Moody v. Clark

266 S.W.2d 907, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2048
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1954
Docket6691
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 266 S.W.2d 907 (Moody v. Clark) 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
Moody v. Clark, 266 S.W.2d 907, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2048 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

FANNING, Justice.

Rex Lowell Clark, by next friend, sued C. Everett Dean and wife Rachel Jo Dean, William Dean and wife Virginia Dean, Mrs. Rosa Croley, George Henry Moody and .the City of Gilmer to recover damages for personal injuries. Upon a jury trial and submission on special issues, judgment, except as to Rosa Croley, was rendered for appellee Clark, awarding a recovery of $10,000. Moody contingently claimed indemnity and contribution against the City of Gilmer and indemnity against the Deans; all of which was denied. The judgment however decreed contribution as between Moody and the Deans. The City of Gilmer claimed indemnity against Rosa Croley, which the judgment denied, and against Moody which the judgment awarded. Defendants (other than Rosa Croley in whose favor judgment was rendered) have appealed. -

Appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeal of the city of Gilmer by reason of the filing of an appeal bond in this court by the city more than thirty days after the overruling of the city’s motion for new trial is overruled. The city of Gilmer could appeal from a judgment against, it without filing an appeal bond. City of Athens v. Evans, Tex.Com.App., 63 S.W.2d 379; articles 1174 and 2072, V.A.T.C.S.

*909 On or about July 18, 1950, Rachel Jo Dean drove a hydramatic power drive automobile (1948, Pontiac), west along Tyler Street in Gilmer and she testified that she parked it at an angle on the north side of the street in front of Henry Lee Davis’ store. Virginia Dean, her sister, was in the front seat on the right with her baby, and in the back were two children about two years old each or less, one being the son of Rachel Jo Dean and C. Everett Dean and the other being the son of Virginia Dean and William Dean. To the east of the Davis Store were three buildings owned by Mrs. Croley upon which an old awning made of lumber and composition material and extending seventy-five feet along the front of said buildings had been replaced with mostly new materials. In the course of this repair old lumber and old materials were placed in the street in front of the Croley buildings. Appellees contended-that part of this lumber was stacked up in the street partly in front of the Davis Store, however, the jury found that at. the time of the accident there was no lumber in front of the Davis Store, placed there by Moody or under his direction. When the Dean car was parked, Rachel Jo Dean left the car and took the young baby of Virginia Dean with her to a nearby beauty shop, left the engine of her car running without effectively set7 ting the brake. She left Virginia Dean sitting on the front seat on the right with the two young boys in the back seat. The two young boys climbed over to the front and by manipulating or sitting upon the acceh erator started the car in sudden, violent and rapid motion, and without any control the car ran over the curb and upon the sidewalk and struck the extreme west end of the Davis Store and part of the extreme eastern side of the Theatre building which was directly .west of the Davis Store, and breaking the plateglass window on the west .side of the Davis Store. Rex Lowell Clark, who was on the sidewalk, at the time, was struck by the car and sustained serious personal injuries as a result thereof. Plaintiffs’ theory of the case as ,to Moody and the City of Gilr mer is that the lumber, nails and other material placed in Tyler Street constituted a “ramp” (although appellees do not specifically plead that same constituted a ramp) over which the Dean vehicle traveled from the street and over the curb (about eight or nine inches in height) and that the failure of Moody and, the City of Gilmer to remove the materials from the street, were continuing acts of original negligence which appellees say cooperated and concurred with the negligence of the Deans to proximately produce and cause the accident and resulting injuries toClark.

The jury in response to the special issues found that Rachel Jo Dean permitted the car to stand unattended without first stopping the engine and effectively setting the brake and that this was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries; that the automobile in question under all the attendant, conditions and circumstances was a dangerous instrumentality and likely to produce injuries to persons and that it was exposed by-Rachel Jo Dean to easy manipulation into sudden and violent forward motion by Eddie Jo Dean and Billy Ray Dean, the two-year old children of the Deans that it was negligence .to so. expose said automobile and that same was a proximate cause; that Virginia Dean failed to prevent Eddie Joe Dean and Billy Ray Dean from manipulating said automobile into sudden and violent forward motion, and that same was negligence and a proximate cause; that old lumber, etc., was thrown and piled in Tyler Street by Moody and his crew, that such was negligence and a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries; that such lumber, nails, etc., piled in Tyler Street by Moody and his crew constituted destructive or injurious material; that Moody and his cretv failed to removeé same from Tyler Street, that same was negligence and a proximate cause. The jury also found that the City of Gilmer failed to immediately remove or cause to be removed the old lumber, nails, etc., thrown into Tyler Street by Moody and hid crew, that same was negligence and a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. The jury further found that the collision in question was not the result of an unavoidable accident; that at the time of .the accident in question there.was no lumber in front of the Henry Lee Davis Store placed there by Moody or under his direction. The jury also found *910 that the conduct of the Dean children was a new and independent cause of the accident. Plaintiff’s motion to disregard the jury’s finding on this issue was granted and the court entered judgment on the verdict of the jury on the other issues.

Appellant Moody’s first point is “that the trial court erred in not rendering judgment in his favor based upon the verdict of the jury finding that at the time of the accident in question there was mo lumber in front of the Henry Lee Davis Store placed, there by Moody or under his direction, together with the uncontroverted evidence that it was in front of said store that the automobile was parked and ran upon the sidewalk injuring plaintiff.”

Plaintiff pleaded that Moody and his crew threw and piled the old lumber, etc., “directly in front of. the three Croley buildings with the pile thereof .extending eastward a few feet in front of the building adjacent to the east of the easternmost ,of the said Croley buildings and the pile thereof extending westward a few feet in front of the building adjacent to and west of the westernmost of the three said Croley buildings.” (Emphasis added). Plaintiff further pleaded that such lumber, etc., was piled to a depth of several inches extending from the curb into the street for a distance of four or five feet. Plaintiff further alleged that the Dean automobile was parked in front of the westernmost of said Croley buildings at an angle with said concrete curb of approximately thirty degrees with the front wheels of said automobile against or near the pile of old lumber about four or five feet away from the curb and “toward the front of the westernmost of said Croley buildings and the front of the Henry Lee Davis Grocery Store building.” (Emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
266 S.W.2d 907, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moody-v-clark-texapp-1954.