Groendyke Transport Co. v. Dye

259 S.W.2d 747, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1885
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 1953
Docket6306
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 259 S.W.2d 747 (Groendyke Transport Co. v. Dye) 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
Groendyke Transport Co. v. Dye, 259 S.W.2d 747, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1885 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

■PITTS, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding damages by reason of a collision between two motor vehicles upon a public highway which resulted in the death of two minor children and property damages. Appellees, J. C. Dye and wife, Fern Dye, sued appellants, Groendyke Transport Company, a corporation, and its employee, Everett Stallings, for damages sustained by them by reason of Stallings’ alleged negligence ■in the operation of a large gasoline transport truck owned by Groendyke Transport Company when, it collided with a 1949 Frazer automobile owned by appellees and killed the driver thereof, Chester Dye, the 17 year old son of J. C. Dye by a former marriage, and a passenger therein, Rogene Jones, the 15 year old daughter of Fern Dye by a former marriage, and likewise caused property damages as alleged. The natural mother of Chester Dye was deceased as was the natural father of Rogene Jones. J. C. Dye had four children by his former marriage, two boys, namely, Chester and Phillip, and two daughters both of whom were married at the time of the collision, while Mrs. Fern Dye had none other than Rogene by her first marriage. However, Mr. and Mrs. Dye married in 1937, thus uniting their children in the same family when the ones here involved were very small, and they had three other children born to this marriage.

The Dye family resided in Dalhart, Texas, but J. C. Dye owned and operated an automobile agency in Dumas, Texas. On November 2, 1951, Chester and Phillip went with the Dalhart football squad to Shamrock for a game. Later in the day Mrs. Dye took her daughter Rogene and two neighbor children, Helen Freeman and Bowdry B'loxom, in her car, drove by Dumas where Mr. Dye was on duty, picked him up at Dumas and all drove to Shamrock for the ball game. After the game Chester and Phillip joined the family and the two neighbor children for the return trip home, all riding in the Dye family car until they reached Dumas. There Chester, Rogene and the two neighbor children, Helen Freeman and Bowdry Bloxom, 'left the Dye family car to pick up the business car of J. C. Dye in Dumas, which car he used to drive back and forth between his home in Dalhart and his place of business in Dumas. With Chester.-Dye operating the latter car occupied by himself, Rogene and the two neighbor children, with two of them riding in the front seat and two riding in the back seat, they left Dumas following Mr. ánd Mrs. Dye and Phillip in the family car for the remainder of-the trip to their homes in Dalhart. J. C. Dye drove faster than his son Chester did and therefore he 'with his wife and Phillip drove away from Chester and the other children and had returned home before he heard about the collision. While on the return trip home the Frazer automobile had a collision with the gasoline transport truck owned by Groendyke Transport Company and being operated by Everett Stallings at. about 2:50 a. m. o’clock on November 3, 1951, approximately 1.8 miles south of the city limits of Dalhart in Hartley County, Texas, while both motor vehicles were travelling on U. S. Highway No. 87, which-collision resulted in the death of all four of the occupants of the Dye car and injuries to Everett Stallings which caused him to be temporarily unconscious. Stallings was taken immediately to the Loretto Hospital at Dalhart where he remained for several days.

'The case was tried to a jury which found-in. answer to special issues that immediately, prior to the collision Stallings drove his-motor vehicle with a part of it across the center line of the highway and upon Chester Dye’s side of the same and that such constituted negligence which was a proximate cause of the collision. The jury likewise found that Stallings failed to maintain that character of lookout for approaching vehicles which a person of ordinary prudence would have maintained under the-same or similar circumstances at the time and place of the collision and that such-failure was a proximate cause of the collision. The jury also found that Chester Dye found himself in a position of sudden, *751 peril and alarm immediately prior to the collision, caused by Stallings driving the gasoline transport truck across the center line of the highway with a part thereof on Chester Dye’s side of the highway and that such sudden peril and alarm caused Chester Dye to drive his motor vehicle onto his left-hand lane of the highway, which was a reasonable thing for him to do from his standpoint at the time because of his apprehension of sudden peril and alarm and because’ the appearance of danger was so imminent to him as to leave him no time for deliberation. The jury further found that the act of Chester Dye in driving his motor vehicle with part of it across the center line of the highway and onto Stal-lings’ side of the highway did not contribute to or cause the perilous situation he found himself in. The jury also found that immediately prior to the time Chester Dye turned his motor vehicle toward his left lane of the highway his mind was in a startled, dazed and confused condition but that his act of driving his motor vehicle to his left with part of it across the center line of the highway and on Stallings’ side thereof did not cause or contribute to cause the startled, dazed or confused condition of mind. ■ The jury likewise found that the collision was not the result of an unavoidable accident. It also found that the rate of speed Chester Dye was driving immediately prior to the collision was not a proximate cause of the collision. The jury further found that the fact that Chester Dye, immediately prior to the collision, drove his motor vehicle with a part thereof across the center line of the highway and upon Stallings’ side of the highway was a proximate cause of the collision. However, the jury did not find that such an act on the part of Dye was negligence and no such issue was requested or submitted to the jury inquiring if such act of Dye constituted negligence. The jury further found that immediately before the collision Chester Dye failed to maintain that character of lookout for approaching vehicles which a person of ordinary prudence would have maintained under the same or similar circumstances and that such failure was a proximate cause of the collision.

. Appellants filed a motion for judgment upon the verdict of the jury and the same was overruled. Thereafter appellants filed a supplemental motion for judgment requesting the setting aside and disregarding of all of the answers of the jury to special issues concerning stidden peril and alarm as well as the cause of the same, and appel-lees likewise filed a motion seeking to have set aside and disregarded the jury’s answers to the special issue concerning Chester Dye’s failure to keep a proper lookout at the time and place of the collision as well as the issue concerning proximate cause on the grounds that there was no evidence to support such , issues and they sought to have judgment rendered for them on the remainder of the jury findings. After due notice both of these motions were heard by the trial court with a result that appellants’ supplemental motion to have certain answers of the jury set aside and for judgment was overruled and appellees’ motion was by the trial court sustained and granted, thus setting aside and disregarding the findings of the jury concerning Chester Dye’s failure to keep a proper lookout at the time and place of the collision for the reason that there was no evidence to raise such issues.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.2d 747, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groendyke-transport-co-v-dye-texapp-1953.