Central Freight Lines, Inc. v. Bergeron

470 S.W.2d 117, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 29, 1971
Docket7252
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 470 S.W.2d 117 (Central Freight Lines, Inc. v. Bergeron) 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
Central Freight Lines, Inc. v. Bergeron, 470 S.W.2d 117, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2424 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

KEITH, Justice.

We review a judgment arising out of a car-truck collision wherein the minor plaintiff, a passenger in the car, recovered damages for personal injuries. The jury convicted defendant’s driver of a single act of negligence — driving at an excessive rate of speed — which proximately caused the accident; and, although it found that the driver of the automobile failed to keep a proper lookout, refused to find that such failure was the sole proximate cause of the accident. The jury also found that the truck driver was acting in a sudden emergency, acted prudently when confronted thereby, but that the sudden emergency was not the sole proximate cause of the accident. 1

The jury returned negative answers and thereby refused to find that the truck driver: (a) failed to slacken the speed of his vehicle immediately prior to the collision; (b) failed to keep a proper lookout; (c) failed to make a proper application of his brakes; and (d) sound the horn on the truck. The jury also found that the truck driver failed to turn to the right or to the left immediately prior to the collision but refused to find that such failure, in each instance, was negligence.

The question of Mouton’s stopping prior to entering the intersection was submitted both positively and negatively and was answered consistently — the jury refused to find that he failed to stop before entering the intersection and found that he did stop prior to entering the intersection.

Defendant’s motion for judgment non obstante veredicto having been overruled, judgment followed the verdict. From the order overruling its amended motion for new trial, defendant brings this appeal.

By appropriate points, defendant challenges the findings of negligence and *119 proximate cause upon which the judgment rests. These points complain that there was “no evidence”, and “insufficient evidence” to support such findings, and a further complaint is made that the answers are contrary to the great weight and overwhelming preponderance of the evidence. Each of the points which we will consider is founded upon an appropriate assignment in defendant’s amended motion for new trial. 2 In our consideration of the no evidence point, we consider only the evidence in support of the finding of the jury, while as to the latter two challenging the “sufficiency” of the evidence, we consider the record as a whole.

Plaintiff was a passenger, “sitting shot gun in the front seat”, of a car driven by Russell Mouton, when it was struck by a truck-tractor owned by defendant and operated by Kenneth Myers, an agent in the course of his employment with the defendant. The accident occurred at the intersection of Highway 73 and Thirty-second Street in the City of Groves. The highway consists of two widely separated roadways, each having three lanes, and Myers was in the center lane. Thirty-second Street, at the point of the collision, is a two-lane paved city street and there was a stop sign as well as a red blinking light requiring traffic thereon to stop before entering Highway 73. The blinking light also warned by a yellow or caution signal, traffic on the highway approaching the intersection. Myers was traveling upon a “through highway” as defined in Art. 6701d, § 13(f), Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St.

The accident occurred during the early afternoon of August 12, 1966, at a time when the sun was shining, the visibility was good, the roadway dry, and with only normal traffic in the area. Mouton, then fifteen years of age, was accompanied by the plaintiff, then fourteen years of age, and another teen-aged boy. Of these occupants, only the minor plaintiff appeared at the trial and we have no explanation of the absence of the other two persons in the Mouton vehicle.

Plaintiff testified that as they came to the highway intersection, Mouton stopped his vehicle and then proceeded into the intersection. He said that he first saw the truck while they were stopped; it was “coming fast”, although he was unable to estimate its speed. Plaintiff did not continue looking in the direction from which the truck was approaching; but, as Mouton “eased out into the intersection”, he turned around “and looked again and there was that truck right there.” The next thing he remembers was “[wjaking up in the hospital.” Upon cross-examination, plaintiff repeated his prior testimony that he did not know the rate of speed of the truck, but did remember telling Mouton “Watch out, Russell,” and that he hollered at him “because the truck was on us.” He felt no application of the brakes on their car.

Plaintiff called Groves City Policeman Block, who investigated the accident, and established that the posted speed limit on Highway 73 at the place of the accident was fifty miles per hour and that the truck laid down forty-seven feet of skid marks. On cross-examination, Block said the accident happened in the center of the three lanes upon Highway 73 and that the Mouton vehicle left no evidence of skid marks on the pavement.

Defendant presented C. J. Findley, an attendant at a filling station situated at the intersection, who said that he saw the accident. Findley said that Mouton did not stop, he just “hesitated” before entering the intersection. He said that the truck driver, whose speed he estimated at forty- *120 five miles per hour, blew his horn, locked his brakes, and tried to jump the esplanade to avoid hitting the Mouton vehicle. Fin-dley was permitted to say that the truck speed was “normal” when he first saw it some seventy-five yards away from the point of impact. He said that the horn sounded when the truck was some fifty-five to sixty feet from the point of collision and that the brakes came on about that time.

Myers, the truck driver, testified to eleven years’ experience in operating such vehicles, described his unit as having a gross loaded weight of some thirty tons. He fixed the posted speed limit in the area as forty-five miles per hour and told of slowing down some five or six blocks before reaching the critical intersection. Having slowed down, he had begun to increase his speed and had reached a speed of forty to forty-five miles per hour as he approached the intersection.

He saw two cars upon Thirty-second Street, one of which stopped when he was some twenty to twenty-five feet from the intersection, but the other “ease[d] on” into the road. He blew his horn, “feather [ed] his brakes”, and slowed his vehicle. With truck air horn sounding, the Mouton car continued to move on out into the intersection and Myers says that he locked his brakes. His truck, with the brakes on all wheels locked, skidded and struck the Mouton vehicle broad-side upon the right front door.

Plaintiff read from a pre-trial deposition of Myers as part of his evidence in chief and Myers there testified that he was going about forty miles per hour when he first saw Mouton’s car approach the intersection. At that time he, Myers, was “fifty or sixty feet back up the highway”, and Mouton was looking in his direction when he started to move out into the highway. Myers then described the accident in this manner:

“Well, I didn’t know exactly what he was going to do.

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Bluebook (online)
470 S.W.2d 117, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-freight-lines-inc-v-bergeron-texapp-1971.