Hanks v. LaQuey

425 S.W.2d 396, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2617
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1968
Docket11563
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 425 S.W.2d 396 (Hanks v. LaQuey) 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
Hanks v. LaQuey, 425 S.W.2d 396, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2617 (Tex. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Chief Justice.

This case involves a railroad crossing accident between an automobile and a moving train. Two students from Southwestern University who were in the automobile were injured in the collision, both quite seriously.

The accident occurred in January, 1965 at about 11:45 p. m. in Georgetown at a point where 12th Street crosses the railway tracks. Appellant, Clyde Hanks, was driving the automobile also occupied by ap-pellee Barbara LaQuey as guest-passenger, when the automobile, traveling easterly, struck a moving train at this crossing. Barbara and Clyde had been at Paul’s Dairy Nook, a restaurant, near downtown and were en route back to the Southwestern University campus at the time of the wreck.

Both Barbara and Clyde were students at Southwestern University where she was a sophomore and he was a freshman. Their acquaintance was casual and came about largely because she had dated one of his fraternity brothers. They had not dated before the night of the accident. Because her regular date was unable to take Barbara out that night, Clyde called her to go over to his fraternity house. They double dated with another couple, but before they went to the fraternity house, they drove to Jarrell where Clyde bought a bottle of whisky. On the way back to Georgetown Barbara and Clyde had some drinks.

They arrived at the fraternity house at about 8:30 p. m. and remained there until about 11 or 11:30. Here they danced and played cards.

Barbara knew that during the course of the evening Clyde had drunk two or three mixed drinks, while she had about the same number. At about 11:15 or 11:30 she asked Clyde to take her out for something to eat and he borrowed a car and drove to Paul’s Dairy Nook, a restaurant. At this time Barbara knew that Clyde had had at least two or three drinks.

The Dairy Nook was popular with the college students and Barbara and Clyde ordered food and stayed at this place some fifteen or twenty minutes. They left the Dairy Nook at about 11:45 p. m.

After they left the Dairy Nook, their plan was to return to the fraternity house where they would pick up another couple then return the girls to their dormitory. The closing time at the dormitory was 11:55, and if a girl was late, she would be penalized. Consequently, everyone tried to get their dates back into the dormitory on time. Barbara and Clyde had about ten minutes to get from the Dairy Nook to the fraternity house, pick up the other couple, and get to the girl’s dormitory before it closed.

Clyde continued due east toward the railroad crossing. Before reaching the crossing, he overtook the automobile of Alfred Brown, the admissions counselor at Southwestern University, who was also returning to the campus with some students in his vehicle. Clyde was in the inside lane going east and so was the counselor. The evidence indicates that Clyde was speeding as he approached the counselor. When the counselor saw Clyde approaching he drove his automobile to his left, across the double yellow stripe to the wrong side of the road, in order to allow Clyde to pass. The counselor estimated Clyde’s speed to be at least 70 miles per hour, perhaps as high as 90 miles per hour. The counselor had already observed a slow moving train blocking the 12th Street crossing before Clyde passed him. Clyde did not reduce his speed after passing the counselor, but continued speeding down 12th Street and hit the twenty-first car from the front of a twenty-nine car train. The car hit the rear wheels of the twenty-first car, stuck to the train, and was carried south with the train some 228 *399 feet. The counselor did see the stop lights of the automobile come on an instant before impact. The police found that the car had skidded about 45 or 50 feet before striking the train. No one knows whether Clyde or Barbara applied the brakes at the last instant.

The train and crossing were not difficult to see. There was a street light at every block along 12th Street from Paul’s Dairy Nook to the crossing, and a street light directly over the crossing that lighted the train itself. In addition, there were automobiles stopped on the east side of the crossing and their lights were plainly visible as the train was passing. Furthermore, the railroad had erected warning lights at the crossing that had four constantly burning red lights and two more that blinked on and off when a train was at the crossing.

12th Street was smooth and level and the six red warning lights at the railroad crossing could be seen all of the distance from Paul’s Dairy Nook to the crossing itself.

The railroad crossing is in the 800 block of 12th Street. Between Paul’s Dairy Nook and the crossing, there is a school zone in the 300 block; a hospital zone in the 500 block; a railroad warning sign in the 700 block; and a speed limit sign of 35 miles per hour.

Clyde had been a student at Southwestern University since September of 1964. He had been over the same railroad crossing many many times before the accident. He knew that 12th Street was the main street to get to and from Southwestern University. He knew all other students would be using it and was well aware of the speed limit. He readily agreed one could see trains using the crossing when still several blocks away if one were to look and agreed that trains using the crossing were not difficult to see.

Clyde further testified that before the accident he knew that there were warning lights at the railroad crossing.

Both Clyde and Barbara were severely injured in this collision and she remembers nothing after getting into the car at the Dairy Nook. He remembers taking a Spanish examination during the afternoon of the day of the wreck, and nothing after-wards for some weeks. Barbara was in the hospital for more than eight months after the accident. Included in the severe damage to her body was some facial disfigurement which may be permanent, her legs shortened by several inches and the inability to open her jaws more than a quarter of an inch. This latter feature can possibly be corrected by surgery accompanied by an interlude of painful exercises designed to keep the joints of the jaw from becoming fixed again. Before the accident, Barbara was a very attractive young lady, sought after by the boys, able in athletics, and was, in fact, the head of the athletic activities of her sorority. Now, the boys no longer call her and certain results of the accident will probably be with her for the rest of her life.

The jury found that Clyde failed to keep a proper lookout, 1 which was gross negli *400 gence and a proximate cause of the collision; that he was driving at an excessive rate of speed, which was gross negligence and a proximate cause of the collision; that he failed to apply the brakes in time to avoid the collision, which was gross negligence and a proximate cause of the collision.

The court entered judgment for Barbara LaQuey against Clyde Walton Hanks, III based on the jury verdict in the amount of $150,748.06. It is from this judgment that appellant Hanks has perfected his appeal to this Court.

We affirm.

I.

Appellant Hanks is before this Court on fifty points of error. 2

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Bluebook (online)
425 S.W.2d 396, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanks-v-laquey-texapp-1968.