McCarthy v. Valdez

10 S.W.2d 1051
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1928
DocketNo. 7270.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 S.W.2d 1051 (McCarthy v. Valdez) 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 v. Valdez, 10 S.W.2d 1051 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

Appellee sued appellants IT. J. . McCarthy, Daniel Gayton, D. M. Davis, and Charles Conner, as a motorbus copartnership operating between Fort Worth and San- Antonio, through intermediate points, including Austin, under the trade-name of Spanish American Travel Agency, for damages for personal injuries and loss of money in a purse; sustained as the result of appellee’s being thrown from a bus alleged to have been operated by appellants, and because of the alleged negligence of one Hugle, appellants' alleged agent, servant, and employee, driving the bus in such manner as to cause it to be violently jarred, jerked, and shaken, thereby causing the appellee to be thrown through the doorway of said car and upon the ground. Upon special jury findings, judgment was rendered for appellee for $1,744.16, from which this appeal has been perfected.

The 21 propositions predicated upon some 16 assignments of error present the following questions only which merit discussion:

1. The principle contention made in the brief and oral argument on appeal is that there is no legal evidence to sustain the jury’s findings (1) that at the time of the accident Hugle was “acting as the agent of the defendants (appellants) in the transportation *1052 of plaintiff (appellee)”; and (2) that Hugle was “acting within the scope of his authority under his agreement with defendants (appellants) in accepting plaintiff (appellee) for transportation from San Antonio to Et. Worth.” We do not sustain the contention.

The evidence shows without material dispute or conflict that at the time of this accident appellants, as a copartnership and as a common carrier under the Motorbus Raw (Acts 1927, pp. 399-409, c. 270), were operating a motorbus line between Fort Worth and Laredo, through Austin, and San Antonio under permission of the Railroad Commission, and under the trade-name of Spanish American Travel Agency. They owned and listed with the Railroad Commission ' a Packard sedan under license No. M. B. 7040, which was used on their bus routes. Before this accident they sold this car to the Packard agency at Eort Worth. Later, and' about two months before the accident, the Packard agency sold this car to one Plugle, who had been employed by appellants for two or three years as a driver of their service cars. After Hugle purchased the car, he operated it for appellants under the following arrangements as testified to by appellant Conner:

“We listed Hugle’s car with the Railroad Commission as one of our cars. We are required to list any car we operate. It was listed as one of our cars, and we used it when we needed it on our route that our permit called for. * * * x had something to do with the money from the passengers he carried from Port Worth’down there the day before. He carried those passengers in a car listed as our car; he was carrying those on our route and our permit, and he was to come back under our permit provided our office in 'San Antonio gave him some passengers. * * * When the car was being used under the arrangement I spoke of yesterday Mr. Hugle was driving it. It was his car, and when he carried passengers for us we would take teh per cent of the fare. He furnished the car and did the driving and attended to the upkeep of the car. We had Mr. Hugle and others working that way. * * '* Hugle did not have a permit to operate an automobile. Our permit covered this car he was driving when he was operating for us. We have a permit to operate from Port Worth to San Antonio, and this is one of the cars listed, and on the day before the accident or the day before that this car carried passengers for us to San Antonio.”

Hugle confirmed, the above testimony of Conner as to the contract, and in addition testified without contradiction that it was also agreed that, on return trips to ■ headquarters at Port Worth, and when appellants could not furnish him passengers he might pick up passengers where he could, and that with reference to such passengers appellants were not to receive any portion of the fare. The testimony is undisputed that, on the morning of December 6th, appellants sent Hugle to San Antonio, under the contract in force between them, with passengers; that on December 7th Hugle made ready his car for the .return trip to Port Worth; that on the morning of December 8th, as per schedule of the Spanish American Travel Agency filed with the Railroad Commission, he called at appellants’ office in San Antonio, but they had no passengers for his return trip, whereupon Hu|-le went to another transportation agency, the Guerra Agency, in San Antonio, and after giving this agency the card of the Spanish American Travel Agency, the Guerra Agency delivered to him appellee, his wife and little boy, for transportation to Port Worth, and paid him $9 as their fare. In making this return trip; Hugle made it on the north-bound schedule of appellants, and no other car or person made that trip or schedule for them on that day. And in this connection Hugle further testified as follows:

“In hauling the passengers from Port Worth to San Antonio I went over the route of the Spanish American Travel Agency, and I came back the same route. The passengers I took from Port Worth to San Antonio were turned over to me as the Spanish American Travel Agency’s passengers, and I hauled them ⅜ * * I personally have not taken out a permit to operate a motorbus. As to who took it'out for me, I don’t know. I have not a permit from the Railroad Commission to haul passengers. * * * I reported this accident to Mr. Conner just because I had the accident. I told him the next morning when I got back that I had had the accident. * * * I am still driving out of that same office, still on the same contract, just like always; there has not been a hit of change at all in the contract. My motorbus license for 1927 was M.B. 7040. With reference, to giving this Mexican down here at the café one of the company’s cards, I gave it to him to advertise our business, the Spanish American company’s business. That Mexican runs a Mexican restaurant here. My passengers are practically all Mexicans-, and I gave him that card to> advertise the agency. * * * As to whether I am competing with the Spanish American Travel Agency or working for them, I am running my car out of their office.”

Appellant Conner also testified, with reference to an affidavit he made for a continuance of the case after the pleadings of appel-lee alleging when and where the accident occurred had been filed, and long after Hugle had reported to him when and where the accident occurred, as follows:

“This is my signature. I swore to this paper. I read it before it was sworn to. This paper contains this statement: ‘The defendants further state that they cannot safely go to- trial at this term of court because it is impossible for them to secure the presence of their witness, John T. Hugle, who was driving the car of the defendants at the time of the alleged accident.’ That was true. This paper contains the further statement: ‘That the said John T. Hugle was at the time of the alleged accident and until a few days ago employed by the defendants as. a driver.’ That was true. He was in onr employment at the time of the accident, in the ea* *1053 pacity of driving the ear. I stated under oath that he was in our employ, and I stated the truth.”

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 1051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarthy-v-valdez-texapp-1928.