like a dot. From the time he saw the truck until the collision was about two seconds. He was then skidding in the middle of the road. He could not estimate the speed of the truck. He wasn’t going very fast. He was on the wrong side of the road at the time of the collision. His car crossed the center stripe three times before the collision. From the time it first crossed until the impact was five or six seconds. When he first swerved left the left front wheel went on the south shoulder and caught on the shoulder. He estimated his car traveled 300 feet from the time he first swerved until the collision. After the collision the truck and car ended up 30 or 40 feet south of the pavement.

[431]*431Melvin Zwahr testified he was in his pickup in the driveway at Johnny Bergen’s house on the north side of the highway. He saw the collision. He heard a sound and looked west and saw the Oldsmobile sliding north toward its lane. The car was facing northwest. He thought it was going into the ditch. It was sliding. Just before getting to the ditch the car headed south. It was in a spin. It was, however, sliding west. It all happened in two or three seconds. He did not see the truck until after the collision. He had turned into the driveway, coming from the west, and had been there about 20 seconds before he saw the car. He did not see it when he turned into the driveway. At the time of impact he thought the truck was right in its lane. He didn’t know whether the truck tried to swerve. The skid marks made started west of his pickup. Between the time his head "flew west” and he saw the Oldsmobile until the collision was about two seconds. When he first saw the car it was going 70 or 80 miles per hour. He had no idea of its speed at the time of impact. He thought the car was going into the ditch on the north side just before it swerved back to the south just before the collision.

Mr. Bergen testified he first saw the car when it was just about in back of the pickup. It was skidding across the road headed north. It was on the wrong side of the road (south) and coming back to the north. When it started to the north it was headed toward the ditch. He thought it was going into the ditch. It then swerved left and hit the truck. He could not give the speed of the car. The skidding of the car had to slow it but he couldn’t say how much. You could hear the sound of the tires as they were sliding. At impact the truck was not off the highway. The car took the truck off the highway into the ditch on the south. When he first saw the car it was traveling at a tremendously high rate of speed. When it hit the truck it was sliding sideways. The left front fender and headlight came in contact with the car. When he first saw the car it was going over 70 miles per hour. It was going near that when it hit the truck.

Perry Lewis was riding in the truck with Mr. Cofield. They were coming back from a job at Lake Jackson. As they were traveling along he was eating pecans. He heard Mr. Cofield say “look out”. He looked up and saw the car. It was zigzagging across the road.

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Bluebook (online)
466 S.W.2d 429, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blood-v-patco-lumber-co-texapp-1971.