Interstate Casualty Co. of Birmingham v. Martin

234 S.W. 710
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 1921
DocketNo. 690.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 710 (Interstate Casualty Co. of Birmingham v. Martin) 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
Interstate Casualty Co. of Birmingham v. Martin, 234 S.W. 710 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

This suit was instituted in the district court of Harris county, Tex., by Charles Martin, against the Interstate Casualty Company and Fred Martin, for damages on account of the death of the minor son of the plaintiff, which was caused by being struck by an automobile belonging to defendant Fred Martin; said accident occurring on Hardy street in the city of Houston.

Plaintiff alleged that at the time of the accident defendant Fred Martin was the owner of and engaged in the business of operating a certain Ford automobile for transportation of persons, as passengers, for hire in what is known as the jitney service, in the city of Houston, and that while said automobile was being operated by Luron Whatley, who was then and there the servant and employó of defendant Fred Martin, along and over what is known as Hardy street in the said city of Houston, the said car was negligently run upon and over Roy Martin, the eight year old minor son of plaintiff, causing his death; that said Luron Whatley, servant and employé of said Fred Martin, was operating said automobile on a public highway at a reckless and dangerous rate of speed, and at a greater rate of speed than was allowed under the ordinances of the said city of Houston, by reason of which he was guilty of gross negligence. Plaintiff further alleged that defendant Interstate Casualty Company had executed a bond in compliance with the ordinances of the city of Houston covering said car while being operated in the jitney 'service, obligating it to respond in *711 damages that might be suffered by any person by reason of the wrongful or negligent operation of said automobile while in the jitney service, and predicated his liability against said company on account of said bond.

The defendant Fred Martin answered by general demurrer, general denial, and special plea of contributory negligence. Defendant Interstate Casualty Company answered by general demurrer, general denial, and special plea of contributory negligence, and further specially pleaded:

“(a) That the application made by defendant Fred Martin to the city of Houston was to operate a jitney on what is known as the Montgomery route in the city of Houston; that the policy sued upon in this ease was issued to Fred Martin based upon the fact that he would operate the jitney over the said Montgomery route, and that the liability of the Interstate Casualty Company was limited in accordance ’with the terms of said policy to accidents occurring while the said jitney was being operated on the said Montgomery route; and that the policy so recited that it only covered the operation of said car while the same was being operated in the jitney service on the Montgomery route.
“(b) That the accident involved in this suit did not occur on the Montgomery route, or any part of the route known and designated as the Montgomery route; that it occurred on Hardy street, and that the said Hardy street, where the said accident occurred, is no part of*what is known as the Montgomery route designated for jitney service.
“(c) That by reason of special provision of said policy and the ordinance of the city of Houston, the policy became null and void upon the operation of the car covered thereby over any route other than the one designated by the city of Houston; that it was never contemplated by the said policy, or by the city ordinance under which the said policy was written, that there should be any liability on the part of the Interstate Casualty Company for any accident occurring unless the accident sued upon occurred while the car was being operated over the particular route designated in the policy, in the schedule of warranties attached thereto, and in the said application; that the ear at the time of the accident was not then in the jitney service, was not on the Montgomery jitney route; and that therefore there was no liability on the part of the Interstate Casualty Company.
“(d) That by the express terms and provisions of the policy and the fact that the accident occurred off of the Montgomery route, there is no liability on the part of the Interstate Casualty Company on said policy.”

The case was tried before a jury upon special issues, all of which the jury answered in plaintiffs’ favor except one. Motions were duly filed by the defendants for judgment in their favor, which were overruled by the court and judgment entered in favor of plaintiff against Fred Martin in the sum of $2,917, the amount of damages found by the jury, and against the Interstate Casualty Company for the sum of $2,500, the limit of its liability, said judgment providing that execution should first issue against defendant Fred Martin, and if the judgment was paid then no execution should issue against the defendant Interstate Casualty Company, but if the execution was returned nulla bona, then execution should issue against Interstate Casualty Company for the satisfaction of the judgment to the extent of $2,500. Motions were also filed by defendants, before judgment was entered on said special issues, to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant a new trial, which were by the court overruled. Motion for new trial was duly filed by defendants, and also overruled by the court, to all of which rulings of the court and judgment the defendant Interstate Casualty Company alone has appealed, and the case on behalf of said defendant is properly before us for review. There is no brief for'appellees.

Appellant presents four assignments of error, all raising the following proposition of law:

“The liability of the Interstate Casualty Company being predicated and dependent upon the operation of a particular jitney car in the jitney service over a designated route, which in this instance was the Montgomery Avenue route in the city of Houston, and the evidence showing without dispute that the accident involved in this suit occurred off of the Montgomery jitney route and while' the Car was not being' operated in the jitney service, there was clearly no liability on the part of the Interstate Casualty Company on its bond, and the court should have so held.”

In the language of appellant, in consider- • ing these assignments, it is necessary that we ’ bear in mind the following matters:

(1) The right of the jitney involved in this case to be operated over the streets of Houston depended upon the city ordinances of the city of Houston. These ordinances provided that an application must be made to the city council for a license to operate a jitney, and in the application the applicant must state over which route the jitney was to be operated.

(2) The ordinances further provided that the city council should from time to time specify and designate said routes, to operate over which permits would be granted.

(3) The city ordinances further provided that before a jitney would be granted a permit, it must file a bond similar to the one issued in this case by the Interstate Casualty Company.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-casualty-co-of-birmingham-v-martin-texapp-1921.