Hampton Co. v. Joyce

80 S.W.2d 1066, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 271
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 1935
DocketNo. 2615.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 80 S.W.2d 1066 (Hampton Co. v. Joyce) 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
Hampton Co. v. Joyce, 80 S.W.2d 1066, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 271 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

On trial of this case to a jury in lower court, appellee, S. C. Joyce, was awarded judgment for $7,500 as compensation for injuries suffered' by him in a collision between a motorcycle he was riding and the ambulance of appellant, the Hampton Company, which occurred on or about August 8, 1932, at the intersection of Houston avenue and Seventh street in the city of Port Arthur. The Hampton Company has duly prosecuted its appeal from that judgment.

We overrule appellee’s motion that this court is without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. The facts of the motion are as fol *1067 lows: Judgment was entered on July 29, 1933. The original motion for new trial was filed on August 7th following. On August 26th following, appellant filed its amended motion for new trial. Permission from the court was not obtained or given for the filing of the amended motion at the time of its filing. On August 26th, which was on Saturday, appellant’s counsel merely handed the motion to the clerk of the district court, who promptly filed it. In accordance with his usual custom and manner of conducting business on Saturday afternoons, the trial judge was not in court at that time. On September 23d following, the amended motion was called for hearing, and on that day formal order for the filing of the amended motion was granted by the court and duly entered on the docket. Over the objections of appellant the hearing was “postponed for two days, at which time it was duly heard and overruled. On a hearing on the amended motion appel-lee urged the point urged here, that the trial court had lost jurisdiction of the amended motion because formal permission was not granted for its filing, and denying this contention the trial court said: “Well, I may he wrong, gentlemen, but that is too narrow a technicality for me to pay any attention to; tor a man to lose his right of appeal on a little narrow technicality like that, because he didn’t get the leave of the Court. We all know that the Court would have given him leave. So I overrule that motion of plaintiff.” The motion made in the trial court was renewed by appellee in this court in due time, and its general effect is thus summarized by appellant: “The basis of appellee’s contention is that this appeal should be dismissed because appellant did not obtain leave to file its amended motion for new trial until after the actual filing thereof, even though it was ' filed within the time required by law.”

There is no merit in appellee’s motion. In Morrissey v. Jones (Tex. Civ. App.) 24 S.W. (2d) 1101, 1102, the court said: “Control over amendments is lodged in the trial court, and action therein will not be interfered with, unless palpable abuse of discretion is shown by the complaining party.” In Finks v. Fitzpatrick (Tex. Civ. App.) 30 S.W.(2d) 419, 422, the court said: “We think the effect of the court’s act in overruling the motion was to determine Fitzpatrick was entitled to file it. Thomas v. Young, 5 Tex. 253; Haynes v. Rice, 33 Tex. 167; Connell v. Chandler, 11 Tex. 249; Hopkins v. Seay (Tex. Civ. App.) 27 S. W. 899; Morrissey v. Jones (Tex. Civ. App.) 24 S.W. (2d) 1101.” Under subdivision 29 of article 2002, R. S. 1925, on the facts deduced on the hearing, appellant had an absolute right to file its amended motion; we say “on the facts deduced on the hearing” for the reason that no element of estoppel was shown and no element of surprise to appellee, but the motion was filed in accordance with the usual custom of filing amended motions. The trial judge testified that he would have permitted the filing had the request been made. On these facts it is a correct construction of the statute to say that the failure to obtain the permission to file the amended motion was a mere irregularity, cured by the subsequent order of the court granting the permission. Hopkins v. Seay (Tex. Civ. App.) 27 S. W. 899; Smalley v. Paine, 102 Tex. 304, 116 S. W. 38; 49 C. J. 471.

Section 8 of article 827a of the Penal Code of 1925, as added by Acts 1929 (2d Called Sess.) c. 42, as amended by Acts 1931, c. 282, § 9 (Vernon’s Ann. P. O. art. 827a, § 8), provides that it shall be unlawful to drive a motor vehicle within the corporate limits of a city or town at a greater rate of speed than twenty miles per hour. The jury found that, at the time of the collision, appellee was driving his motorcycle in the corporate limits of the city of Port Arthur at a greater rate of speed than that allowed by the Penal Code. It was also found that the rate of speed was “a contributing proximate cause” of appel-lee’s injuries. Appellant’s proposition is that, on the verdict of the jury, appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. The answer to this contention is that article 791 of the Penal Code 1925 provides that the speed limit of twenty miles per hour shall not apply to motor vehicles operated by police patrols and, , on the undisputed evidence, appel-lee was a policeman of the city of Port Arthur, and, at the time he was injured, on police patrol. In this connection we overrule appellant’s contention that the act of the Forty-First Legislature, passed in 1929, of which article 827a is a part, repealed by implication article 791, allowing the exemption to police patrols. There was no express repeal of article 791 by the act of 1929, and a careful study of that act has convinced us that article 791 was not repealed, by implication. “Repeals by implication ' are not favored.” 25 R. O. L. 918.

Appellant has assigned misconduct by the jury. This assignment must be sustained. During the trial, before the jury retired to consider its verdict, no reference whatever was made to “insurance.” The following testimony was offered on the hearing *1068 on motion for new trial, questions and answers reduced to narrative:

The foreman, Farha, testified: “I know from my own knowledge that there was a discussion of insurance while the jury was o.ut. I really don’t recall who was taking the leading part in the discussion, wouldn’t be positive; but I think it was some of the jurymen there brought it up ; I can’t say exactly who it was, but it was discussed. After I, told them that they shouldn’t consider that, How, whether it stopped immediately or not, Í am not in a position to say, but I think I put a stop to it, because I told them that shouldn’t be considered in the case. I don’t know whether anybody said in my presence that they knew that the defendant, the Hampton Company, had insurance in this case; it seemed like they was under the impression they had insurance. I told them I didn’t know whether they had or not; that I thought ambulances, the premium oh them -fras- prohibitive, because I wrote insurance and wrote some for Roberts, but Roberts didn’t carry any ambulance insurance; nothing but fire and theft, with me.”

' The juror Lacy testified:

^ .“The discussion of the matter as to wheth-ér or not Mr. Hampton or The Hampton Company were covered by any sort of insurance in.this action, covering this ambulance, in the case in question was practically the first discussion, We all went in there and the question was raised that it would not cost Mr. Hampton anything to give Mr. Joyce a pension or whatever you call it, because he. was highly insured and it wouldn’t cost him anything. It was all talked among the twelve jurors there and then the foreman, he says, we had better drop that and talk about something else, and so we then dropped the insurance business and talked about something else as far as I-remember.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 1066, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hampton-co-v-joyce-texapp-1935.