Greer v. Thaman

38 S.W.2d 378, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 1163
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 1930
DocketNo. 9347.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 S.W.2d 378 (Greer v. Thaman) 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
Greer v. Thaman, 38 S.W.2d 378, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 1163 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinions

GRAVES, J.

Appellant -assails a $4,604.85 judgment for personal injuries in favor of appellee — $604.85 of it for medical attention, hospital bills, and nurse hire, the balance for other damages — - rendered against him on a verdict in response to special issues finding there was negligence on his part that proximately caused one of his autobusses operating as a common carrier for hire between the cities of Houston and Goose Greek, on which the appellee was a fare-paying passenger, to turn over with her into a ditch, in two respects: (1) That he had failed to have the bus equipped with an adequate and sufficient wiper to keep the windshield clear for vision; (2) that the driver of the bus failed to keep a‘proper lookout to observe the condition of the road ahead of him.

The $604.85 allowance as expenses for medical attention, hospital bills, and nurse hire is protested against on the ground that appellee’s pleadings failed to allege that such expenditures were reasonable or necessary, while the remaining $4,000 is challenged as being so grossly excessive in amount as to show; that it is the result of bias, prejudice, or some other improper motive.

Both points must be overruled.

The pleadings as to the first of these -sums was as follows:'

“That because of said injuries, and as the direct and proximate result of said accident, *379 said plaintiffs have been forced to expend and incur large bills for medicines, medical and surgical services and attention, hospitalization, nurse hire, hired help, and X-ray examination, as follows: (Specifying many items, aggregating $914.55.)
“That plaintiffs will have to spend and incur in the future large sums of money for medicines, medical and surgical services and attention, hospital, nurse hire and hired help around their home, in the probable and reasonable sum of Three Thousand ($3000.00) Dollars, which said sum will be a reasonable, proper and necessary charge for such services, attention and help as she will be required to have in the future.”

No special exception pointing out the lack of averment of the reasonableness thereof was directed against any of the amounts so specified; in such circumstances, the pleading has been held sufficient. Dickey v. Jackson (Tex. Civ. App.) 293 S. W. 584, and Id. (Tex. Com. App.) 1 S.W.(2d) 577.

The size alone of the other $4,000 award is said to indicate that some improper motive must have induced it, no misconduct nor prejudice-producing influence of any sort from any source being alleged; when the evidence reflecting the nature and extent of the injuries Mrs. Thaman received from the accident is looked to, no shock to the appellate conscience follows the ascertainment that such a sum was regarded by a jury of her peers in the proper exercise of their exclusive province as only reasonable compensation for them; without detailing the testimony, it is enough to record that the jury were fully justified in finding that they necessitated her undergoing a serious internal ' operation with subsequent confinement of six weeks, entailing much pain before and after, and causing an abnormal nervousness that persisted for more than one year up to the time of this trial.

The heart of the appeal, we think, is found in the next two very ably presented contentions that the trial court erred, (1) in refusing to submit to the jury as an issue of fact whether or not Mrs. Thaman’s injuries were the result of an unavoidable accident, together with a suggested explanation of the meaning of that term, (2) in declining to add to its definition of proximate cause a further and specific explanation of the legal meaning of the expression “new and independent cause” therein contained.

Not without some hesitation, this position, too, is held untenable; in so determining it we pretermit consideration of whether appellant’s appended definitions of “unavoidable accident” and “new and independent cause” to his requests to put these matters before the jury were correct in form, since they were at least sufficient direction of the court’s attention to them.

Under the undisputed evidence, much of it on this phase from the driver of the bus himself, we conclude that the issue of unavoidable accident was not raised; the meaning and application of that term in Texas has been thus stated by the Commission of Appeals:

“ ‘An accident, is inevitable if the person by whom it occurs neither has nor is legally bound to have sufficient power to avoid it or prevent its injuring another. ⅜ * * But in order to provethat an accident was inevitable it is not always enough to show that, under the circumstances existing at tile time, it could not- have been then avoided. It must also be the fact that the defendant was not guilty of any negligence which brought about any of those circumstances.’
“The proper application of the term is explained in 20 R. C. L. p. 20, as follows:
“ ‘If the injury resulting from the act could have been foreseen by a prudent person, the perpetrator will be held accountable therefor; the ease is not one of accident. And conversely, if the injury could not have been foreseen, it is to be attributed, not to the actor, but to accident. Accident, then, is an occurrence that could not have been foreseen.’ ” Boyles v. McClure (Tex. Com. App.) 243 S. W. 1080, at page 1084.

There was sufficient support for the jury’s finding of appellant’s negligence in both the particulars above specified — the first of these being likewise found to have constituted a, the second the, proximate cause of “the accident and injuries” — and there is no claim to the contrary!

The mishap occurred on a dark rainy night on the way from Houston to Goose Creek at a place where the road, which was shell, while narrow had a sufficient clearance for two cars, but was fringed on its right side with a strip of wet soft dirt lying between it and a ditch of from three to five feet in depth; while being run in a manner the jury so found was negligent in that the windshield was not being kept clear for vision and tES driver was not keeping' a proper lookout as to the condition of the road ahead, the bus, without stopping, turned too far to the right, ran off the road on that side, struck this soft ground, and skidded into the ditch, rolling over upon its side.

Such being the situation under the jury’s unattacked findings to which it must be applied, the sole circumstance out of which appellant claims the issue of unavoidable accident arose was the testimony of three witnesses, one of them the driver of the bus, to the effect that, just before this occurrence, a car from the opposite direction rounded a curve in the road ahead at a pretty fast rate of speed, and, with its bright lights shining in *380 the driver’s face, approached this bus; that the bus was then running on the right side of the road at from twenty to twenty-five miles per hour, whereupon it began slowing down, pulled off the road too far to the right, and slid into the ditch; what are deemed the material portions of the driver’s statement, as to which there is nothing contra from the others, are these:

“I didn’t have any trouble at all until I got over here and met this car coming around a curve.

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Related

Greer v. Thaman
55 S.W.2d 519 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1932)
Texas & N. O. R. v. Kveton
48 S.W.2d 523 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W.2d 378, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 1163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-thaman-texapp-1930.