Myers v. Continental Panhandle Lines, Inc.

278 S.W.2d 365, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2410
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 1954
Docket6452
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 278 S.W.2d 365 (Myers v. Continental Panhandle Lines, Inc.) 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
Myers v. Continental Panhandle Lines, Inc., 278 S.W.2d 365, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2410 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a personal damage action as a result of an alleged three-way motor vehicle collision Occurring upon a public highway in Potter County, Texas. Appellant Mrs. Pearl Myers, acting for herself and as next friend of her minor daughter Billie June McClaflin, filed suit against Continental Panhandle Lines, a corporation, hereafter referred to as the Bus Company, Plains Creamery/ a corporation, hereafter referred to as the Creamery, and Dale Johnson individually, seeking personal damages for herself in the sum of $75,000 and personal damages for her said minor daughter in the sum of $65,000 against the named defendants jointly and severally. The record reveals that on or about December 19, 1952, appellants were passengers on a bus being operated by the Bus Company in an easterly direction, on U.S. Highway 60, the same being operated in the south lane of a three-lane highway' distinctly marked as such. The Creamery was operating its truck in a westerly direction in the center lane of the said highway while in the course of passing an automobile proceeding west in the north lane of the highway. Dale Johnson was operating his Ford automobile in-an easterly direction also in the center lane ■ of the ' highway, having entered the center lane from the south, lane for the purpose of passing-the-Bus- Company’s bus.1 -The Johnson car, while moving rapidly,- collided with the Creamery truck near the center-lane-of the highway, knocking the truck out of control and directing its movement into the path óf the Bus Company’s bus causing a three-way collision that resulted in the alleged injuries as well as the instant death of both the bus driver and the truck operator.

The case of Plains Creamery, Inc. v. Denny, previously before this Court and reported in 277 S.W.2d 755, arose out of this same collision. -We refer to'that'case for further material facts and circumstances as there related by some of the same witnesses who testified in the trial of these four cases consolidated here for trial. The evidence in the Denny case at ’ least corroborates that given in this trial.

At .the time this case was tried before a jury beginning, on December 8, 1953, three other suits involving four additional plaintiffs and the same defendants, all arising out of the same collision, were tried-simultaneously upon the court’s own motion without objection from any party. All of the party plaintiffs were passengers on the same bus and had a common interest for the alleged' claims against the defendants they each sued. In the trial, all parties appeared in person and through their respective attorneys of record ekcept defendant Dale Johnson, who appeared only through his attorney who announced ready for trial for him. The court and jury heard the evidence in all of the cases jointly and only one charge was submitted to the jury covering the issues raised in all the cases, without any objections being made to the *368 said charge', by any party. In answer to special issues submitted, the ‘jury .acquitted the Bus.Company and.the Creamery both, of any act of negligence proximately causing the collision in question and convicted Dale Johnson of four separate acts o.f negligence, each of which was found by the jury :to-be a'proximate cause of .the said collision. The jury further found that the collision; was not the result of an unavoidable accident and that Dale Johnson’s automobile' collided .with the Creamery truck just' prior to the collision between the said truck and the bus being operated by the Bus Company in such a manner that Dale Johnson’s negligence was the . sole . proximate cause. of the collision between the truck' and the bus, which resulted in the injuries; sustained‘by appellants herein, as well as the sudden death of the bus driver and the.truck operator. The overwhelming weight of the evidence supports these jury findings and such have not been challenged by appellants. Based upon the jury verdict, the trial court rendered judgment for appellants against Dale Johnson only, for the sums of $5,000 for Mrs. Pearl Myers and $7,500 for her daughter, Billie June Mc-Claflin, fr.om , which part of the judgment no appeal .has been perfected. Based upon the jury verdict, the trial court rendered judgment further denying appellants any recovery as against appellees, the Bus Company and the Creafnery, from which part of the1 judgment only appellants have perfected an appeal.

■This-appeal and one other of the four cases tried jointly before the court are before us upon a lengthy record. - Both appeals are before us on the same statement of facts heard at the trial of all four cases, consisting of 420 pages with exhibits attached, a. second statement of facts of all evidence heard on motions for a new trial, consisting of 163 pages, and a third volume marked “Statement of Facts in Supplement,” consisting of 120 pages recording the arguments of counsel in the trial of all four cases. The two appeals before us were submitted and oral arguments heard together; Because the two appeals arose out of the same; transactions and are predicated upon the same statements- of. facts,..which involve practically the same principles of law, a disposition of the’óthéf'ap-peál follows immediately this one wimpractically the same principles of law applied thereto.

Through several points presented ¡in this case, appellants charge error because of the refusal of the trial court to permit ‘.‘appellants to question representatives1 of; the Bus Company and Creamery in regard to the pleadings filed by them in this case;” and because of alleged jury misconduct, alleged improper argument of the Bus. Company’s counsel before the jury, and the admission of alleged improper evidence, ,i , ;

In their first point presented, appellants as plaintiffs did not seek" to iiltroduce or present and read to the jury the pleadings of defendants, appellees herein,'-the Bus Company and the Creamery, ks‘admissions against the interests of the respective pleaders or for impeachment purposes, but they sought to introduce and present the Bus Company’s pleadings as evidence against its co-defendant the Creamery' and the Creamery’s pleadings as evidenced against its co-defendant the Bus Company.

Pleadings filed in a case, and presumably read to the jury are not .before the court and jury as evidence but merely as a formal statement of facts to be established or proved by evidence. They' cannot be legally considered for any other, purpose unless they be introduced to show, material admissions against the interests of the pleader or to impeach evidence the pleader may have offered in Conflict with his pleadings. Barrera v. Duval County Ranch Co., Tex.Civ.App., 135 S.W.2d 518; Hughes v. Dopson, Tex.Civ.App., 135 S.W.2d 148; 17 Tex.Jur. 356-57, par. 119, and numerous authorities there cited. We know of no rule of law that would prevent.'any of the defendants in a case such as this from asserting common defenses if th.ey choose, or from seeking to place the liability upon a co-defendant if the pleadings and a development of the facts so justify. Under the record here presented, the pleadings were offered in evidence for the purpose previously herein stated and the acts of the *369

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W.2d 365, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-continental-panhandle-lines-inc-texapp-1954.