Cisco & N. E. Ry. Co. v. McCharen

118 S.W.2d 844, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1938
DocketNo. 1809.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 844 (Cisco & N. E. Ry. Co. v. McCharen) 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
Cisco & N. E. Ry. Co. v. McCharen, 118 S.W.2d 844, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 40 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

Roy McCharen recovered judgment below against Cisco & Northeastern Railway Company for damages in the sum of $2,750, from which the latter has appealed.

The appellant, defendant below, will be referred to as defendant, and appellee, the plaintiff below, as plaintiff, the same as in the trial court.-

The cause of action involved a personal injury of plaintiff at the crossing of the railroad and a public street in the city of Breckenridge, which latter was also a part of three or four state highways.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged grounds of negligence denominated (a) to (p), both inclusive. Of these sixteen grounds of negligence many of them were mere repetitions, in different form, of others. The defendant alleged seven grounds of contributory negligence, most of them being included, in whole or in part, in others, and some being mere repetitions in different words. The case was tried by a jury. The court overruled the request of defendant for a peremptory instruction of a general verdict in its favor. Seventeen special issues'were submitted to the jury, supplemented by one other given at the request of defendant. The court refused to give 24 special charges and 81 special issues requested by the defendant. The special verdict returned by the jury comprised findings all favorable to the plaintiff, briefly, and in substance, as follows: (1) That defendant did not have a flagman or watchman at the crossing, warning persons about to use said crossing of the approach of the train; (2) that defendant’s employees released two box cars and permitted them to be shoved across th,e street and uncontrolled; (3) that said employees did not sound the whistle and ring the bell on the engine at such a distance from said crossing as to be reasonably calculated to give notice to persons about to use said crossing, of the approach of the box car. It was further found in response to other issues that each of the abo^e found acts or omissions constituted negligence and a proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries. It was further found' that the collision (between plaintiff’s motorcycle and the box cars) wqs not occasioned by an “accident” nor “an unavoidable accident.”

*846 On issufes of contributory negligence it was found by the verdict (1) that plaintiff did not discover the approaching, box car (with which he collided) at any time as he approached or rode his motorcycle onto said crossing, in time to avoid the collision; (2) that the failure to so discover the box cars was not negligence; (3) that plaintiff was not guilty of negligence in riding his motorcycle at the rate of speed he did ride it in going onto said crossing. Damages as the 'result of injury sustained by plaintiff were found in the sum of $2750.

In answer to the single issue requested by the defendant, which was given, it was found that the plaintiff in approaching the railway crossing at the time and place of the accident, in the way and manner he did, under the then existing conditions, did not fail to use the care that a person of ordinary prudence under the same or similar circumstances in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, would have used to ascertain whether or not cars were moving over the crossing, before driving his motorcycle so near the crossing he could not stop the same in time to prevent the accident in question.

Defendant has filed a printed brief of 166 pages. Plaintiff has filed no brief whatever. Defendant’s brief contains 66 assignments of error and the same number of propositions.

Defendant’s first assignment of error presents for review the action of 'the court in refusing its request for a peremptory instruction. We shall reserve this question for the last part of the discussion.

Assignments of error numbers 2 to 4, inclusive, present for review the several actions of the court in refusing to give particularly requested charges. . The case, as the foregoing statement discloses, was submitted upon special issues. The requested charges were upon the law of the case. The jury could have no proper concern with the law of the case. It should undoubtedly be considered as settled by this time that in a case submitted upon special issues it is not error for the court to refuse to give a requested special charge or instruction on the law of the case. On the contrary, it is improper to do so.

Assignments of error numbers 5 to 28,, inclusive, and the propositions thereunder, relate to the several actions of the court in refusing to submit requested special issues. We have considered all of said assignments of error, and it is our conclusion that they present no question of merit. Many of them constituted repetitions, with slight change in verbiage of issues that were submitted. Others ' relating to negligence of the plaintiff were not embraced in the special pleas of contributory negligence, and, therefore, not proper to be submitted for that reason. Most of them combined two or more issues in one.

At this point we pause to observe parenthetically that the subject of contributory negligence involves two distinct issues. It would generally be error to submit contributory negligence as one issue. The negligence of the plaintiff is not even a defense, unless it be a proximate cause of the injury. See authorities cited in Dunn v. Texas Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Tex.Civ.App., 84 S.W.2d 545.

Others of the requested issues were, as written, so conditioned that it would have been improper for the court to submit them, even if otherwise correct. As to such a request we may refer to our conclusions stated in Harris v. Thornton’s Dept. Store, Tex.Civ.App., 94 S.W.2d 849, wherein, upon the authorities cited, it was held that the request for a special issue must be accompanied (page 852) “with a correctly stated issue in such form that the court can make his action upon such request a matter of record simply by indorsing thereon ‘given’ or ‘refused,’ as the case may be.” Unless a requested issue satisfies this requirement, there is no error in refusing to submit it.

The assignments and propositions relating to misconduct of the jury are overruled. There is no bill of exceptions supporting the assignments and consequently the record does not show what was the finding of the trial judge upon the issues of misconduct. Only two jurors appeared as witnesses. If the trial judge reached a conclusion from the evidence that there was no misconduct as alleged in the assignments of error, we could not disturb that finding. In other words, such finding, in our opinion, would not be without evidence to support it. We presume that the court made such finding.

The proposition relating to- argument of plaintiff’s counsel cannot be sustained because there is no authentication of sufficient facts, either by the bill of exception, or statement from the record made in defendant’s brief, to show that the argument was not justified by the record. Un *847 less an argument is of such a nature that it must he presumed that it was not justified by the record, then we think it is at least incumbent upon the appellant to show a state of facts from the record from which the impropriety of the argument may appear.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 844, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cisco-n-e-ry-co-v-mccharen-texapp-1938.