Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Co. v. Motwiller

112 S.W. 794, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 240
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 112 S.W. 794 (Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Co. v. Motwiller) 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
Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Co. v. Motwiller, 112 S.W. 794, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 240 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

RAINEY, Chief Justice.

The appellee, a widow, sued the street railway company, appellant, for injuries to her, caused by the negligence of the railway employes. Defendant answered by general and special exceptions, general denial and contributory negligence. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $2,806.

The first error assigned is: “The court erred in the following paragraph of his charge to the jury: ‘If you find for the plaintiff you will find such an amount as you believe from the evidence will be a fair and just pecuniary compensation for her physical'suffering and mental pain, if any, her impaired ability to earn money, if any, the reasonable amount incurred for medicine and medical attention, if any, made necessary as the direct and proximate result of the defendant’s negligence, if any.’ ” This charge is complained of because it authorized the jury to find for pecuniary compensation for “impaired ability to earn money,” because there is no evidence from which the jury could properly and intelligently ascertain the amount of loss sustained by reason of the impairment of her ability to earn money; that is, there was no sufficient basis in the evidence for such submission.

' There is no assignment of error attacking the verdict or judgment on the ground that appellee was not injured, as claimed, by ,the negligence of the appellant’s servants. We therefore conclude that she was entitled to recover. We will then consider whether the charge complained of as to impaired ability to earn money is such error as will cause a reversal of the judgment.

On the issue of appellee’s disability to earn money, we give portions of the testimony of several witnesses on this point, that her condition may be fully understood. Mrs. Motwiller, the plaintiff, testified: “I had gotten through work about six o’clock. When I fell I lighted on this side (left side). I was dazed. I stood up with my weight on the other *434 foot. The other foot was a heavy weight hanging to my body. It brought my monthly sickness on, and it was not time for it again. Ever since the accident I have had my monthly sickness every three weeks, and now it is getting less than three weeks apart, and lasts me nearly all the time. I have to be prepared for it all the time. On one occasion, at the office, I left off my pads, and I had on four skirts, with a heavy black skirt, and it came through all of these and got on the cushion I was on, and I handed it to á girl down there and she had to take it out and conceal it. It j ust comes most any time. Before the accident I was regular. I was considered very healthy. I would walk to my work and walk home, two miles from where I worked. The feeling I had in my leg was pain. It seemed to be heavy and stiff, and is that way now. I never before had a doctor with me except when my two children were born. I could stand most anything before, but now I have a nervous trembling to my muscles. What flesh I have in my left leg quivers, and the muscles around my month quiver. I do not suffer with headache; I hardly ever have a headache. I take the car right at my door and ride to the transfer, and it is only a few steps to where I work, and that is all the walking I do. I never had any trouble with my kidneys before the accident; now I have to take medicine every time they operate. Sometimes I go two days, and there is a fullness in my bladder all the time. I know my leg is shorter now than it was before the accident. I can take a few steps and stop, and get about a short distance by holding to things, and I can not walk more than a few blocks with a cane without stopping and resting and steadying myself. I have almost given np walking at all.” On cross-examination she testified: “I work all the time, only I get off early. I have the best people in the world to work for. Yes, sir, during last week I cried in the office. They often ask me there what I am crying about. I cry there often. Yes, sir, I was on the witness stand about two hours last January, and I did not cry any then, but, Mr. Harris, my condition is worse. My working hours are eight to six. Sometimes I get there at half past eight. I do pretty much as I please. As a general rule I do not stay there full time. Some days I have only twelve letters to write.' In the store we have cabinets and phonographs all along, and I can walk along holding to one cabinet and then go along and hold to another. I always have to hold to something when I walk so as to prevent it from hurting me. Before the accident my standard weight was 140 pounds. In January this year I weighed 105 pounds. I weighed last week and weighed 98 pounds.”

W. T. Pace testified: “On the 5th of June, last year, when I got home, plaintiff was lying on a couch and groaning, her face contorted and hands all cramped up. We got Dr. Poe. Three days after I called in Dr. Smart for consultation, and she was in such condition if you touched her, moved or manipulated the parts, she would halloo, and you could hear her across the street. She remained two weeks confined to her bed. During the night I could hear her groaning. She had something the matter with her hip. I often assisted her in turning over, and moving her about the bed, and at these times she would scream out with pain. Her left leg was immovable. I have known her since 1900 intimately, and I have always known her to be a healthy woman before this accident. Her weight was 140 pounds, and she walked to town, a mile and one- *435 half or two miles, without any complaint. Her face is thin; she has fallen off almost to a skeleton.”

Mr. Newman testified: “Plaintiff could not move her leg. She would scream every time you started to move her. Before the injury she was in good health, and walked everywhere she wanted to. Since the accident she has lost a great deal of weight, and is not the same woman at all. She can not get about even in the house, and suffers all the time. She is physically a different person. I don’t believe now she would weigh over 100 pounds. She can not get about hardly at all without a cane, and even catches to the furniture in passing. Her condition is worse than it was at the former trial. Her height is about five feet six inches.”

Dr. Poe testified: “I found her wrought up, nervous, and suffering injury to her hip joint. On examination I concluded it was an injury to the hip joint and the contiguous tissues thereto. I treated her two weeks. I saw her twice a day most of the time. Dr. Smart made a casual examination. I saw her at her mother’s house. The condition of the hip and soreness remained the same. The joint seemed to be limited in its motion, and lasted until the last time I saw her. The last time I examined her I found a shortening of the limb—about three-fourths of an inch. The acetabulum could be fractured. From the condition of soreness that seemed to be present, there might be an injury of that kind in this case. The principal result of an impaction of the femur and acetabulum would be inflammatory action. The motion would be limited, naturally, from inflammation. Ankylosis is limited motion and stiffness caused by inflammation. From the hypothetical question you put to me, I would attribute the lameness and that condition to some contusion of the tissues immediately surrounding the joint, or in the joint. Ankylosis would also be the result of such an injury. I would attribute the inflammation in the joints to the soreness and straining of the ligaments. When I was waiting on her she seemed not to have any control over her left limb at all.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.W. 794, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-consolidated-electric-street-railway-co-v-motwiller-texapp-1908.