Ford v. Phillips

250 S.W.2d 752, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1657
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 11, 1952
Docket4783
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 250 S.W.2d 752 (Ford v. Phillips) 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
Ford v. Phillips, 250 S.W.2d 752, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1657 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

WALKER Justice.

Appellants Wayne R. Ford and wife, Mary Bell Ford, brought this action against appellees W. M. Phillips and the American National Life Insurance Company to recover damages for the death of their son, James Wayne Ford, an infant, whom the defendant Phillips killed on October 17, 1950, by driving his automobile over the infant’s head. Plaintiffs’ cause of action was based on various allegations of negligence, charged to have been committed *753 by Phillips in the operation of his automobile. The cause was tried to a jury and the trial court instructed the jury to return a verdict against the plaintiffs, and on this verdict rendered judgment against' plaintiffs. From this judgment the plaintiffs have appealed.

Under Points 3, 4 and 7 plaintiffs -have assigned as error that there was evidence of negligence by Phillips in striking the infant on the “shoulder” of the central driveway or street referred to hereinafter, in not having his vehicle under proper control, and in failing to drive his car on “his proper righthand side” of the road. These Points are overruled.

Under Points 1 and 2, the plaintiffs assign as error that there was negligence by Phillips in not keeping a proper lookout for the infant and in not seeing the infant at a time when he could have avoided the infant’s person. There was evidence of the following matters, relevant to these points:

At the time of the incident the infant, James Wayne Ford, was three years and four months old, and resided with the plaintiffs, his parents, at one of the dwellings in Parker’s Court which the plaintiffs occupied as tenants of C. G. Parker, the owner of the Court. There were 15 of these dwellings and a garage, with an upper apartment, in the Court, and outside or partly outside of the Court was a building which housed a store. The Court adjoined a public highway; and the various buildings in the Court were arranged in the shape of the letter “U”, with a roadway at the center, which led into the highway. At the entrance of the Court there was a cattle guard across this central driveway and at the other end of the driveway was Parker’s dwelling. Nine of the houses were on the right side of the central drive, looking from the cattle guard towards Parker’s house, and the other houses were on the opposite side. All of the dwellings faced the central drive.

The entire Court, structures and driveway, occupied a relatively small area.

According to Parker, the central drive was 50 feet wide and the plaintiffs’ house was 20 feet from the boundary of the drive. There is some apparent contradictory testimony, but we construe it as referring to the traveled part of the drive. According to 'this testimony, the traveled part of the drive was about 35 feet wide and the plaintiffs’ house was about 30 feet from the nearest edge. A shallow drain, with gently sloping sides, extended along the central drive, between the drive and the yards of the plaintiffs and their neighbors. Between the drain and the traveled part of the drive was a “shoulder” on which grass grew; but there was sand in and about the drain near the plaintiffs’ house.

The plaintiffs resided in house No. 7, which was the fourth house from the cattle guard. Next to them (looking towards Parker’s) was house No. 8 and beyond that, house No. 9. A family named Car-ruth resided in house No. 9.

No trees were in front of the plaintiffs’ house but before house No. 8 and beyond it, between it and house No. 9,. was a clump of trees which Parker said numbered 9 or 10. Two of these (shown in defendants’ exhibits 3 and 4) stood only 2 or 3 feet from the traveled part of the road; these trees stood at a point which lay perhaps between an extension of the •walls of houses 9 and 8, but which according to defendants’ exhibit 4 seem nearer an extension of the farther wall of house No. 8. Two others of these trees stood much nearer the plaintiffs’ house, but much farther from the road. The plaintiff W. R. Ford, on his second examination, after having made additional measurements, said that these two groups of trees were about 30 or 35 feet apart and on his first examination he estimated the distance from the street of the two trees nearest the plaintiffs’ house .at about 15 or 20 feet. According to defendants’ exhibit 2, one of these two trees stood near the corner of house No. 8 nearest the plaintiffs’ house and well up in the yard of house No. 8, and this was the tree nearest plaintiffs’ house. On his second examination the plaintiff W. R. Ford said that the two trees farthest from his house and nearest the central drive were. about 80 feet from his house and on .his first examination said *754 that the trees nearest his house were about 30 or 35 feet from his house. There seems to be some inconsistency between his estimates of the distance which the nearest trees stood from his house but defendants’ exhibit 2 shows the relative location of these trees and defendants’ exhibit 3 shows the relative location of the trees farthest from plaintiffs’ house. There was a good deal of other testimony respecting the location of the various trees and houses but this statement sufficiently indicates the relative position of the two groups of trees, the central drive, and the adjacent houses.

There was nothing to obstruct a motorist’s view of the central drive, the shoulder, the drain and the adjacent yards as he approached the plaintiffs’ house from the cattle guard.

The incident occurred about 4 o’clock on the afternoon of October 17, 1950, and the sun was shining brightly at this time. The ground was dry.

According to the testimony of Mrs. Ford, she was standing on the porch of her house immediately prior to the occurrence of the incident. She saw the defendant Phillips’ car entering the Court, at a point which she estimated to be about 15 or 20 feet from the cattle guard, moving then at a speed which she estimated to be 15 or 20 miles per hour. Her son James Wayne Ford was playing in the sand on the shoulder of the central drive with a bucket and shovel at a place which Mrs. Ford said was “just angling” toward the right from where she stood and about 30 or 35 feet away. This placed the infant between the drain and the traveled part of the road; and the plaintiffs’ exhibits 3 and 4, which show the place where Mrs. Ford located the baby confirm this. There was no evidence locating more precisely the exact spot at which the infant was playing. Defendants’ exhibit 2, as well as the plaintiffs’ exhibits 3 and 4, show however, about where Mrs. Ford thought that the infant was at the time. There are inconsistencies and uncertainties in Mrs. Ford’s testimony but this statement sufficiently indicates the position of the child, and with the evidence previously summarized, shows that when Mrs. Ford saw the child at play, the child was in plain view of Phillips as Phillips approached the plaintiffs’ house.

Mrs. Ford said that when she first saw Phillips he was looking to his left, toward a person at the back of the store (which stood at the left of the cattle guard), but that he turned his car toward the right of the drive as if he intended to stop at the second house from the cattle guard, and that he drove along the right side of the road. She then looked toward her son and saw him at the place mentioned above.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W.2d 752, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-phillips-texapp-1952.