Grant v. Griffin

390 S.W.2d 746
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1965
DocketA-10489
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 390 S.W.2d 746 (Grant v. Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Griffin, 390 S.W.2d 746 (Tex. 1965).

Opinions

CALVERT, Chief Justice.

Patricia Ann Grant was riding in an automobile being operated by a long-time acquaintance, Wilbert Edward Suggs, when the automobile left the highway and presumably ran against a tree. Suggs was killed in the accident and Miss Grant was seriously injured. Miss Grant sued Bill F. Griffin, administrator of the estate of Suggs, for damages sustained as a result of her injuries. The trial court withdrew the case from the jury at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony and rendered judgment for the defendant. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed. 383 S.W.2d 643. We affirm.

The problem to be considered is whether an occupant of an automobile involved in a one-car accident, suing the administrator of the estate of the deceased operator for damages resulting from injuries sustained in the accident, is prohibited by Article 3716, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes, the Dead Man’s Statute, from testifying to the conduct of the deceased and to what was said and done by each of them in the context of events preceding and accompanying the accident.

Before the actual trial began, defendant filed a motion requesting that counsel for plaintiff be instructed to refrain from questioning the plaintiff concerning matters about which plaintiff was not permitted to testify by Art. 3716, and that plaintiff be instructed to refrain from giving testimony concerning such matters. The motion was granted and the instructions were given in some detail. The substance of each specific instruction is not material to our review. It is sufficient to state that by the instructions counsel for the plaintiff was instructed in detail not to question plaintiff, and plaintiff was similarly instructed not to testify, [747]*747concerning her observations of the defendant’s conduct and condition, her conversations with the defendant and statements by him, and the conduct of the plaintiff preceding the accident.

After a jury was impaneled to try the case, Miss Grant was called as the first witness. She testified, without objection, to her place of residence, education and past employment; that she had been having dates with Suggs for about four and one-half years; and that she was riding in a Falcon pickup operated by Suggs when she was involved in an automobile accident on the highway between Timpson and Tenaha on June 16, 1963, around 6:30 p. m. She was then asked: “And how did the accident occur?” At this point counsel for the administrator objected on the ground that questions and answers concerning the accident had been prohibited by the order sustaining the motion in limine. The court sustained the objection. Thereupon the jury was retired, and the testimony of Miss Grant was taken for the purpose of perfecting her bill of exception. The testimony was re-offered after the jury was returned to the courtroom, but was excluded by the court. Miss Grant was then permitted to testify fully concerning the nature and extent of her injuries and to her hospitalization and medical treatment. It was stipulated that at the time of trial she had incurred necessary and reasonable medical expenses in the sum of $2,681.56.

The plaintiff offered no other evidence tending to explain the accident or its cause, or showing the surrounding circumstances. Indeed, she testified that she knew of no other witness to the accident and of no other person who could testify concerning the accident or to events leading up to it. It was at this point that the court withdrew the case from the jury and rendered judgment for the defendant. The Court of Civil Appeals concluded that all of the excluded testimony related to a transaction with the deceased and was inadmissible. We agree with the conclusion. For a better understanding of our conclusion we will summarize the excluded testimony.

Suggs arrived at the plaintiff’s home in a Falcon pickup around noon and took her to Center, about nine miles distant, for lunch. After lunch they drove around town for awhile and then started back to her home, but it was raining and the car “got stuck” at a place where the highway was under construction. They spent thirty to forty-five minutes getting the car “unstuck,” and then proceeded to her home where they arrived at about 4 o’clock p. m., and where she changed clothes. They then drove to the home of Jerry and Lanell Beckham and visited for about an hour. They left the Beckham home and proceeded toward Timpson. When they left the Beckham home, Suggs did not “appear to be under the influence of alcoholic beverage,” did not “walk with a stagger or wobble,” his speech did not “slur,” and he gave no signs that the plaintiff could notice “that he had been drinking alcoholic beverage.” When they had been on the road for about twenty minutes, Suggs reached under the car seat and pulled out a six-pack of beer, and began opening the bottles and drinking the beer. As they drove around the city limits of Timpson, Suggs “got to driving reckless” and “got to cussing,” and “he got madder as he started on towards Tenaha.” During this period of time, “he wa: drinking beer.”

There was a caution light on the highway between Timpson and Tenaha where they passed the Timpson school. At that point “you had to slow down.” With respect to events transpiring at that point of their travel, she testified: “I told him to quit drinking and he was going to get in trouble and he was driving too fast and I told him to just let me out there and I would go up to the Dairy Queen and call mother and them or I would get out and get with some of the rest of my friends at the Dairy Queen and he slowed down.” When Suggs slowed down, the plaintiff thought he was going to let her out. He pulled off the side of the road and she opened the car door [748]*748intending to get out, but the car was going too fast. Suggs speeded up and told her “to shut the door and get back in the car.” Suggs pulled back on the road and continued to drink beer.

The plaintiff testified further: “I insisted he let me out. Told him to let me out if he was going to drive that way. The weather was too bad and he was drinking and if he was going to be mad like that and drive and drink, let me out of the car.” It was raining “pretty heavy” and the highway was “rather narrow.” Asked if she had “an occasion to observe the speedometer of the automobile Eddie Suggs was driving,” she replied: “He was making around 80 I imagine.” Asked again: “Do you know approximately how fast he was going when he went off the road?” she replied, “We were going fast. I don’t know how fast.” She testified that his speed was “approximately the same” when they went off the road “as it was prior back there on the road.” The last thing she remembered was “Eddie reaching up under the seat,” the car “going off side of the road” and “a bunch of trees.” Questioned about how many times she asked to get out of the car, she answered: “I don’t know. In different ways I asked him a dozen times directly to let me out. I said let me out when we was up town, at the Dairy Queen and I told him to stop and let me out. I told him different ways a dozen or so times, I imagine, at different times, to let me out.” She testified she never had any chance to get out of the car, and that from the time Suggs got the beer out from under the car seat he appeared “to become intoxicated.” She said: “I had seen him drink beer before and he hadn’t gotten like that. I don’t know. He seemed either sleepy or drunker than usual or something is the reason he was driving so reckless. I don’t know why. * * * ”

The pertinent part of Art. 3716 provides:

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Grant v. Griffin
390 S.W.2d 746 (Texas Supreme Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
390 S.W.2d 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-griffin-tex-1965.