Green v. Houston Electric Co.

89 S.W. 442, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 260, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 89 S.W. 442 (Green v. Houston Electric Co.) 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
Green v. Houston Electric Co., 89 S.W. 442, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 260, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 119 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

Appellant sues to recover of appellee damages for injuries alleged to have been received by her while getting on one of appellee’s cars. Appellee owns and operates a line of street railway in the city of Houston, and it is alleged in the petition that while appellant was in the act of getting on one of its cars, and before' she had gotten entirely in the car, it was, by the person in charge, negligently started with a violent jerk and without any warning to appellant, the effect of which was to throw her violently against the end of the seat and to inflict upon her injuries, for .which she claims damages in the sum of $3,500.

Defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial. There was a verdict and judgment for the defendant. Her motion for a new trial having been overruled, she appeals.

Appellant, in her first and second assignments of error, complains *262 of the charge of the court in its definition of negligence, as “the want or failure to use ordinary care, that is, that degree of care which an ordinarily prudent person would use under like circumstances, to avoid injury or accident.” The evidence shows that if appellant was injured at all, she was, at the time, a passenger on the car of appellee, a common carrier, and this is the allegation of her petition. The charge is erroneous in defining the degree of care required of appellee, which is, in substance, “such a high degree of foresight as to possible dangers, and such a high degree of prudence in guarding against them, as would be used by very cautious, prudent and competent persons under similar circumstances.” Railway v. Halloren, 53 Texas, 53; International & G. N. Ry. Co. v. Welch, 86 Texas, 203.

The jury were instructed in paragraph 6 of the charge that appellant’s right to recover was dependent upon their belief that she was a sound, healthy and active woman prior to the injury. This placed upon appellant the burden of proving, as an essential element of her- right to recover any damages whatever, the descriptive allegations of her petition that she was, prior to the alleged injuries, a sound, healthy and active woman. We think this charge was error. Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Brown, 16 Texas Civ. App., 104.

The jury were further instructed that the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover if they believed that her physical condition at the time of the trial was not the result of the injury alleged, or if they believed that it arose from other causes prior to the injury. While it is true that there was evidence which tended to show that appellant’s general physical condition at the time of the trial was no worse than it had been for several years, and previous to the date of the alleged injury, and that instead of having been, previous to such injury, a stout, healthy and active woman, as alleged by her, she was weak, sickly and not capable of physical labor, still if this testimony had been true, and if her general physical condition at the time of the trial had been no worse than it was before the alleged injury, it would not have precluded her from recovering for such physical and mental suffering, incapacity to attend to her affairs, etc., as alleged, if any, as were immediately consequent upon such injury and the direct result thereof, and in addition such expenses, if any, as were incurred for medical attendance on account thereof, if in fact she had been injured as alleged in her petition and testified to by herself and other witnesses. If the jury had believed that the accident occurred, as testified to by appellant and Mrs. Finch, and that she sustained damages and incurred expenses immediately consequent thereupon and the direct result thereof, such matters, under the instruction referred to could not have been considered by the jury if they further believed that her general physical condition was no worse at the time of the trial than previous to the injury. This is hot the law, and the charge referred to was error. In each of these instructions the right to recover for whatever damages on account of mental and physical suffering, if any, appellant may have sustained immediately consequent upon the accident and injury complained of, and not affecting her general physical condition at the time of the trial, is denied. These objections to the charge of the *263 court are presented by sufficient assignments of error and must be sustained.

The eighth paragraph of the court’s charge is as follows, and is assigned as error: “In this connection you are further instructed that as plaintiff alleges that her injuries and present condition were produced and caused by the negligence of defendant’s servants in charge of the car, she is required to prove this allegation by a preponderance of the evidence, and if you believe that the accident occurred at the time and place alleged, but believe that before that time the plaintiff was in a diseased and nervous condition, whereby her system was already permanently or seriously injured, and that her present physical condition is only a continuation or aggravation of the already existing condition, you will find for defendant.” Appellee insists that this instruction announces a correct rule of law. Its contention is that appellant, having alleged in substance that she was, prior to the accident,, a sound, healthy and active woman, that her injuries were entirely produced by the accident complained of, and having supported the allegations of her petition by her testimony, and there being testimony tending to show that she was in fact physically weak and unsound before the accident, she is not entitled to recover damages for such injuries produced by the accident as only aggravated a previously diseased or unsound physical condition.

The gravamen of appellee’s argument is that appellant must be confined to the case made by her petition, which is that of injuries produced by the accident upon a sound, healthy and active person. In support of these contentions several authorities are cited. The strongest ease cited and the one announcing in the most positive terms the doctrine contended for, is Wilkerson v. Detroit Steel Works, 73 Mich., 405. The quotation in appellee’s brief from Watson on Damages is in itself a quotation from the opinion in the above case. We have not had access to this last authority, but note that in the quotation in the brief the author states that “on the other hand, it has been decided that the plaintiff may show his delicate state of health at the time- of the injury complained of, and the fact that the consequences are more serious than they would have been had he been in robust health, without special allegation of such facts in his petition.”

In the Wilkerson Case, supra, the facts appeared to be that the plaintiff was partially paralyzed and had epileptic fits, which were alleged in the petition to have been produced by the injuries complained of. Defendant introduced evidence to show that both the paralysis and the epilepsy existed prior to the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W. 442, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 260, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-houston-electric-co-texapp-1905.