Office Equipment Co. v. Smerke

136 S.W.2d 972
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1940
DocketNo. 14012.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 S.W.2d 972 (Office Equipment Co. v. Smerke) 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
Office Equipment Co. v. Smerke, 136 S.W.2d 972 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This is an appeal by defendants, Wm. C. Davis, Sr., and Office Equipment Company, from a judgment rendered jointly and severally against them in a suit for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the wife of the plaintiff, F. A. Smerke, in the collision of the automobile in which she was riding alone with one owned by the said defendant Company and driven by its officer, Davis.

The case being tried to a jury, all issues were determined in favor of the plaintiff and a judgment was rendered against de *973 fendants for the sum of $3,500, to compensate for the personal injuries sustained by Mrs. Smerke.

The several assignments of error are presented through seven propositions.

The first proposition asserts that the jury’s award of $3,500 is excessive and demands a reversal or the requirement of a remitter.

Appellate courts are slow to disturb the verdicts of juries, in such matters, unless the verdict, viewed in the light of the facts adduced, shows a bias or prejudice that renders the verdict unjust.

No two cases are ever alike and it would serve no useful purpose for us to attempt to quote from the testimony in commenting upon this proposition.

If the jury believed the testimony adduced by the plaintiff—and we are compelled to find that the jury did so—then we do not feel justified in substituting our ■opinions for theirs.

The second proposition urges a reversal on the theory that Mrs. Smerke admitted that she was driving her automobile, immediately prior to the collision, at a rate in excess of 20 miles per hour—within the corporate limits of the City of Fort Worth —and the jury having found that she was not so driving her car at such rate, when the accident occurred, evidences bias and prejudice and requires a reversal.

There might be something to this contention, were it not for testimony before the jury which is utterly at variance with that presented in appellants’ brief.

Mrs. Smerke testified that she had brought her car to a stop, near the curb, on her side of the highway, when the collision took place, and she is corroborated by a disinterested eye witness.

With this evidence before the jury, the finding of the jury is supported by the testimony, although Mrs. Smerke testified that prior to the accident she was driving her car at a rate of speed of from 20 to 25 miles per hour.

The third proposition urges a reversal because the trial court submitted the issue of damages in the following form, over appellants’ objection that it constitutes a comment upon the weight of the evidence and assumes a disputed fact, viz: that plaintiff sustained any injuries in the accident. This is the charge: “What amount of money, if paid now in cash, do you find from a preponderance of the evidence would reasonably and fairly compensate the plaintiff for the injuries sustained by Mrs. Smerke as a result of. the accident in question ?”

It is ordinarily required that the fact of an injury, or injuries, be established by a finding based upon the evidence introduced. It is absolutely essential that such a finding be made, if the evidence is sufficient to warrant a finding that no injury was sustained.

If it can be said that the defendants succeeded in adducing testimony which was of such probative force as that, if believed by the jury, it would have supported a finding that Mrs. Smerke did not receive any bodily injury in the accident, then it follows that the criticism of the charge is well taken.

To test the situation, it is but fair to turn the question around: What if the jury had said by its verdict that Mrs. Smerke received no injury. Could such a verdict stand in the light of this record? We do not believe so. We realize that this is a rather close question, before us, but we are confronted with the testimony of Mrs. Smerke, which relates her injuries and sufferings, and we find her corroborated by disinterested witnesses who reached her side, immediately after the collision. They testify to the injury to her head and to the fact that she was “unconscious” and that they bathed her face with cold water to revive her. She is corroborated by her neighbors and friends who saw her, in her home, after she was taken there.

The only testimony offered by the defendants to ■ show that she was not hurt comes from the lips of a physician who was at the hospital, when Mrs. Smerke was taken there, shortly after the accident.

The record does not show who called in this physician. He never treated her, either there or at her home. His testimony shows that he advised that she be taken to her home. This physician, evidently, made no notes of such examination as he may have made. He referred to none and did not testify from notes.

He did not attempt to say what kind of examination he made. He based his statements on his “recollection” solely. In the very beginning of his testimony he says: ‘■‘So, I,-myself examined the patient and asked her of what she complained and she said a general feeling of illness and dis *974 tress — nervousness. I didn’t find — my recollection is I didn’t find any bruises or fractures or lacerations of the skin and things of that kind; she seemed to he pretty nervous and a certain amount of shock, probably, but I didn’t find any what we call external evidences of an injury.”

We believe that such testimony given in such a manner, in a case, such as the one shown by this record, can be said to go no further than to raise a question of the extent of the injuries.

We are of opinion that the evidence shows without dispute that Mrs. Smerke sustained some injury in the collision.

The record discloses that the defendants tried the case on the theory that Mrs. Smerke’s injuries were temporary and not serious and not upon the theory that she sustained no injuries.

If the doctor, on whose testimony the defendants rely to show absolutely no injury sustained by Mrs. Smerke, had shown that! he made a minute and careful examination of the patient, that he was not merely’ depending upon his “recollection” and had given positive and unequivocal testimony to the effect that he, after a careful and minute examination of the patient, saw and found no bruise, no wound, no abrasion and no evidence of any injury sustained by her, in such event the issue would have been raised; but that is not the case before us.

The case of Eastern Texas Elec. Co. et al. v. Joiner, Tex.Civ.App., 27 S.W.2d 917, is not in point, as will be seen by examining the charge, which requests the jury to find what sum would compensate the plaintiff “for the injuries received by him, if any, to his back, spine, pelvis, sacro iliac joint, and resulting neuritis.” (Italics ours).

The Court of Civil Appeals condemned the charge because it contained the words “and resulting neuritis”, and bottomed such ruling on the fact that whether or not neuritis resulted from the injuries was a disputed issue which the trial court should not have assumed as an existing fact. The case at bar is not like the other case cited by appellants, viz: Texas Employers Ins. Ass’n v.

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Related

State v. Lunsford
456 S.E.2d 918 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1995)
Nussbaum v. Anthony
214 S.W.2d 686 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1948)
Smerke v. Office Equipment Company
158 S.W.2d 302 (Texas Supreme Court, 1941)

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136 S.W.2d 972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/office-equipment-co-v-smerke-texapp-1940.