Menefee v. Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co.

181 S.W.2d 287, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1944
DocketNo. 5615.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 287 (Menefee v. Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co.) 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
Menefee v. Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co., 181 S.W.2d 287, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 770 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

Appellants, Elton Menefee, a minor, suing through his father, Floyd B. Menefee, as his next friend, and Floyd B. Menefee suing in his own behalf, filed suit against appellee, Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company, for damages in the sum of $60,000 as a result of personal injuries sustained by Elton Menefee when there was a collision on December 20, 1941, between a truck he was driving for McDonald Lumber Company and a motorcar train owned and operated by appellee at an intersection of a public road and the railroad near a flag station in Newton County.

At the tinie of the collision and injuries Elton Menefee was employed by McDonald Lumber Company as a log hauler and his employer was a subscriber under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq., of which subscriber Federal Underwriters Exchange was the insurance carrier. Prior to the trial of the case appellant, Federal Under *289 writers Exchange, intervened in this suit, ■adopted all of the pleadings of the appellants, Elton Menefee and Floyd B. Menefee and sought to enforce its subrogation rights in the sum of $4,957.20, which it had previously paid appellants, Elton Menefee and Floyd B. Menefee, in a compromise suit between said appellants and this intervenor as workman’s compensation as a result of the injuries sustained by Elton Menefee. Intervenor sought further an additional recovery of $1500 which it alleged would probably be asserted against it as additional doctors’ bills and an attorneys’ fee in the sum of $1000, all of which intervenor sought to recover out of the first moneys awarded Elton Menefee and Floyd Menefee by any judgment in their favor.

Appellants, Elton Menefee and Floyd B. Menefee likewise prayed that intervenor have judgment against appellee and against them by way of subrogation in the sum of $4,957.20, together with any other sums intervenor may show itself entitled to, out of any judgment awarded to the said appellants.

Appellants, Elton Menefee and Floyd Menefee and Federal Underwriters Exchange, alleged that the collision occurred at a public road crossing and that the injuries were sustained by Elton Menefee because of the negligence of appellee in that its agents operated the train at a dangerous and excessive rate of speed, failed to keep a proper lookout for travelers at the crossing, failed to keep proper control of the train and failed to ring the bell and sound the whistle as the law requires at an intersection of a public road and a railroad track.

Appellee answered with a plea in abatement, numerous exceptions, a general denial, unavoidable accident and charged that Elton Menefee was guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of his injuries in that he failed to keep a proper lookout for appellee’s motor train as he approached and attempted to cross the tracks ahead of the train, he failed to have his truck under proper control, he failed to have adequate brakes on the truck, he failed to look for and observe the approaching train, he failed to heed the warning signals given by the train, he failed to turn his truck to the right and off the road as the train approached and he was driving at an excessive rate of speed; that all of the said acts of Elton Menefee, separately and concurrently, were a proximate cause of his injuries and damages, or contributed to cause same.

The case was submitted to a jury on special issues which returned a verdict and found, in effect, that appellee’s agents did not operate its train at a dangerous and excessive rate of speed; that they had the train under proper control, kept a proper lookout, gave reasonable notice with whistle at least 1320 feet from the crossing and repeated the whistle from time to time until the train had crossed over the crossing; that they did not ring the bell at 1320 feet from the crossing and did not continue ringing it as they approached the crossing but that such -was not negligence and that they did ring the bell as the train passed over the road crossing; that the public road crossing had been there for thirty-five years and that such was known to 'agents of appellee; that Elton Menefee did not keep a proper lookout for appellee’s motor train as he approached and attempted to cross the tracks ahead of the train; that Elton Menefee’s failure to keep a proper lookout for appellee’s motor train as he approached and attempted to cross the intersection ahead of the train was negligence and was a proximate cause of the collision and the injuries received by him and that Elton Menefee and Floyd Menefee were entitled to no damages by reason of the negligence of appellee. The jury further found that the truck Elton Menefee was driving had adequate brakes and that Elton Menefee applied the brakes; that he turned the truck sharply to the right and off of the road but that such was not negligence; that he was not driving at an excessive rate of speed; that he failed to heed the warning of the whistle as the train approached the crossing but that such was not negligence; that Elton failed to stop his truck before going on the track on which the train was approaching but that such was not negligence, and that Elton did not fail to look for appellee’s motor train as the same approached the crossing where the injury occurred.

Appellee having been acquitted of any negligence that proximately caused the injury and appellant, Elton Menefee, having been convicted of negligence that proximately caused his injury, and nothing having been awarded appellants as a result of appellee’s negligence, the trial court rendered judgment for appellee on the verdict of the jury. Appellants, the Menefees and *290 intervenor, filed motions for a new trial alleging, among other things, misconduct of the jury and attached the affidavits of two jurors to their motions. The trial court heard the motions and the evidence thereon, including the testimony of the two jurors whose affidavits were attached to the motions and overruled appellants’ said motions, from which order overruling the motions appellants perfected an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Ninth Supreme Judicial District at Beaumont and the same was transferred to this court by the Supreme Court of Texas.

The Menefees and the intervenor insurance company joined hands in the trial of the case, in the hearing on their motions for a new trial and they have filed a joint brief on appeal. In the language of appellants in their brief, “the points upon which the appeal is predicated are based, for the most part, upon misconduct of the jury * * *.”

Appellants complain of jury misconduct in points 1 to 11, inclusive, to the effect that during their deliberation the jury improperly discussed and considered the question of the presence of an insurance company, the question of attorneys’ fee of in-tervenor’s attorney in the case, the manner of operating air brakes on the train as explained by two jurors as a result of their own previous experiences and the statements of one juror who related his previous experience in another and different train wreck, and that all of such constituted original, extraneous evidence introduced by the jurors to the jury during their deliberation which affected their decisions upon material issues and resulted in the jury “originally believing one way but finally voting another way” and awarding “no damages” to Elton Menefee and his father, Floyd B.

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181 S.W.2d 287, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menefee-v-gulf-c-s-f-ry-co-texapp-1944.