Norris Bros., Inc. v. Mattinson

118 S.W.2d 460, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 685
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1938
DocketNo. 13768.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 460 (Norris Bros., Inc. v. Mattinson) 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
Norris Bros., Inc. v. Mattinson, 118 S.W.2d 460, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 685 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This suit was instituted by appellee against appellant, for personal injuries sustained when one of appellant’s employees, alleged to be on a mission for his employer, propelled his automobile into appellee on a public street within the City of Fort Worth, when appellee was crossing the street, for the purpose of boarding a north bound bus.

The undisputed evidence shows that ap-pellee, instead of crossing the street and placing himself on the east side thereof, for the purpose of boarding the north bound bus, stood on the west side of such street until the bus approached, and that he then signaled the bus to stop and attempted to cross the street to board the bus, when he was struck by the automobile. The accident happened around 2 P. M. and appellee, in detailing what he did prior to attempting to cross the street, stated emphatically that he first looked up the street and then down the street, and that in doing so he saw two automobiles, one approaching from the north and the other from the south, and that he observed a third automobile behind the one approaching from the north, which was approximately a full block away at the time; that he figured that when the first two automobiles passed the point at which he stood, he could then cross the street with safety. In detailing what he did and how he acted, appellee frankly admitted that he neither looked to the right nor the left after he started to cross the street in question.

The cause was tried to a jury, and 16 special issues were submitted. On the issues the jury found, (1) that the accident was not unavoidable; (2) that immediately prior to the collision, appellant’s employee was operating his automobile at a rate of speed in excess of 20 miles per hour; (3) that the operation of the automobile at such rate was a proxim'ate cause of the collision ; (4) that said employee did not sound his horn immediately prior to the collision, and such act was negligence; (5) that such negligence last inquired about was the proximate cause of the collision; (6) that defendant’s employee failed to keep a proper lookout immediately prior' to the collision; (7) that such failure was a proximate cause of the collision; (8) that defendant’s employee did not discover that appellee was in a position of peril; (9) that appellee did not fail to keep a proper lookout for his own safety immediately prior *462 to the collision; (10) that appellee did not dash out into the street suddenly; (11) that appellee was not attempting to cross the street at a place other than the end of the block, designated for pedestrian traffic; (12) that the act of appellee in attempting to cross the street at a place other than the end „ of the block was not a proximate cause of the collision; (13) the amount of damages was assessed at $3,-845.83.

Objections were levelled at the charge and overruled. On the verdict, judgment was rendered for,appellee (plaintiff below). Motion for a new trial was timely filed, presented and overruled by the trial court, and the cause was brought to us for review.

We find twelve assignments of error presented in appellant’s brief, but, viewing the case as we do, we shall not discuss all of them.

The fifth assignment'of error complains of the trial court overruling appellant’s objection to special issue No. 1, which required the jury to find from a preponderance of the evidence whether or not immediately prior to the collision in question appellant’s employee was operating his automobile at a rate of speed in excess of 20 miles per hour. We have searched the statement of facts, and the only testimony introduced by appellee on the matter of speed at which appellant’s employee was operating his car comes from the lips of appellee, and under his positive testimony, the only time and the last time that he saw the automobile it was some 400 feet north of him, and he estimates in his testimony that at that time the car “looked like it was running at a moderate rate of speed, about 35 or 40 miles an hour.” All of the other testimony comes from the defendant’s side, and it bears directly upon the rate of speed the automobile was being driven immediately prior to the accident. We are frank to say that the preponderance of the testimony tends to show that the automobile was not- being driven at a rate of speed in excess of 20 miles per hour immediately prior to the accident. We sustain this assignment of error, particularly in view of the fact that testimony was introduced to show that the automobile skidded some little distance after the brakes were applied by appellant’s employee, and that one of the jurors, on the hearing of the motion for a new trial, frankly admitted that he went out to the scene of the accident, viewed the premises and tried his own car out on the same street, not far from the scene of the accident, and on what he testified was the same sort of pavement, and that he reported to the jury during their deliberations that an automobile would not skid if it were stopped suddenly when going at the rate of ten or twelve miles per "hour.

The ninth, tenth and eleventh assignments of error raise issues touching misconduct on the part of the jury during the trial of the case, and while the jurors were considering the case. We think these assignments of error should be sustained.

One of the jurors was considerably worried over the issue of whether or not appellee was keeping a proper lookout for his own safety immediately prior to the time he was struck by the automobile, and he admits that he went out to the scene of the accident, and that he had his wife to observe the time that it took him to drive in his automobile from the place on the street in question where appellee said he saw an automobile approaching from the north, some 400 feet away, and that he also undertook to walk toward the center of the street on which appellee was struck, in the manner in which appellee testified that he walked, and he testified frankly that he went back to the jury room the next day and communicated the results of the test made by him. He told the jury that he timed himself covering the distance in his automobile at a rate of speed of 35 miles per hour.

Another juror testified that on the very day the taking of evidence began, he went out to the scene of the accident, in order to satisfy his own mind, and said that he found the situation different from what he had gathered from the testimony. This juror admitted that he tried his own car out to see how quickly it would stop at the rates of speed of 20 miles per hour and 30 miles per hour. He said that he did this for the purpose of finding out how far his car would skid, and that while he did not measure the skid marks, he looked at them and estimated the length of the skid marks. This juror frankly testified that when he came back the next day, he communicated to the jury panel the fact that he had gone out to the place of the accident and told them about making the test, and' he said that he told the jury panel that an automobile traveling at the rate of *463 10 miles an hour would not skid; that he had tried it out and found that it would not, and that his conclusion was that an automobile would have to travel faster than 10 or 12 miles per hour before it would skid.

What these jurors testified to was amply corroborated by other jurors. It cannot be reasonably said that such misconduct does not vitiate the verdict of a jury.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 460, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-bros-inc-v-mattinson-texapp-1938.