Peveto v. Smith

113 S.W.2d 216, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1455
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1937
DocketNo. 3209.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 216 (Peveto 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
Peveto v. Smith, 113 S.W.2d 216, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1455 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

COMBS, Justice.

Mrs. Iva Smith, a widow sued appellants, Arias Peveto and H. B-. Jackson, as defendants’ for $30,578.35 actual damages and $10,000 exemplary damages, on account of the death of her son Charles Olen Smith, which occurred as the result of injuries sustained by him on April 22, 1936. The accident in which he was injured occurred on the viaduct or approach of the Neches River Bridge, near Beaumont in Jefferson county.

In their petition the plaintiff alleged: “That on or about April 22, 1936, at or about the hour of six thirty o’clock P. M., the said Charles Olen Smith, now deceased, left his work at Pennsylvania Shipyards, Inc. in Beaumont, Texas, and started to his home at Vidor in Orange County, Texas, and drove his car, a certain Dodge, 1927 Model Sedan, Texas-License No. 647-369, on and over the United States Highway No. 90, which runs from Beaumont to Vidor, Texas, at or about said time was driving his car .dn and along' said public highway and was driving same in a southeasterly direction over the viaduct and was approaching the bridge that crosses the Neches River, when suddenly'and without previous notice his engine stopped running and he pulled over to the fartherest edge of said viaduct on his right hand side. At said time and place it was not yet dark but, nevertheless, he turned ,his lights on and the lights on his said car, both front and rear, were burning. The said Charles Olen Smith got out of his car, raised the hood on the left hand side and began to- inquire into the trouble of his engine and was examining the vacuum tank on his said car when suddenly, without any notice or warning of any kind whatsoever, the defendant, Arias Peveto, driving a new Ford V8 Pickup Truck, License No. 122-CM091, loaded with sacks of meal or some such commodity, drove said truck with great force and violence into the rear of said Dodge Sedan, and' the said Charles Olen Smith was thrown against said Dodge Sedan and down on said highway and was brutally, severely and fatally injured, and suffered thereby the following injuries,' which resulted in his death, to-wit: Fracture of upper jaw, loosening all the upper teeth, a wound on the roof of his mouth, punctured like, both eyes bruised and almost closed, a fracture of the lower Jaw on the right side, which caused quite a deformity, injury to the right thigh near the right groin, and internal injuries of the abdomen, which likely ruptured some of the viscera, particularly the kidney and the intestines.”

And further: “That by reason of such negligent, careless and incompetent and inexperienced management of said Ford V8 Truck by defendant, Arias Peveto, and as a direct and proximate result therefrom, the said Ford V8 Truck struck, knocked, collided, ran into and against the rear of said Dodge Sedan with great violence, knocked, propelled, broke and damaged the same, and threw the said Charles Olen Smith on and about the engine, windshield, and fenders of said Sedan and down and upon said highway whereby he received the injuries hereinbefore mentioned, which caused his *218 death; and in this connection plaintiff further alleges that said collision, the injuries to the said Charles Olen Smith, which later caused his death, all herein fully alleged, each and all, were caused by the negligent acts on the part of defendant, Arias Peveto, herein alleged.”

The defendant Jackson was brought into the case on the theory of partnership by the following plea: “Upon information and belief, plaintiff charges the facts to be that prior to the accident herein mentioned, defendant, H. B. Jackson, and Arias Peveto, defendant, entered into an agreement, either oral or written, as the proof will show, by the terms of which the said H. B. Jackson contributed money and credit and the said Arias Peveto contributed his services and other considerations to operate several mercantile stores, which business was known as ‘Peveto Mercantile Company’ ; that said parties were to receive a portion of the net profits, either from the beginning or at some subsequent time, as the proof will show; that by said agreement the said H. B. Jackson and the said Arias Peveto became partners and became jointly and severally liable for-the wrongs of each other incurred in the partnership business. That said Ford V8 truck which the said Arias Peveto drove into the said Dodge Sedan and which inflicted the injuries and subsequent death of the said Charles Olen Smith, had painted on the sides thereof, ‘Peveto Merc. Co.’, and that said truck was being used at said time and place in the partnership business, and that said Arias Peveto at said time and place was driving said truck with a load of merchandise to Mauriceville to be used and disposed of in the partnership business and was driving said truck at said time and place within the scope of his authority as a partner of H. B. Jackson.”

The defendants answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, and general denial, and pleaded specially that the deceased, Charles Olen Smith, failed to exercise ordinary care under the circumstances, which failure on his part was proximate or contributing cause to his injury. There was no specific denial of the partnership, and no verified plea was filed as provided by statute.

The trial was to a jury, and since one of appellants’ main contentions is that the evidence did not connect Peveto with the accident or raise any issue of negligence against him, as found by the jury, it is necessary to briefly summarize the evidence. '

Charles Olen Smith lived with his widowed mother and younger brothers and sisters at Vidor. He worked at the Pennsylvania Shipyards, at Beaumont, and contributed about $60 per month to the support of his mother and the family, and. was practically their sole support. He was sober and industrious.

On the day of his fatal injury, April 22, 1936, he did not work at the Shipyards, there being no work for him there that day. He brought his automobile, an old Dodge sedan, -to the home of a married brother in Beaumont, where he and a cousin, Everett Smith, worked on it most of the day. Everett Smith, who lives in Louisiana, was ' not present at the trial, but it was stipulated that if present he would testify that at about 6:30 p. m..he and Olen Smith started to the latter’s home in Vidor in the Dodge car, traveling eastward on the Old Spanish Trail highway; that when they were on the -viaduct or approach of the Neches River Bridge, traveling eastward toward Vidor and Orange, the car ran out of gasoline. The vacuum tank was dry. They parked the car on the right-hand side of the viaduct and both walked back toward Beaumont to the Bridge Service Station, which was near the end of the viaduct. Everett Smith decided he would not go on to Vidor and returned to his boarding place in Beaumont, leaving Olen at the service station.

Ralph Wilson, a school teacher, testified that at about 6 o’clock that day he passed over the Neches River Bridge, on his way to the Boy Scout Camp, which is near Vidor; that he saw a car parked on the viaduct. From photographs in evidence he identified it as the Olen Smith car. It was facing toward Vidor and Orange and was on the right-hand side, and as near the railing or walkway as it could get. As he traveled along the viaduct approaching the car, he met two men between it and the Beaumont end of the viaduct walking back toward Beaumont. He did not know either party. He saw no one around the car. He passed by it without difficulty as he had plenty of room to pass.

J. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 216, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peveto-v-smith-texapp-1937.