Cantu v. South Texas Transp. Co.

110 S.W.2d 995, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1307
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1937
DocketNo. 10381.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 995 (Cantu v. South Texas Transp. 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
Cantu v. South Texas Transp. Co., 110 S.W.2d 995, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1307 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal, in a suit brought by appellant against appellee for damages for personal injuries resulting from a collision of their respective automobiles, alleged to have been caused by the latter’s negligence, is from a judgment in appellee’s favor, entered by the trial court upon a jury’s verdict in response to special issues submitted to it; the verdict had found both parties negligent in some respects, each of which constituted a proximate cause of the collision, that is to say, that appellee had failed to give warning of the backing up of its truck on the oocasion, while the appellant had both failed to exercise ordinary care in not stopping his automobile until the appellee’s truck had completed its turn in Canal street in the city of Houston, and had also failed to keep a reasonable lookout for the movements of the truck at the time.

In inveighing here against such adverse judgment to him below, the appellant, through the able and considerate Mr. Bernard Golding as his counsel, foregoes all other complaints, and thus in his brief limits his presentments upon the appeal:

“The writer, however, feels that the only question involved concerns that of discovered peril, and has, accordingly, limited this brief to such question. And too, the writer is inclined to the opinion that numerous Assignments of Error beget lengthy and tedious briefs, which, in turn, impose upon a. three-judge court not only unnecessary labor, but labor which no intelligent human could expect them to discharge with dispatch.
“Appellant contends that not only the pleadings, but the evidence raise the issue of discovered peril, and by reason thereof, the Trial Court’s failure to submit appellant’s Special Issues on this score, requires a reversal of this cause.”

This opinion, therefore, will likewise be so confined.

It will be noted from the quoted statement, as indeed also appears from the assignments, propositions, and recitations in the motion for a new trial below, the *996 sole question presented in this court is, whether or not the trial court’s failure to submit to the jury the specific special issues affecting the claimed issue of discovered peril appellant tendered was reversible error; these issues were seven in number, but each and all of them omit one of the indispensable requisites of the defense of discovered peril, that is, actual discovery by the appellee of appellant’s perilous position in time to have, by the exercise of ordinary care in using the means at hand, consistent with the safety of appellant’s driver and truck, avoided the collision; they were, therefore, fatally defective and were properly refused. Northern Texas Traction Co. v. Singer (Tex.Civ.App.) 34 S.W.2d 920; Texas Electric v. Kinkead (Tex.Civ.App.) 84 S.W.2d 567, writ of error dismissed; Northern Texas Traction v. Weed (Tex.Com.App.) 300 S.W. 41; Northern Texas Traction v. Thetford (Tex.Com.App.) 44 S.W.2d 902; Gersdorf-Sloan Ambulance Service v. Kenty (Tex.Civ.App.) 46 S.W.2d 469; Woodward v. Murphy (Tex.Civ.App.) 29 S.W.2d 828, writ of error refused.

Were the complaint in this court one against the trial court’s failure to charge at all upon that issue after a tender to it of these seven inquiries relating thereto, perhaps a different question would be involved; but since the challenge both below and here was specifically limited to a declination of the court to give the specific proposals submitted, the matter properly ends there; in the next place, it is not thought that, under all the settled authorities in Texas, either the appellant’s pleadings or proof in the first instance properly raised the defensive issue in his behalf of discovered peril, in that his sole pleading touching it was this:

(1) “(g) In then and there negligently failing to use all reasonable means at hand or utmost efforts in that behalf, either or both, consistent with the safety of said truck, and the driver thereof, to avoid such collision after making actual discovery of the danger and eminence thereof, and that plaintiff driving said automobile was in a position of peril from which he could not, or probably would not extricate himself in time to escape from such collision.”

The mere reading of this averment is sufficient to disclose the omission of the requisite affirmative statements that appellant was in a perilous position, that appel-lee discovered his plight of peril in time to have avoided the collision, by the- exercise of ordinary care in using all the means at its hand consistent with the safety of its driver and truck after such discovery, and that its failure was .the proximate cause of the collision; that the appellee failed to exercise ordinary care in such imminent circumstances, although it had in fact discovered such peril in time to have prevented the collision, had it done so.

Wherefore, the pleading failed to meet the requirements of our holdings in that behalf. Baker v. Shafter (Tex.Com.App.) 231 S.W. 349; Galveston H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Price (Tex.Com.App.) 240 S.W. 524; Ball v. Youngblood (Tex.Civ.App.) 252 S.W. 872; 30 Texas Jur. 791 (Negligence par. 119).

(2) The necessary evidence to make out a defense under the doctrine is much more plainly missing; in fact, since the doctrine of discovered peril has been held with us to be a two-edged sword cutting both ways, in other words, equally as applicable to the rights of a defendant as it is to those of a plaintiff [Charbonneau v. Hupaylo (Tex.Civ.App.) 100 S.W.2d 745], the proof here rather shows a defense in favor of the appellee on that doctrine, because the appellant rather than the ap-pellee appears to have discovered his own peril and should himself have avoided it and prevented the collision; not only did the jury on sufficient evidence find him guilty of contributory negligence in the two particulars noted supra, but, under the uncontroverted testimony in his own behalf, he saw the appellee’s truck making the effort to turn in Canal street when quite a distance from it as he approached, but did not himself stop, which he could have done at any time; contenting himself, instead, with extending his left hand out of his car, thereby signaling his own intention to stop, saying he thought the truck driver was going to stop, going on all the while himself in the effort to pass behind the truck.

On the other hand, as affects the appel-lee, there is no evidence reasonably tending to show that its driver (or the helper on the truck with him) either discovered or realized the appellant’s position of peril, or any intention on his part to place himself in such a position, until just prior to the collision itself; the purport of the evidence as a whole, on the contrary, strongly if not conclusively tends to show that the truck driver’s helper, on discover *997

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W.2d 995, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cantu-v-south-texas-transp-co-texapp-1937.