Empire Gas & Fuel Co. v. Muegge

116 S.W.2d 758, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 595
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1938
DocketNo. 10511.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 S.W.2d 758 (Empire Gas & Fuel Co. v. Muegge) 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
Empire Gas & Fuel Co. v. Muegge, 116 S.W.2d 758, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 595 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

GRAVES, Justice.

This much of appellant’s .general, statement of the cause is acquiesced in by the appellees as being correct:

“Ed Muegge and Martin- Pardowski, a minor, by his next friend, Annie Pardowski, sued Empire Gas & Fuel Company in the 21st District Court of Washington County, Texas, to recover damages in the total sum of $2,904.00, alleged to have been sustained by them as a consequence of injuries to person and to property resulting from an automobile wreck which occurred near an underpass four miles east of Brenhani, Texas, on August 14,- 1935. Plaintiffs alleged that an automobile-truck loaded with a ditch-digging.machine, which extended to a height of 14 feet 4 inches and a width of 10 feet 7 inches, had, shortly before the occurrence of the accident, become wedged in the underpass, by.reason of being too high to clear same, thereby blocking the road and making it necessary for plaintiffs, in an attempt to avoid colliding therewith, to turn to the right and into the ditch, wrecking and overturning plaintiffs’ loaded milk-truclc. Plaintiffs alleged that defendant Empire Gas & Fuel Company was the owner and operator of the truck blocking the underpass and the machinery loaded thereon, or if plaintiffs were mistaken in such allegation, that defendant was then engaged in operating and moving such vehicle over the highway, by and through its agent, servant, employee, and representative, Warren Angel. That the operation was being conducted under and by virtue of a special • overload-permit, issued by the Highway Commission of Texas, authorizing Empire Gas & Fuel Company to transport a load not over 12 feet high or 8 feet wide over the highways from Denison to Yoá-kum. That the damages to plaintiffs resulted proximately from the negligence of defendant Empire Gas & Fuel Company, its servants, employees, and representatives, in (1) operating a load of greater height and width than authorized by the permit; (2) blocking the underpass; (3) attempting to drive through the underpass when it was -known, or should have been known, that passage was impossible; (4) blocking the underpass in the knowledge that accident or -collision might result'therefrom; (5) failing to withdraw from the tinderpass; and (6)- failing to give warning of the fact that the underpass was blocked.
“Defendant’s answer consisted of a general demurrer, a general denial, a special sworn denial that it owned the truck or the ditching-machine,- that- it had licensed said truck in its name in Texas, or ever had authorized anyone else, to do so,-that it was in any way interested in the transportation -of the ditching-machine, that it had procured or authorized anyone to procure in its name a permit' for the transportation thereof, or that Warran Angel, the driver, was its agent, servant, or employee in making the trip, or that the trip was made in any way for its use or benefit; and a special plea that plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence.

The case was called for trial on April 1, 1936, and after the court overruled defendant’s sworn first application, for a continuance based on its (alleged) inability * * .to locate Warren Angel, the driver, in time to procure his testimony by deposition or otherwise, went to trial before a jury. On April 3rd the jury found in response to special issues submitted to it: (1) That defendant owned or operated the truck on the occasion in question; (2) that defendant, its employees, servants or agents, blocked the underpass; (3) which was negligence; (4) proximately causing plaintiffs’ damage; (5) that Owen Hartness did not.own the truck in question; (6) that plaintiffs’ truck was not being driven at an excessive rate of speed; (7) and that the damages, which were itemized, amounted to a total of $1358.20. Judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict on April 6, 1936.”

The quoted statement so. reflecting the issues below presages also those joined upon the appeal; the first of these — that, the *760 overruling of appellant’s application for continuance constituted reversible error— is held not to be well taken, without extended discussion; this, mainly for the reason that it assumes against what this court finds to be the record showing on that feature, that appellant exercised all due diligence in its efforts to locate Warren Angel, the driver of the truck that so blocked the underpass; it is true the application was a first one, and it may be further conceded that it was in proper legal form, but it does not follow that, ipso facto, it had to be granted irrespective of whether or not an actual showing of such due diligence was made. Sovereign Camp v. Davis, Tex.Civ.App., 268 S.W. 523; Maupin v. King, Tex.Civ.App., 25 S.W.2d 153; Peveto v. Richardson, Tex.Civ.App., 38 S.W.2d 133; Lipscomb v. James Leffiel & Co., Tex.Civ.App., 44 S.W.2d 1008.

It appears that the sought-for witness, Warren Angel, was a non-resident of Texas; that this suit had been filed on August 23 of 1935; that interrogatories to him had not been filed until February 12 of 1936, nor a commission to take his deposition pursuant thereto issued until February 24 of 1936, which had been sent to his address at Bartlesville, Old.; that on his not being found at that place no sufficient efforts to locate and reissue the commission for him were thereafter made for a period of some 35 days from then until this trial on April 1, of 1936, although appellant was shown all the while after such filing of the suit seven months prior to have been in position to know the materiality of this man’s testimony, his occupation as a truck driver working from place to place over the country, his being a nonresident of Texas, and of the probable necessity of procuring his testimony only through deposition.

In such circumstances, as the cited cases make manifest, it was not an abuse of the discretion vested in the trial judge to deny the application.

Through a number of propositions it is next urged that- the evidence upon which the jury found the complain-ed-of truck to have been owned or operated by the appellant, that its employee or agent had negligently blocked the underpass with it, and' that Owen Hartness did not own it at the time, at most only created a presumption or inference as to such ownership and responsibility for the truck and its movements at the time, which was dispelled and completely removed by positive evidence it adduced to the contrary; aé a corollary, in that connection, it further presents that appellee Muegge’s direct testimony, to the effect that just after the accident at the underpass the driver of the offending truck, Warren- Angel, after he had first pulled the appellees from under their own wrecked truck in the near-by ditch, had, on Muegge’s request therefor, written and given him a memorandum of his name and address and the license number of the truck he had been so driving, reading: “Empire Gas & Fuel Company —Texas—162-341;—Bartlesville, Oklahoma —Warren Angel,” was — standing alone— neither admissible for the purpose nor sufficient to raise the issue for the jury over whether Angel was then and there its agent or employee with any authority to fasten responsibility upon it for what he did.'

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.2d 758, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-gas-fuel-co-v-muegge-texapp-1938.