HT Cab Company v. Ginns

280 S.W.2d 360, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1903
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1955
Docket12827
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 280 S.W.2d 360 (HT Cab Company v. Ginns) 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
HT Cab Company v. Ginns, 280 S.W.2d 360, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1903 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.,

This suit was originally brought by Lee Ginns on July 28, 19S0, to recover damages sustained by him resulting from a gunshot wound inflicted on him by James Melvin Jones on May 7, 1950. The original plaintiff brought his action against the said Jones and also against the H. T. Cab Company and the Taylor Company. In his original petition Lee Ginns alleged that the H. Ti Cab Company was engaged in operating taxicabs in the City of Houston under a license issued to it for that purpose, and so a common carrier of passengers for hire at all material times. He.alleged that on the *362 date he was so wounded he took a taxicab which was operated by the said Jones under the authority of H. T. Cab Company and notified Jones where he wished to go, and was accepted as a passenger and it then and there became the duty of the H. T. Cab Company to exercise the degree of care toward him due from a common carrier of passengers to a passenger; that when plaintiff arrived at his destination he attempted to pay Jones the proper fare but that Jones became infuriated with plaintiff as to the amount of fare tendered in payment (it being IS cents less than Jones demanded) and Jones threw the tendered fare away and shot plaintiff in the mouth, inflicting the gunshot wound for which damages were sought.

Plaintiff further alleged that the taxicab -had printed thereon in large letters “H. T. Cab Company”; and further alleged that Jones was a driver of H. T. Cab Company operating under the license issued to said company by the City of Houston and that in any event H. T. Cab Company, by its acts, held out that Jones was its driver and acting in the course of his employment and that the H. T. Cab Company was es-topped to claim otherwise.

Plaintiff further alleged that'the H. T. Cab Company and the' Taylor Company were incorporated by Hobart Taylor about the same time and have the same office address and the same officers and directors; and further that said corporations formed a part of a set-up, or a subterfuge, by which the H. T. Cab Company and the Taylor Company sought to avoid liability for any torts committed in the course of operating the taxicab business in the City of Houston; that under the scheme the title to the taxicabs was placed in the name of the Taylor Company, etc. — The facts concerning the relationship between the Taylor Company and the H. T. Cab Company and Jones, the driver, as the same are claimed to be by the defendants,, will hereafter be set forth.

The defendants, including Jones, filed a common answer. Therein they alleged that no relationship of master and servant, employer and employee, or principal and agent, existed at any material time between Jones and his two codefendants. In the alternative the defendants plead that Jones was not acting for his codefendants nor in the furtherance of the business of either, etc.

After the suit had been filed in July, 1950, the original plaintiff died, about November 10th of 1950. It is undisputed that his death did not result from the gunshot wound in question. Some two and one-half years thereafter the original plaintiff’s surviving wife suggested his death to the court and obtained leave to substitute for the original plaintiff and to represent the two minor children of herself and the deceased .original plaintiff, and the surviving wife alleged that no "administration had been taken out and none was necessary, and the court, in an interlocutory proceeding, which the defendants have stigmatized as ex parte, found as a fact that no administration had been taken out and that none was necessary. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendants moved for a directed verdict and, in the alternative, moved that at least the two corporate defendants be granted a directed verdict. The court granted the motion so far as the Taylor Company was concerned, but otherwise denied the motion, and submitted the case to the jury upon the special issues, which were answered as follows: (1) that the defendant Jones on or about May 7, 1950, shot and wounded Lee Ginns, (2) that at that time and on that occasion Jones was an agent or employee of H. T. Cab Company, (3) that Jones in shooting said Lee Ginns “if you have found that he did shoot him” was acting in the course and scope of his employment or agency for H. T. Cab Company, (4) that such action on the part of Jones was not a deviation from the course and scope of his employment or agency, if any, by H. T. Cab Company.

No complaint has been raised as to the amount of damages found by the jury which amounted to $6,765, for which sum the court rendered judgment against H. T. Cab Company and Jones. The court overruled defendánts’ motion, both for- judgment non obstante veredicto, and alternatively to *363 disregard certain jury findings, and granted the motion of plaintiffs for judgment on the verdict.

Defendants, as appellants, have predicated their appeal upon eleven formal points. Their points 1, 2, 3, 4, 8 and 9 in substance complain that the court erroneously found that there was no necessity for administration on the plaintiff’s estate, and erroneously permitted the suit to be tried by the substitute plaintiffs. We overrule said points.

There was evidence upon the trial, indeed the surviving wife herself testified, that certain debts existed at the time Lee Ginns died intestate. The first time appellants complain that appellees were without authority to be substituted as plaintiffs and to prosecute the suit, was in their motion for a directed verdict. We deem it unnecessary to answer the contentions made under appellants’ various points attacking the authority of appellees to proceed with the trial of the suit on the alleged grounds that the evidence established as a matter .of law that there was a necessity for administration on the estate of the deceased Ginns for. this reason: Under our community property system damages which are recoverable for an injury to the husband are the common property of the husband and wife. Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Bailey, 83 Tex. 19, 23, 18 S.W. 481; Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Groseclose, Tex.Civ.App., 134 S.W. 736, 739 (writ denied). As the surviving wife of Lee Ginns, Mrs. Ginns was authorized to bring suit to recover on community claims without any necessity of alleging that there was no administration on her deceased husband’s estate and that none was necessary. See the Groseclose case just cited. And, it was not reversible error-for the children to be joined with Mrs. Ginns as plaintiffs in the suit. Id.

In their points 5, 6, 7, 10 and 11, appellants complain of (a) the court’s refusal to direct a verdict for the Cab Company based upon the evidence that Jones was an independent contractor, and complain of (b) the court’s submission of special issue No. 2, and also of (c) the submission of special issue No. 3. Appellants’ remaining points are but repetitions of the contention that there was insufficient' evidence to support an affirmative finding of agency on the part of Jones, or to support the finding that Jones was acting in the scope of his employment or agency for the Cab Company when he shot Ginns.

Appellants’ aforesaid points are overruled. Hobart Taylor, the owner of the Taylor Company and of the H. T. Cab Company, testified at length. We have, carefully read all of his testimony and do. not consider appellee’s characterization of it as evasive as too harsh.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W.2d 360, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ht-cab-company-v-ginns-texapp-1955.