Lubbock Bus Company v. Pearson

277 S.W.2d 186, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1955
Docket6467
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 277 S.W.2d 186 (Lubbock Bus Company v. Pearson) 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
Lubbock Bus Company v. Pearson, 277 S.W.2d 186, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2544 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

Appellee, Houston Pearson, filed suit against appellant, Lubbock Bus Company, a corporation, for personal and property damages in the total sum of $56,250, resulting from an alleged motor vehicle collision occurring tin a busy street in Lubbock, Texas, on or about May 27, 1952. The case was tried to a jury upon special issues submitted and judgment was rendered upon the verdict awarding personal damages to appellee in the sum of $34,000 and property damages in the sum of $1,400, from which judgment appellant has perfected an appeal.

This case was previously before this Court tin appeal, as'réported in 266 S.W.2d 439. In the trial of the case on that appeal, as well as in the trial of the case on this appeal, appellee alleged and claimed that his injuries resulted from the motor vehicle collision of date May 27, 1952, while appellant claimed.on the former trial and claims here that appellee’s injuries, if any, resulted from a fall he experienced in his own home on June 11, 1952, early one morning when he got up to turn off an alarm clock.

In Points 1 and 2,'appellant charges error for the alleged reason that the trial court limited the jury’s consideration to that for impeachment purposes only' of a certain statement admitted in evidence at this trial ■and made by appellee at the former trial. The record reveals that appellee was travelling east on Broadway, a four-lane street, about 4:00 p. m. o’clock, while the weather was damp and. misty, when he stopped for a red light to change at the intersection of Broadway with Avenue H which extended north and south. Immediately after he stopped for the said light to change, appellant’s city bus loaded with passengers collided with the rear end of appellee’s ■ Cadillac automobile, running head on into the back of the same, knocking the Cadillac some 12 to 15 feet or more into the street intersection but the two motor vehicles were locked together when they stopped. The testimony .given by appellee reveals that the collision caused a jolt or jar that popped his back and neck which stunned him momentarily; that the jolt or jar knocked his hat off and it fell into the back seat of his car; that after a few moments, appellee got out of his car, got his hat and talked to the bus operator who said 'his brakes failed him; that the bus operator called his bus superintendent and *188 the city traffic officers with whom appellee talked upon their arrival; that the bus superintendent, Mr. Buck, told him the bus company would have his car repaired; that he there at the scene of the collision told a policeman that he didn’t think anybody was hurt and that at that time he didn’t think anybody was hurt much; that he thereafter drove home that afternoon to,his farm in Crosby County; that his hack and neck were sore but he thought the soreness would soon pass away without giving any trouble; that upon his arrival at home, his wife rubbed and treated his back and neck with Bén Gay and applied a heating pad; that for several days he often experienced some pain, burning sensations and discomfort from the time of the car collision but thought he could pass it off; that he did not realize the seriousness of his injuries for some 10 days or two weeks after the collision when he got up early one morning to turn off an alarm clock and fell in the floor after taking a few steps and could not get up; that he needed help to get bade in bed after which Doctor T. S. Holmes, of Ralls, was called; that Dr. Holmes examined him and sent him to a hospital in Lubbock where other doctors treated him for some time; that his pain and suffering have not been relieved; that he still suffers constant pain in his lower back, is bothered .with nervousness, can’t sleep and his‘left leg is partially paralyzed; that when he coughed or sneezed severe pains: ran down his back and legs; that it seems he is steadily getting worse and has to use a cane when he .walks; that his age was 31 years and he had enjoyed good health prior to the collision and engaged in usual farm labor in the operation of a large farm. Appellee’s testimony concerning the seriousness of his injuries is supported by medical testimony.

In connection with appellee’s testimony about falling on June 11, 1952, while türning off an alarm clock early that morning, he made the following statement in response to a question propounded by his counsel on direct examination:

"Well, as I say I got out of bed and • started for the alarm clock, got three or four steps and this páin hit me in the back, I just doubled up and drew over there and finally went down to the floor; my wife hollered at me to cut the alarm clock off, something had woke her up, I told her that I was down on the floor and couldn’t get up and that she would have to cut it off and help me get back in bed. So, she tried, to and I couldn’t stand for her to pull me — to move me, so she went out and got one of the colored people to help her put me on the bed.”

The statement made by appellee at the former trial was admitted in evidence at this trial, but appellant here charges it was limited by the trial court to be considered by the jury only for impeachment purposes and the same is as follows:

“Well, I had the alarm clock set and it went off and I started to get out of bed to turn it off and I just fell flat on my face. I was paralyzed. I just couldn’t hardly move and had extreme pain in my back.”

The statement last quoted was first introduced in the last trial of this action by appellant without its purpose being limited in any way by the trial court, as reflected on Page 82 of Vol. I of the Statement of Facts. However, appellee then objected to its introduction. The contents of the said statement were again challenged by ap-pellee’s counsel who objected to it and asked that any testimony concerning it be stricken but his objection was overruled and his request denied by the trial court. Pages 252-53, Vol. II, S.F. The. statement in its entirety was again introduced in evidence, Page 555, Vol. Ill, S.F., when, upon objection made by appellee, the trial court then held that the statement was admissible only for impeachment purposes, and so instructed counsel. Insofar as we are able to determine from the record, the trial court never did instruct the jury that the statement in question must be limited to the use for impeachment purposes only while the said statement had then already been twice read to the jury and its contents used more than once by appellant in pro *189 pounding hypothetical questions to doctors while examining them as witnesses.

In support of its contentions made, appellant cites several authorities, among them being the late case of Texas General Indemnity Co. v. Scott, 152 Tex. 1, 253 S.W.2d 651, 655, from which it quotes the following rule:

“Undoubtedly the general rule is that any statement, written or oral, made by a party or on his behalf, which is inconsistent with his present position, and any act or conduct of a party from which it may be inferred that the facts in issue are not as he now claims, may be introduced in evidence against him, as an admission.”

In our opinion, the provisions of the said rule were in no way violated by the court’s ruling here made.

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W.2d 186, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lubbock-bus-company-v-pearson-texapp-1955.