Bower Auto Rent Co. v. Young

274 S.W. 295, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 615
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1925
DocketNo. 9350.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 295 (Bower Auto Rent Co. v. Young) 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
Bower Auto Rent Co. v. Young, 274 S.W. 295, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 615 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

LOONEY, J.

This suit for damages is based on the alleged failure of appellants, common carriers of passengers, to exorcise towards appellee that high decree of care incident to the relation of carrier and passenger. The suit was originally brought by Mrs. E. L.-Rawls, as next friend for Loraine Crane Young, for the alleged reason that, at the time of the filing of the suit, appellee was mentally deranged as the result of the injuries received in the accident complained of, but, in an amended petition, appellee alleged that she had sufficiently recovered from the derangement to justify dismissing her next friend and substituting herself as plaintiff, in which she joined pro forma James Lyday, to whom she was married after the suit was instituted. _

The case was submitted to a jury on special issues, and on their verdict judgment for $25,500 was rendered in favor of appellee, from which appellants prosecute this appeal.

Appellants urged the proposition that the allegations of negligence in .appellee’s petition were vague, indefinite, and insufficient to put them on notice of the specific acts of negligence relied on and intended 'to be proven, and that the court erred in overruling their special exception calling attention to this vice in the petition. In the respect excepted to, the petition contains the following allegation: After alleging that plaintiff, on or about the 16th day of June, 1921, was a passenger in one of the defendant’s automobiles, riding on the road known as the Fort Worth-Dallas pike, a public highway, over which, among other roads and streets in the city and county of D'allas and adjoining counties, the defendant commonly and ordinarily operated automobiles carrying passengers from city to city or location to location to any point within the state for *296 hire, she was seriously and permanently injured. The petition continues:

“Plaintiff would show to the court that while she was lawfully a passenger in defendant’s automobile as aforesaid, and at a point on said pike near the Tarrant-Dallas county line, through the gross negligence and default of said defendant, its agents,, servants, and employes, said automobile was caused, allowed, and permitted to run off the road and be thrown from said roadbed and the embankment thereof, upset and turned over, thereby hurling plaintiff, Mrs. Loraine Crane Lyday, with great force and violence against the ground and parts of said automobile and crushing her beneath said automobile, seriously, painfully, and permanently injuring her in her head, neck, right side, right arm, and right leg, and internally in. her brain and nervous system, causing her great damage in the sum of $30,000.”

Also the following allegations appear:

“Plaintiff would further show to the court that all of the injuries of which she complains were caused and occasioned by the defendant, its agents, servants, and employes, in failing to exercise that degree of care for the personal safety of plaintiff that common carriers of passengers are bound and obligated to exercise towards their passengers.”

The court, in our opinion, did not err in overruling the special exceptions urged by appellants to the petition. Appellee alleged that appellants were common carriers of passengers for hire; that she was a passenger ' at the time, the injury was received in one of their automobiles, and -received her injuries on account of the gross negligence and default of the driver in allowing and permitting the automobile to run off the road and to be overturned, upset, etc. The Supreme Court of this state, in G., C. & S. F. Ry. v. Smith, 74 Tex. 276, 11 S. W. 1104, held allegations of negligence in substance the same as these good against a similar attack. To the same effect, see the following authorities : G., C. & S. E. Ry. Co. v. Wilson, 79 Tex. 371, 15 S. W. 280, 11 L. R. A. 486, 23 Am. St. Rep. 345; T. & P. Ry. Co. v. Stivers (Tex. Civ. App.) 211 S. W. 319; Doll & Sons v. Ribetti, 203 E, 593, 599, 121 C. C. A. 621; Ryan v. Gilmer, 2 Mont. 517, 25 Am. Rep. 744, 745; Parish & Co. v. Reigle, 11 Grat. (Va.) 697, 62 Am. Dec. 666, 669, 670.

The rule announced in' these cases is based on the idea that, in actions of the nature of the one at bar, proof of negligence beyond proof of the accident itself is not required, where- the vehicle or. thing connected with the accident is at the time under the management of defendant or his servants, where it appears, as in the case under consideration, that the accident is of such a nature as would not ordinarily happen if those in charge of the vehicle had used proper care. In all such eases it is held that the transaction speaks for itself (res ipsa loquitur) and, in the absence of an explanation by the defendant, proof of the accident itself is held sufficient to establish negligence. Appellants’ contention that the court erred in not sustaining special exceptions to the plaintiff’s petition is overruled.

Appellants make the further contention that appellee should not have been permitted to recover, and that a verdict should have been instructed in their favor, on the theory that the automobile arud the driver, at the time of the accident, were being used for a purpose different from that agreed on in the contract of hiring — that it, for an unlawful purpose, to wit, the transportation of intoxicating liquor, contrary to appellants’ instructions to drivers and in violation of law, state and Federal; that the driver was acting without the scope of his employment, and, at the time the ear was ditched and the injuries received by the passengers, was acting as the agent and servant of the hirer.

The court refused at the request of appellants, to instruct a verdict in their favor, but submitted the case on special issues, all of which were answered in favor of appellee, to the effect that the automobile left the road, turned over, resulting in the injury to appellee, and others, on account of the negligence of appellants’ driver in charge of the car, and' that this negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries to appellee, and also found, in response to an issue presented, .that on the occasion in question appellee exercised ordinary care for her own safety. The proposition of law presented by appellants is well sustained by the authorities; that is, that, where an agent or an employs departs from his agency and is acting wholly without the scope of his employment, he ceases to be the representative of his principal, and consequently his acts are not binding on his employer (Christensen v. Christiansen [Tex. Civ. App.] 155 S. W. 995; Hemphill v. Romano [Tex. Civ. App.] 233 S. W. 125; De Voin v. Michigan Lumber Co., 64 Wis. 616, 25 N. W. 552, 54 Am. Rep. 649; Berry on Automobiles, § 138, p. 968), but, in our opinion, the rule is wholly inapplicable to the facts of this case.

The facts are that on the day in question Baker V. Wiley, of Huntsville, Tex., and T. H. Lively, of Whitewright, Tex., former acquaintances, met in the city of Dallas, and, after becoming more or less intoxicated, decided, to engage an automobile for the purpose of taking a “joy ride” with some women, and with this view Wiley hired an automobile from appellants and requested that one of their drivers with whom he was acquainted, to wit, Vance Bennett, should drive the ear on the occasion. Lively invited appellee to be his. companion on the trip, -and Wiley secured a Mrs. Rolliter to be his guest. Ap-pellee had never met either the driver of the car or Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 295, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bower-auto-rent-co-v-young-texapp-1925.