Mercer v. Band

484 S.W.2d 117, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2483
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 13, 1972
Docket15936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 484 S.W.2d 117 (Mercer v. Band) 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
Mercer v. Band, 484 S.W.2d 117, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2483 (Tex. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

BELL, Chief Justice.

Appellees recovered judgment against appellants in the amount of $34,337.00 for injuries sustained as a result of an automobile collision which occurred in the City of Richmond on August 26, 1966.

Appellants’ answer contained the following allegation:

“In addition, the Defendant will show that Plaintiffs were themselves negligent in that the vehicle in which they were riding was equipped with seat safety belts and they failed to use them. This failure was negligence and a proximate cause of their own injuries and damages.”

Prior to voir dire examination of the jury appellees filed a motion in limine asking the court to strike the above paragraph from the answer and to instruct counsel to in no way bring the matter contained therein to the attention of the jury. The court sustained the motion and appellants were not permitted to read this pleading or introduce evidence before the jury relating to seat belts.

Appellants’ contention here is that the failure to use available seat belts may be shown for the purpose of reducing a plaintiff’s damages to the extent that the injuries may be shown to have been caused by such failure. They assert that the evidence was sufficient to raise the issue.

In reply appellees assert there is no evidence to show the following:

1. A causal relationship between the injuries sustained and the failure to use seat belts.

2. No expert evidence to show the effect of wearing a seat belt.

3. That the injuries would have been lessened if seat belts had been worn.

4. To show what amount of damage would have been caused if the seat belts had been fastened or unfastened.

Also, appellees assert there is no duty to use a lap strap seat belt.

Admitted in evidence was the following testimony which might be said to be material to some questions raised.

The collision occurred at the intersection of U.S. Highway 59 and 4th Street. Ap- *119 pellee Mr. Band was driving in a southwesterly direction on Highway 59 and Mrs. Mercer was driving northeasterly on 4th Street. Mrs. Mercer’s automobile hit the Band automobile just back of the right headlight and the force of the collision caused the right front fender to be severely damaged. The Band automobile ended up near a statue on the court house lawn on the northeast side of Highway 59. The righthand door came open and Mrs. Band was thrown to the pavement. Mrs. Band’s physicians found her injuries, which were allegedly received as a result of the collision, to be nerve root damage in lower back and neck together with localized areas of chronic muscle inflammation in the neck-shoulder region on the right, damage to the first sacral nerve root on either side in the lower back, damage to the third or fourth nerve root in the right side of the neck or nerve branches arising from these nerve roots, lumbar sprain, multiple abrasions and contusions and fracture of the right fifth metatarsal, with exostosis formation, and bilateral S-l radiculopathy and right cervical instability, levator scapular syndrome.

Mr. Band’s jaw was broken in two places. His head was cut open. Two bottom teeth were cracked and sticking forward and his jaw bone was cracked in the back where it hinges. He had a brain concussion. He had a bruise on the chest and knee.

Mrs. Band testified that five months before the collision she had her right ovary removed because of a cyst on it. After the collision she had trouble with the incision and received cortisone injection in the incision because it was protruding. She testified she “assumed” the abrasions on her hips, arms, elbow, legs and knee were received when she landed on the pavement but to say that these were received from being thrown on the pavement as contrasted with anything that happened in the car itself would be “guessing”.

Mr. Band testified the force of the collision had a tendency to throw him toward the right. He reached to the right to try to keep his wife from falling out. In doing this he got from under the steering wheel. He then attempted to get control of the car but he doesn’t think he made it. He received cuts on the head. After the wreck he looked at the windshield. He said his head hit the windshield. He “presumed” it was the windshield because his head was cut open. The windshield was broken at a point to the right. After receiving the blow he must have been knocked unconscious because after that he remembered nothing. He fell out the front door on the right. He at one point testified he didn’t recall hitting the windshield. He said he really did not know what he struck inside the car. He could not say what injuries he received in the car, behind the steering wheel, the windshield or what.

The evidence offered but excluded appears in a bill of exception and is substantially as stated below.

Mr. Band stated the automobile was equipped with waist-type seat belts for the driver and a front seat passenger. They are of the type that you unfasten by pushing a button. If you hit the button the belt “disengages.” He did not know whether his was fastened or not. He hit the windshield on the right side. He said if it was fastened he couldn’t have gotten to the right or fallen out unless the belt had broken. He later saw the automobile but he could not open the doors and he did not know whether the belts were broken. He didn’t know whether his wife was wearing a seat belt but presumed she was not because of the operation. He didn’t know whether she struck any part of the interior of the car upon initial impact. Band did not know whether he hit the button in his attempt to grab his wife. He could not say where his wife’s injuries came from. He could not say whether his jaw was broken from his having hit the windshield or *120 the steering wheel. He didn’t know whether he hit the steering wheel. He had no idea how his wife received her injuries.

Part of Mrs. Band’s deposition was offered as a part of the bill of exception. There she testified she didn’t “hit the windshield or anything like that” inside the car. She had a knot on the back of her head after the collision. She didn’t remember hitting anything in the car. She didn’t know whether she “hit something going out or what, or on the pavement or what.” She did not recall whether hitting in the car resulted in any cut on her body. She got a scrape on the elbow from the pavement. She had a deep abrasion on the right hip that left a scar. There were scrapes on the right knee which she assumed she got on the pavement. She would assume she got the abrasion on her left hand from the pavement. She did not know whether she or her husband was wearing a seat belt.

The problem of failure to use available seat belts has been before the Texas courts in the following cases: Sonnier v. Ramsey, 424 S.W.2d 684 (C.C.A.—Houston 1st), ref., n. r. e.; Tom Brown Drilling Company v. Nieman, 418 S.W.2d 337 (C.C.A.—Eastland), ref., n. r. e.; Quinius v. Estrada, 448 S.W.2d 552 (C.C.A.—Austin), ref., n. r. e., and United Furniture v.

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Bluebook (online)
484 S.W.2d 117, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercer-v-band-texapp-1972.