Hemsell v. Summers

138 S.W.2d 865, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 1940
DocketNo. 5134.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 865 (Hemsell v. Summers) 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
Hemsell v. Summers, 138 S.W.2d 865, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 171 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

Appellee, Florence O. Summers, filed this suit against appellants, Clennon C. Hemsell and Columbian Fuel Corporation, on behalf of herself, her three minor children, and Laura L. Summers. She alleged that she was the surviving wife and her children were the surviving children and Laura L. Summers was the surviving mother of J. W. Summers, deceased; that the death of J. W. Summers was occasioned by the negligence of appellant, Clennon C. Hem-sell, and that the Columbian Fuel Corporation was also liable therefor by virtue of the fact that Hemsell was its employee and that the death of J. W. Summers resulted from a collision between an automobile being operated by Summers and another automobile being operated by Hemsell, who, it is alleged, was at the time engaged in the performance of the duties devolving upon him as an employee of the Columbian Fuel Corporation. The record shows that on the 9th of October, 1937, at about 11:30 o’clock P. M., J. W. Summers was driving his automobile from his home at Dumas to the place where he was working in the oil field in Moore County. Clennon C. Hemsell was an employee in the geological department of appellant, Columbian Fuel Corporation, in connection with oil producing properties owned by it in Texas, New Mexico and Kansas. He was returning from the company’s property in Kansas where he had been some few days and the two met at the point indicated when a collision occurred between their automobiles which resulted in the death of J. W. Summers.

The case was submitted to a jury upon sixty special issues, and upon the verdict returned by the jury in answer thereto, judgment was rendered in favor of -appel-lees in the total sum of $30,890, apportioned between them by the jury in response to *868 appropriate special issues. Appellants filed a motion for a new trial and the same being overruled they excepted, gave notice of appeal, and the record is now before us for review.

The briefs present forty-three assignments of error and fifteen propositions of law' for -our consideration, the principal contentions being based upon the charges and instructions submitted by the court to the jury in connection with the special issues. Under special issue No. 54 the court asked the jury to find what sum of money, if paid now to Florence O. Summers, would reasonably compensate her for the actual damages which she sustained, if any, by reason of the death of J. W. Summers. In connection with this special issue the court charged the jury that, in arriving at the amount of actual damages, they may consider only the following items: (1) Necessary and reasonable funeral expenses paid by Florence O. Summers for her husband’s funeral. (2) The amount of money that would have been used by the deceased, J. W. Summers, to support and care for the plaintiff, Florence O. Summers, for a period of 34½ years, in the manner to which she was accustomed and would expect to be cared for. This last charge or instruction was excepted to by appellants upon a number of grounds and, their exceptions being overruled, they have brought the exceptions forward in the record and it constitutes the first contention in their brief. The principal objections made to the charge were that it was on the weight of the evidence and assumed that the deceased husband would have lived 34½ years; that he would have used a certain amount of money to support and care for appellee, and that it deprived the jury of their proper and lawful discretion by giving to them a fixed mathematical formula by which they should be controlled in arriving at an answer to the special issue.

At about the close of the testimony counsel, in a conversation between them in open court, made a stipulation concerning the introduction of the American Experience Table of Mortality compiled by insurance companies. The stipulation was the result of a rather loose and indefinite conversation held between counsel in open court, but we think the effect of it was that counsel for appellants agreed that the mortality table would show that the deceased, J. W. Summers, had a life expectancy as alleged in appellees’ petition and that the American Experience Table of Mortality, not being immediately available, should be considered in evidence without the details of its formal introduction. Other than testimony concerning the manner of life, employment, habits and customs of the deceased, this is all of the evidence shown by the record concerning his life expectancy. The rule is well established in this and most other jurisdictions that, in the trial of a case of this kind, in determining life expectancy, the jury is not bound by the general averages in life insurance tables. Such tables are, in fact, of little value in determining the life expectancy of any particular person. They are estimates from the general average of the lives of many people and are perhaps of great value to life insurance companies engaged in insuring the lives of men and women, but they are of little service to a jury in determining the length of the lifetime of any particular person whose life expectancy becomes a material question. Our statute, Art. 4677, R.C.S., 1925, does not attempt to fix the damages recoverable in suits of this character, but leaves it to the jury to assess such damages as its members think proportionate to the injury resulting from death. Many such cases have been decided by our courts, however, and the rule is well established by the decisions that the damages which may be recovered under the statute are such pecuniary benefits as the plaintiff had a reasonable expectation of receiving from the deceased had he lived. City of Galveston v. Barbour, 62 Tex. 172, 50 Am.Rep. 519; Hines v. Kelley, Tex.Com.App., 252 S.W. 1033; Ward v. Cathey, Tex.Civ.App., 210 S.W. 289; Texas-Mexican R. Co. v. Higgins, 44 Tex.Civ.App. 523, 99 S.W. 200; Galf C. & S. F. R. Co. v. Compton, 75 Tex. 667, 13 S.W. 667.

The effect of the charge given by the court was to take from the jury the prerogative of deciding the fact question of life expectancy of J. W. Summers, deceased. It, in effect, told the jury to fix the amount of money which he would have contributed to his wife during a period of 34½ years, if he had not been killed in the collision. The question of life expectancy of the deceased husband was not only a question of fact, but a very important one. Under our ’system it was unquestionably one that should have been left to the jury. In the case of Texas-Mexican R. Co. v. Higgins, supra, the court said [44 Tex.Civ. *869 App. 523, 99 S.W. 203] : “Hence, while mortuary tables may be taken as evidence of how long a man may live, the question in every case where one has been deprived of his life by the actionable negligence of another is left for the jury to determine from the evidence before it and the observation and experience of its members.” This holding is in keeping with the rule that has consistently been adhered to by the courts of this state through practically all of its history.

The charge was further objectionable because, in effect, it instructed the jury to fix the amount which the deceased husband would have contributed to the support and care of appellee “in the manner she was accustomed to and would expect to be cared for.” The question with which the law is concerned in such cases and which should be submitted to the jury is the pecuniary benefits the surviving wife had a reasonable expectation of receiving during the time which her deceased husband would have lived but for his untimely death in the accident. Authorities supra.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 865, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemsell-v-summers-texapp-1940.