Garrett v. Waits Bus Lines, Inc.

229 S.W.2d 381, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2038
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1950
Docket6467
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 229 S.W.2d 381 (Garrett v. Waits Bus Lines, Inc.) 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
Garrett v. Waits Bus Lines, Inc., 229 S.W.2d 381, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2038 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

LINCOLN, Justice.

The appellants are the surviving wife and minor children of L. .E. Garrett, deceased, and brought this suit to recover damages for his death caused by the alleged negligence of the appellee. The trial court sustained special exceptions to the second amended original petition and, the appellants declining to amend, the suit was dismissed;- The. only point of error is directed to' the action of the court in sustaining the appellee’s, special- exceptions.

The amended petition is quite lengthy. We will state its material allegations. The deceased bóúght and paid for a ticket in Pittsburg, Camp County, to Paris and return for use on the appellee”s bus. At that time he was intoxicated from the use of intoxicating liquors and this fact was known to the appellee’s ticket agent. The bus had already left Pittsburg, but the ticket agent knew that Garrétt would try to overtake the bus and use the ticket for transportation thereon. He overtook the bus at Mt. Pleasant and was admitted as a passenger by the bus driver. It is then alleged that the -appellee “became obligated and bound to safely transport the said Garrett in his then known condition to his point of destination * * * and owed to him that dégree o-f care commensurate with his condition.”

The bus driver took a bottle of whiskey from Garrett at the time he was accepted as a passenger or shortly thereafter. The bus made its usual stop at Talco, a station between Mt. Pleasant and Paris, and *382 then proceeded on toward Paris.. Shortly after the bus left the station at Talco Garrett left his seat and “started toward the front seat,” and requested the driver to give him back his whiskey. The driver stopped the bus immediately, turned around and drove back to the Talco bus station and put Garrett off the bus. At that or at any other time Garrett did not do anything or say anything reasonably calculated to cause the bus driver or any passenger to believe that he was about to create any disturbance. When Garrett was put off the bus the driver offered to return the whiskey but he refused to accept it and the driver pitched it out on the ground and drove off. Garrett picked up the bottle of whiskey and walked away with it. In returning to the station at Talco to put Garrett off, the bus driver drove within thirty or forty feet of the City Hall. The City Marshal and a Deputy Sheriff of Titus County were sitting near the street where the bus was traveling and the driver brought the bus almost to a stop for the purpose of turning Garrett over to the officers “because of his drunken condition and probable danger to himself and to the public.” But he did not do so and put him out at the bus station “without any protection or assistance whatsoever, or any provision for his care of safety in his known condition, or any provision for his transportation in safety to his destination or return to his home.” It is alleged that the bus driver admitted to the plaintiff “Fadie” Garrett that the reason he started to stop the bus as he passed the City Hall at Tal-co was because he was afraid Garrett would get on U. S. Highway No. 271 and get run over; that the City Hall is about 150 or 200 yards from Highway 271 and is about half way between the highway and bus station where. Garrett was put off. It is further alleged that the bus driver saw two men between Highway 271 and the bus station, and “has admitted he knew them to be officers, and whom he knew would have placed the said Garrett in confinement and safe-keeping, if he had stopped and turned the said Garrett over to them.” The petition then makes the following allegations :

“12. That the highway traveled by said bus going through Talco from Pittsburg to Paris is U. S. Highway No. 271 and is a much traveled highway. Said bus driver knew, or should have known, that said Highway No. 271 was a much traveled highway and knew that the said L. E. Garrett was so intoxicated that he was mentally and physically unable to protect himself from the dangers thereof or of appreciating the danger incurred and produced by the acts of said bus driver in unlawfully ejecting the said L. E. Garrett as a passenger from said bus under the circumstances at said place. That said bus driver knew, or should have known, that the said L. E. Garrett was incapable of knowing or understanding the consequences of the danger that confronted him under the circumstances, and any person of ordinary prudence should have known that giving to him more whiskey in his then condition would materially increase his mental and physical incapacity and would materially increase the possibility of his being injured.

“13. That said bus driver in putting the said L. E. Garrett off of said bus was an unlawful ejection of a passenger because said bus driver accepted him as a passenger in his drunken condition and the said L. E. Garrett was guilty of no act or conduct which would either justify, warrant', or excuse such unlawful ejection of a passenger under the circumstances, and said bus driver failed to provide for the safety of the said L. E. Garrett at the time of such unlawful ejection.

“14. That at the time the said L. E. Garrett was unlawfully ejected from said bus it was about 8:00 P. M. at night on said 8th day of April, 1948, and the bus driver knew that he was unlawfully ejecting him at an isolated and unsafe place because of the conditions and actions here-inabove alleged and for the further reasons that the bus station at Talco affords no accommodations to passengers, or prospective passengers, except á place to buy a ticket. That on said date, the owner and operator of a drug store at Talco was the agent of said defendant for the purpose of selling tickets in connection with the operation of *383 his drug store and didn’t even offer as much as a placé for a passenger or prospective passenger, to' sit down.

“15. That said bus driver knew, or should have known, that there was no other mode of public transportation out of said town of Talco that night, either to the place of destination of the said L. E. Garrett, or to return to his home. That said bus driver knew, or should have known, as a matter of law, that the said L. E. Garrett was too drunk to request or receive hotel or other public accommodations if such accommodations were available in the town of Talco, without friends or acquaintances, to assist him. That under the circumstances such unlawful ejection was at an isolated and unsafe place and without the protection required of such defendants under the circumstances.

“16. That said bus driver, knew, or should have known, and any person of ordinary prudence could have reasonably anticipated that the said L. E. Garrett might receive some injury in view of his known condition and the circumstances surrounding such unlawful ejection at such an isolated place so far from his point of destination or his home. That said bus driver has admitted knowledge of such danger, as hereinabove alleged.”

It is then alleged that about 9 o’clock that night Garrett was struck and killed by some kind or character of motor vehicle unknown to the appellants and operated by an unknown person, about five or six miles out of the town of Talco on U. S. Highway No. 271, toward Mt. Pleasant.

Following these allegations the appellants then set up specific grounds of negligence, all of which are involved in the allegations and statements above set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W.2d 381, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-waits-bus-lines-inc-texapp-1950.