San Antonio Traction Co. v. Settle

135 S.W. 116, 104 Tex. 142, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 134
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1911
DocketNo. 2145.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 135 S.W. 116 (San Antonio Traction Co. v. Settle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Antonio Traction Co. v. Settle, 135 S.W. 116, 104 Tex. 142, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 134 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramsey

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought in the District. Court of Bexar County by Thomas Y. Settle against the San Antonio Traction Company to recover damages for injuries sustained by him through the negligence of the said company.

As ground of negligence it is alleged “that plaintiff desired to be tarried as a passenger for hire on one of defendant’s said cars going east on Carson Street and for the purpose of getting on said car to be so carried, plaintiff stood on Carson Street near the corner of Pine Street to await such car, and in a short time the car came along and stopped, about opposite to where plaintiff was standing, and plaintiff attempted to get on the said car as it was standing and while plaintiff was just in the act of getting in the car it was suddenly and violently started forward, and plaintiff was thrown with great force and violence down on the step or footboard of the car, 'his head and body striking the said board or plank heavily and with great force and partially on said board and with his legs on the ground, plaintiff was dragged thirty or forty feet before the car was stopped.”

The traction company answered by general denial and plea of contributory negligence.

At a trial had in said court on the 15th day of June, 1909, a *145 verdict was returned in favor of the company. An appeal was prosecuted from this judgment to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District, in which court, on February 9, 1910, a judgment was rendered reversing the judgment of the court below on the ground, among other things, that there was error in the charge of the court, which will be hereafter set out. Thereafter application was made to this court for writ of error on the ground, in substance, that the decision of the court of Civil Appeals in this case overrules certain of its own decisions as well as the decisions of other Courts of Civil Appeals and of this court.

We think that there can be no doubt that there is a substantial and real conflict between the decision herein rendered in the Court of Civil Appeals and opinions as heretofore rendered by the same court as well as with decisions of other Courts of Civil Appeals and of this court.

1. Among other things, the court charged the jury as follows: “If you believe from the evidence 'that on or about the 15th day of May, 1908, the plaintiff was standing on Carson Street, near the corner of Pine Street, in the city of San Antonio, and that the plaintiff attempted to get on one of the cars operated by the defendant company as the said car was standing still, and while the plaintiff was in the act of getting on the car, it was suddenly and violently started forward and plaintiff was thrown with great force and violence down on the step or footboard of the car, and he thereby sustained the injuries, if any, that you find from the evidence he has sustained by reason of the fall from the car, if any, and if you further believe from the evidence that it was negligence on the part of the defendant to start said car in the manner and under the circumstances that you find from the evidence that the defendant did start said car—if you so find—and you further believe from the evidence that such negligence, if any, was the direct cause of injuries, if any, to the plaintiff—then you are instructed to return a verdict for the plaintiff.”

In this connection'it will be noticed that it is averred, in substance, in the plaintiff’s petition, that by reason of the car starting suddenly and violently he was thrown with great force down on the step or footboard of the car, his head and body striking same, and that while partly on said footboard and with his legs on the ground he was dragged some thirty or forty feet before the car stopped. The Court of Civil Appeals found that there was evidence sustaining this last allegation and the case was reversed for the reason that, in the opinion of that court, not only was this ground of negligence not submitted to the jury, but was, in substance and effect, withdrawn from the jury, and the charge as given constituted affirmative error. To this conclusion we can not agree. We think the charge of the court was not affirmatively erroneous' but that the only possible objection to same was that it did not submit as a basis of recovery one of the grounds set up in plaintiff’s petition. It can not, we think, be successfully urged that there was any conflict between the ground submitted in fact by the court and the ground of negligence the *146 omission to submit which is here complained of. Nor can it be claimed that the submission of the allegation of negligence based upon the conduct of the company in suddenly and violently starting its car and throwing him on the footboard with great force and violence, in any sense, constitute an affirmative error, or that the submission of this issue in intrinsically unsound or in its terms inaccurate. We think the error solely one of omission and that the burden was on defendant in error to ask a special instruction submitting the omitted ground of negligence to the jury.

In the case of Wilkinson v. Johnson, 83 Texas, 392, it was held that a failure to submit an issue made by the pleadings and evidence will not be grounds for reversal where no request was made that such issue be submitted.

In the case of Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Eberheart, 91 Texas, 323, Judge Denman, speaking for the court, said in passing upon a defensive charge: “This was a charge instructing the jury to find for the defendant upon a certain state of facts. If there was any other group of facts which would have authorized a finding for defendant, it should have asked a charge presenting such issue. The defendant could not have been prejudiced by the charge as far as it went.”

The same doctrine, in effect, was announced in the case of Parks v. San Antonio Traction Co., 100 Texas, 222, where the court say: “The charge in this case contained no such instruction in favor of the plaintiff. The distinction, upon the mere statement of it, may appear to be a close one, but it is really a substantial and important one, for upon it depends the further question as to the duty of parties to aid the trial courts in a submission of their cause of action or grounds of defense by supplying mere omissions and deficiencies in instructions given.” In this case it is also said: “The rule in our practice which permits a party to complain in the appellate courts of positive errors in the charges of trial judges, without having in any way excepted or called attention to them at the trial, is quite liberal enough, and should not be allowed to embrace cases like this, where the instruction is entirely favorable to the complaining party, and is merely deficient in not going as far as he might have carried it by requested instructions.”

To the same effect is a decision in the case of Yellow Pine Oil Company v. Noble, 100 Texas, 358, where it is said: “It does not appear that the charge given contained anything contrary to that view. The instruction stated was, in effect, that if such conduct was shown and was negligent the verdict must be for defendant, which is true. It can not be said that this instruction was erroneous.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 S.W. 116, 104 Tex. 142, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-traction-co-v-settle-tex-1911.