McCarthy Oil & Gas Corp. v. Cunningham

255 S.W.2d 368
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1953
Docket12480
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 255 S.W.2d 368 (McCarthy Oil & Gas Corp. v. Cunningham) 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
McCarthy Oil & Gas Corp. v. Cunningham, 255 S.W.2d 368 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

CODY, Justice.

This suit was brought by Hunter Cunningham, individually and as next friend of his seventeen months old son, Christian, to recover damages from McCarthy Oil & Gas Corporation, and .its alleged employee, .V. L. Stone, for injuries alleged to have1 been sustained both by his son, Christian, and his wife, Eunice, in a collision between an automobile which was driven by Mrs. Cunningham, and a truck belonging to the aforesaid corporation, which was driven by the said Stone.

There were four witnesses to the -collision, namely, Mrs. Cunningham, a Mr. William Murrell, the aforesaid Stone, and his wife, who was in the truck with him at the time of the accident. Though Mr. Stone was present all through the trial, he did not testify. Nor did his wife testify.

According to the evidence of Mrs. Cunningham, she and Mr. .Cunningham, accompanied by their four year old daughter and their son, Christian, left Winnie, a small town in Chambers County, where they lived, about 7-:30 p.m., on September 21, 1951, for the purpose of taking Mr. Cunningham to Port Arthur, where he was to board a ship as wireless operator. Port Arthur was about forty miles from Winnie. It was raining when they left, and -continued raining all the way. At Port Arthur they had the windshield cleaned at a service station. After leaving Mr. Cunningham in Porf Arthur, Mrs. Cunningham started back home. It stopped raining by the time she went through Beaumont, some thirty miles from the scene of the -collision. She proceeded westerly from Beaumont toward Winnie, upon the Galveston-Beaumont Highway, which is a two-lane, hard surface, well traveled highway. When she was a mile or mile and one-half from Winnie, she saw .the lights of an approaching vehicle. The driver of said vehicle and Mrs. 'Cunningham both dimmed their lights. The weather had cleared up and the stars were shining. The approaching vehicle proved to be a small pick-up truck which was being driven by Mr. Murrell. As she and Mr. Murrell were passing each other, the McCarthy tru-ck, which was being rapidly driven in the same direction as the Murrell truck was proceeding, and behind the same, was suddenly turned by Mr. Stone into Mrs. -Cunningham’s right hand side of the road, and his wrong side of the road, bringing about the collision.

Defendants plead as special defenses, among others, “unavoidable accident”; that Mrs. Cunningham failed to have her car under proper control; that she failed to keep a proper lookout; that Mrs. .-Cunningham was operating her vehicle gt an exces-. [370]*370sive rate of speed; and the subsidiary issues thereon.

In answer to special issues submitted to the jury, the jury found that Stone was driving the McCarthy truck in the course of his employment, and convicted him of negligence in various particulars, as the proximate cause of the accident, and found damages on account of Mrs. Cunningham’s injuries in the sum of $5,000, and on account of the injuries sustained by Christian, in the sum of $45,000. And judgment was rendered accordingly.

Defendants, hereafter called appellants, have predicated their appeal upon the refusal of the court to submit special issues to the jury, embodying appellants’ above-indicated specially plead defenses, in their points 1 to 4, inclusive. Their fifth point complains of the action of the court in sustaining appellees’ special exceptions to a portion of appellants’ Amended Motion for a New Trial, which set up jury misconduct in a particular hereafter set out. Their .sixth point complains of jury misconduct in another particular, hereafter specified. Their seventh point complains of the verdict as being too excessive to be permitted to stand.

We overrule appellants’ first point complaining of the court’s refusal to submit their special issue No. 1 to the jury, relating to unavoidable accident.

There is no explanation of the failure of appellants to call Mr. Stone, or Mrs. Stone, to testify. Mr. Murrell was called to testify by appellees, and' confirmed the testimony of Mrs. Cunningham, above indicated, as to how the accident was caused by Stone suddenly turning from his right hand side of the road across onto the right hand side of the road to Mrs. Cunningham, whereby it collided with the car driven by her, just as her car was passing the pick-up truck. No horn was sounded nor signal given by the McCarthy truck. The McCarthy truck ended up in the ditch on Mrs. Cunningham’s side of the road; Mrs. Cunningham’s car ended up with its rear just a little bit on the highway. Murrell testified with respect to the McCarthy truck. “It went to pass me, and as it passed me it hit this car head on and knocked the rear end of the car into my pick-up (truck).”

It is stated in 2 Tex.Jur.Supp. 143, “The issue as to ‘unavoidable accidenf is not involved where it is undisputed that the defendant’s vehicle was traveling on the wrong side of the highway.” See also Jessee Produce Co. v. Ewing, Tex.Civ.App., 213 S.W.2d 750, 752; Chesshir v. Nall, Tex.Civ.App., 218 S.W.2d 248, 254; and Younger Bros., Inc., v. Power, Tex.Civ.App., 118 :S.W.2d 954, 958.

We overrule appellants’ second point, complaining of the court’s refusal to submit the special issue No. 2, asking whether Mrs. Cunningham was operating her vehicle at the time of the collision without having the same under proper control, and the subsidiary issue of proximate cause.

Appellants rely exclusively upon the testimony of Mrs. Cunningham to raise said issue. She testified that there is a wide, sweeping curve which she was in when she first saw the Murrell truck. That she saw its lights, but didn’t know whether it was a truck, or passenger car. There were no houses to keep her from seeing the car down the road. That she did not know if she noticed more than one vehicle approaching. But before the collision she had slowed down some because she knew that at this point the highway made an intersection with a shell road, and that big trucks sometimes shot out from it onto the highway. And that she did not see the McCarthy truck any time until he pulled out from behind the Murrell truck. That she then applied her brakes.. That she had no time to turn to the right or left, but held on tightly to the steering wheel. — The evidence showed that she could not turn to her left because of the Murrell truck, nor to her right, because of the ditch, even had there been time.

Mrs. Cunningham’s testimony as to the sudden turning of the McCarthy truck from behind the Murrell truck onto her side of the road is not only confirmed by Murrell, but was not disputed by Stone, as heretofore stated. It is to be presumed that if this testimony was not true,, it would have [371]*371been denied by Mr. Stone, himself, a defendant, and an employee of the McCarthy corporation, aforesaid. See Traylor v. v. Brentzel, Tex.Civ.App., 218 S.W.2d 261, 261, 263. Under the undisputed evidence in this case, there was no evidence from which it could have been reasonably concluded that Mrs. Cunningham was operating her car without having it under proper control. Nor would the evidence raise the issue that she was not keeping a proper lookout.— The same holds true with respect to whether she was operating at an excessive rate of speed. The undisputed evidence is that it had stopped raining before Mrs. Cunningham had passed through Beaumont, and that the stars were shining.

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McCarthy Oil & Gas Corp. v. Cunningham
255 S.W.2d 368 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)

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255 S.W.2d 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarthy-oil-gas-corp-v-cunningham-texapp-1953.