Morrison v. Smith

138 S.W.2d 280, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 1940
DocketNo. 1983.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 280 (Morrison v. Smith) 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
Morrison v. Smith, 138 S.W.2d 280, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 126 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

Mrs. Susan B. Smith, appellee, instituted this suit against J. F. Morrison, operating as Southwestern Peanut Company, appellant, to recover for personal injuries and property damage growing out of the collision of an automobile driven by her with the defendant’s truck. Both parties were traveling in a westerly direction on the Bankhead Highway when the accident occurred between Baird and Clyde in Callahan County. The appellee charged various acts of negligence, etc., and the appellant answered by general denial, pleas of contributory negligence, etc.

In the trial it was, in substance, the theory of the appellant that his truck had turned to the left of the road to pass another car and that after it had so turned and was in the act of passing such car, the appellee, driving at an excessive rate of speed, undertook to pass the truck and in doing so, drove into the truck, causing her car to turn over after careening across the road in front of the truck. The appellant further contended that no horn was blown or signal given by the appellee when she attempted to pass the truck. On the other hand, the appellee’s contentions and testimony were to the contrary. She charged the appellant with turning suddenly to the left and striking her car and that he failed to give any signal or notice that he was about to turn his car to the left. Appellant’s testimony is also to the effect that his truck and trailer were entirely on the left side of the road, passing the car on his right when the appellee, somewhat on the shoulder of the highway, undertook to pass the appellant’s truck.

In answer to special issues the jury found the appellant guilty of negligence: (1) in turning the truck to the left immediately before the collision “without first see- . ing that there was sufficient space for such movement * * * without striking plaintiff’s car”; (2) failing “to give a visible signal of his intention to turn to the left immediately before he turned to the left;” *281 (3) failing “to give an audible sign of his intention to turn to the left” etc-.; (4) in failing “to keep a proper lookout for other cars on the Highway immediately before and at the time of the collision.”

The jury acquitted the appellee of contributory negligence: (1) in attempting to pass the truck while it was passing another car on the highway, (2) in driving at an excessive rate of speed.

The jury also found that the collision did not result from an unavoidable accident.

The first assignments of error complain of the court’s failure to grant a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence of the witness Ferguson who is alleged to have seen the accident from a nearby point in a field; and the second group of assignments assert that the court erred in not granting a new trial because of the inflammatory remarks of the appel-lee’s counsel in telling the jury in his closing argument that the appellant’s counsel was “buying, hiring and bringing witnesses” etc. The propositions relating to newly discovered evidence present a rather close question but since we find that the judgment must be reversed on other points we have concluded not to base our decision on any particular view of the first group of assignments. If we are correct in the conclusions presently to be stated, the question of newly discovered evidence becomes immaterial and will not arise upon another trial.

Appellant’s proposition 2 is addressed to the ruling of the court concerning the following remarks of appellee’s counsel: “Let’s get another one. Suppose it happened like he said, with her out on the shoulder; she would have to have overturned to come in there. She couldn’t do it. Off in the borrow pit she would go. They claim that was this man here (indicating) but Davis hasn’t got them here. It wasn’t Mr. Morrison’s duty. He was the man paying their way here. I wonder what they told him when he struck this man. It wasn’t Mr. Morrison’s duty. It was Davis’s duty, because he was buying, hiring and bringing witnesses here * * ”

Proposition 3 is addressed to said attorney’s remarks used at the same time and in practically the same connection. They are as follows: “This other testimony — let’s see their testimony, — that’s Wilcoxen and Young, the parties that Mr. Davis Scarborough paid their way up here. I do not know how they employed Mr. Scarborough in this case — whether it was like the lawyer who will charge you so much if you furnish the testimony, and so much if he furnishes the testimony- I don’t know how they arrive at that, but anyhow Mr. Scarborough paid their way up here. I don’t know how he did that. I have never seen a lawyér with that much money. Anyway, he volunteered that statement * ⅜ ”

Although the trial court instructed the jury to disregard the above remarks, such argument is urged as reversible error for the following reasons: (1) Such comments amounting to .impeachment testimony by counsel (who was not sworn) with respect to the credibility of material witnesses .offered by appellant, and whose testimony bore upon vital issues in the case. (2) Such comment constituted a direct statement of fact by counsel to the effect that the appellant’s counsel had bought and hired witnesses for the appellant. (3) Such remarks were not in reply to any argument of appellee’s counsel or warranted by the testimony. (4) That such statements by appellee’s counsel amounting to a charge that the appellant’s counsel had been guilty of subornation of perjury, and (5) that by such remarks ajid observations the attorney for appellee undertook to break down testimony of witnesses Wil-coxen and Young upon whose testimony (in connection with that of the truck driver) appellant relied to establish the acts of contributory negligence charged to the appel-lee, etc.

On the trial the appellant offered the testimony of witnesses Young and Wilcoxen who had been following the truck for sometime and who at the moment of the accident were about 75 yards behind the truck. They testified, in substance, that the Smith car was about 50 yards behind the truck and 25 yards in advance of their car when the truck began pulling out to the left to pass the car in front of it. That appellee did not pull to the “right hand side of the highway” after passing them, that “she just stayed on the left hand side'of the highway”; that “about the time she got to this truck, * * * the truck had started around another car, and whenever she started around him * * * she hit his [rear left] duals on his truck, and when she did, it threw the back end of her car around that way (indicating). She went *282 plumb around his truck and- turned over.” That the truck and the car (it was passing) were side by side when the Smith car “got up to that point.”

Wilcoxen also testified that the appellee was traveling 50 or 60 miles an hour when it passed the car in which he was driving. Young testified the appellee’s car was traveling “plenty fast.” Both witnesses testified their own car was running about 35 miles an hour. One of these witnesses also testified that he never heard Mrs. Smith blow her horn or give any such signal. The truck driver testified that no such signals or warnings were heard by him.

The findings of the jury on the material issues have'been set-out above. This much of the testimony has been stated to show its conflicting nature and the closeness of the issues drawn.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 280, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-smith-texapp-1940.