Harris v. Allison

11 S.W.2d 821
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1928
DocketNo. 8061.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 821 (Harris v. Allison) 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
Harris v. Allison, 11 S.W.2d 821 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This is a suit for damages •alleged to have been caused by the negligence •of Durant Motor Company, Red Ball Motor Bus Company, and B. Harris, by which injuries were inflicted upon the person of Tomi C. Allison, wife of N. D. Allison, appellees herein. Each of the defendants, appellants in this court, filed a separate answer. It was alleged by appellees in one count that on or about November 29, 1926, Tomi C. Allison was a passenger in an automobile bus being operated as a common carrier of passengers for hire by B. Harris and the Red Ball Motor Bus Company, and as Said bus was passing along Congress avenue in the city of Austin, an automobile owned by the Durant Motor Company violently and negligently collided with the passenger bus in which said Tomi C. Allison was riding, inflicting bodily injuries upon her. In a second count it was alleged that Harris was a driver for the Red Ball Motor Bus Company, and Tomi C. Allison had secured a seat in the bus automobile to be conveyed by the Motor Bus Company, a common carrier of passengers from Austin to San Antonio; that said Harris negligently ran the motor bus at an excessive and illegal rate of speed within the corporate limits of the city of Austin, and caused a collision by such speed, by not sounding the horn and other acts of negligence. Similar acts of negligence were alleged against'the Durant Motor Company..

The cause was tried upon special issues submitted to a jury, and on the answers thereto judgment was rendered in favor of appellees as against the Red Ball Motor Bus Company and B. Harris; that appellees recover nothing as against the Durant Motor Company; that nothing be recovered by the Red Ball Motor Bus Company on their cross-actions against the Durant Motor Company; and that the company last named recover nothing on its cross-action against the other defendants. The Red Ball Motor Bus Company recovered against B. Harris'. This appeal has been perfected by the Red Ball Motor .Bus Company with a supersedeas bond, and B. Harris with a cost bond.

The jury found that B. Harris, before and at the time of the accident, was operating the motor bus at an illegal speed, that is, at a speed exceeding 20 miles an hour, in the city of Austin; that such excessive and illegal speed directly caused or contributed to the accident and the resulting injuries to Tomi C. Allison; that Harris failed to give a signal of his approach in time to prevent the accident, and such failure to give such warning was negligence; and that it directly caused or directly contributed to the accident and injuries to Tomi C. Allison. The jury also found that Harris failed to turn to the right to avoid the accident, and such act was negligence that contributed to the accident and injuries .to Mrs. Allison. ■ The jury absolved the Durant Motor Company from negligence.

The testimony of Mrs. Allison shows that *822 on November 29, 1926, Mrs. Allison, wife of ■N. D. Allison, took the bus of the Bed Ball Motor Bus Company, at its station in Austin, Tex., to be transported to San Antonio. As the bus bached out of the station of the company, it ran into a passing automobile, then, after moving down Congress avenue across the bridge over the river, the bus, which was moving at the rate of 25 or 30 miles an hour, ran into the automobile as the latter was endeavoring to turn to its right to avoid the bus. By this collision Mrs. Allison claimed to have been injured.

The first proposition in the brief of B. Harris is not tenable. If the court admonished counsel not to ask certain questions on any subject, the mere admonition could not possibly have had any effect on the jury, as it was not made in the presence of the jury. The jury had been withdrawn, and after the court heard what counsel for Harris and the Red Ball Motor Bus Company wanted to prove by Rogers, a policeman, the court held the evidence inadmissible and instructed the attorneys for appellants not to ask questions about the objectionable matter before the jury. The court had the authority to prevent counsel from bringing indirectly before the jury' conversations held by the court to be inadmissible. Counsel for appellants insisted on being “admonished” as to what he should not ask the witness Rogers, and is not in a favorable position to object to the admonition given by the court. It is revealed by' the record that Allison and wife presented no objections to the evidence offered to be introduced by appellants, but the whole affair was one between the Red Ball Motor Bus Company and B. Harris, on the one side, and the Durant Motor Company, on the other. Appellees, Allison and wife, had virtually agreed with the Durant Motor Company before the trial began that no judgment would be sought against that company, and the said company was held in the suit by the motor bus company and Harris, on a cross-action by them against said motor company.

If the evidence was admissible, appellants would have the right to use it, not only as tending to show that they had not been guilty of the negligence charged against them as causing or contributing to the accident, but also as tending to show that it was the negligence of the Durant Motor Company alone which caused the accident. We cannot anticipate and hold that the verdict of the jury would have been the same and would have fixed exclusive liability on appellants. It is true that the jury found not only that appellants were not on the right side of the street and did not give a signal, but also that they were exceeding the speed limit, and that each of these acts of appellants contributed to the injuries; but it might well ■ be that had the jury heard the admissions of the driver of the motor company to Policeman Rogers, they might have found that appellants were not on the wrong Side of the street and that the speed did not contribute to the accident. If the evidence was admissible, it was material and might have exonerated appellants and placed the responsibility on the Durant Motor Company. This being true, the important question arises: Was the testimony admissible in evidence?

We set aside the objection to entertaining the question because the reasons for rejecting the testimony were not set out in the bill of exceptions taken by appellants, for the reason that the bill of exceptions is very long and there are many colloquies between the court and attorneys in which the trial judge gave the grounds on which he rested his conclusion that the testimony was not admissible, and this court is made as fully aware, in that way, of the grounds on which the testimony was rejected, as though they had all been summed up at the end of the bill. The question as to the admissibility of the evidence is duly raised for the consideration of this court, whether appellees objected to its admission or not.

The bill of exceptions shows that appellants offered to prove by G. H. Rogers, who was a member of the Austin city police force, being an “emergency call man, police station,” that on November 29, 1926, between 7:30 and 8 o’clock p. m., he received a telephone call from B. Harris asking him to come to the scene of the collision on South Congress street. He at once got in his car and went to the place of the accident as quickly as he could. When he got there, he spoke to M. L. Jacobs, driver of the Durant Motor Company car.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-allison-texapp-1928.