Shell Oil Co. v. Jackson County

193 S.W.2d 268, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 822
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1945
DocketNo. 11724.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 S.W.2d 268 (Shell Oil Co. v. Jackson County) 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
Shell Oil Co. v. Jackson County, 193 S.W.2d 268, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 822 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinions

This is an action for damages resulting from negligence in driving a loaded truck, weighing 35,000 pounds, upon a bridge crossing the Navidad River in Jackson County, resulting in breaking the bridge in two. The action was brought by the County Judge of Jackson County on behalf of Jackson County, against Shell Oil Company, Inc., the owner of the truck, and against its employee, E. R. Taft, the driver of said truck. Jackson County was also named a plaintiff, but hereafter we use plaintiff to refer to Jackson County.

Plaintiff alleged in substance:

That on September 10, 1943, the Shell Company was moving a fleet of trucks from the Cordele Community in Jackson County over the public road toward the City of Edna, which is in a southerly direction from the Cordele Community. That the maximum load that could be safely transported across said bridge had been fixed at six ton gross weight (12,000 pounds), and that a proper notice of said load limit had been duly posted. That the truck driven by Taft was one of aforesaid fleet of trucks, and that Taft saw or should have seen said notice limiting the load that could be safely transported over the bridge to six gross tons. That Taft drove the truck upon the bridge, and the excessive weight broke the bridge down, and completely destroyed its value as a bridge, rendering it necessary for plaintiff to build a new bridge in place of the bridge destroyed, and also to build a temporary bridge to serve the needs of the public during the time the new permanent bridge was being constructed.

That immediately before the injury thereto, the bridge had a value of $8,000 and as a result of said injury its value was reduced to $250. That the reasonable and necessary cost to plaintiff of building the new permanent bridge, in addition to the material which was salvaged from the former bridge and used in constructing said new bridge, was the sum of $7,550. That the reasonable and necessary cost of the temporary bridge was $472, making as the total damages so sustained by plaintiff the sum of $8,022, for which sum plaintiff prayed to recover judgment.

Defendants, Shell Company and its driver, Taft, answered jointly, urging: A plea in abatement, a general denial, plaintiff's contributory negligence, and unavoidable accident.

At the conclusion of the evidence defendants urged a motion for an instructed verdict, which was refused, and the case was submitted to the jury in nineteen special issues. Upon the jury's verdict the court rendered judgment for plaintiff against defendants for the sum of $7,325, with legal interest from January 19, 1945.

In view of the points on which defendants predicate their appeal it is necessary to set out the substance of the following special issues, as answered:

5. When the driver approached the bridge from its northerly side there was posted at or near its northerly end a sign limiting the load to be carried over the bridge to a maximum of six tons, which sign was intelligible to users of the bridge.

7. The driver immediately prior to going on the bridge, by the use of ordinary care, should have known that the sign limited the use of the bridge to a maximum load of six tons.

10. That the bridge immediately prior to breaking on September 10, 1943, did not have a market value.

12. The bridge had a market value immediately after it broke.

13. Such market value was $375.

14. The bridge had an actual value immediately before it was broken.

15. Such actual value was the sum of $7,550.

16 — A. That said bridge had no actual value immediately after it was broken.

17. It was reasonably necessary to construct a temporary bridge near the site of the old bridge.

18. The reasonable cost of such temporary bridge was $150.

The jury also found that the driver knew, when he drove the truck on the bridge, that it was not safe to do so.

The amount recovered by plaintiff was arrived at by adding the above found sums of $7,550 and $150, making $7,770, and *Page 271 deducting therefrom the above found sum of $375. Such result is, as above indicated, $7,325.

The defendants predicate their appeal upon 36 points. But points 1-7, 7-11, 12-16, 21 and 22, 23-24, 25-30, 31-36 are presented as groups of points.

Points 1-7 complained of the refusal of the motion for instructed verdict; and also complained that there was no competent evidence to support the jury's verdict on special issue No. 15, and that such evidence was insufficient; also that no proper lawful measure was made out by the competent evidence, — appellees' damages being statutory under Art. 6716. Also, the Court erred in refusing to give requested definition of "actual damages"; also the competent evidence was insufficient to sustain the answers to special issues 12-15; also that the judgment is excessive.

Points 8-11 complained of the admission of evidence by certain witnesses. Points 12-16 complained of the admission of evidence, and of the submission of special issues 17 and 18.

Points 17-20 complained of admission of testimony relative to the temporary bridge; and of judgment based on said evidence.

Points 21 and 22 complain of the refusal of specially requested instructions.

Points 23 and 24 complain of submission of special issues 1-4, upon the ground that plaintiffs' rights are statutory, under Art. 6716, and that the findings are not sustained by the evidence.

Points 25-30 complain of special issues 2, 3, and 4.

Points 30-36 complain of special issues 5-9; and of the failure to submit certain specially requested instructions.

At common law every member of the public has the right to use, in a reasonable manner and with due care, public roads, inclusive of public bridges. And motor trucks are now a common means of transportation and, except where size and character of such vehicles has not been restricted by the legislature, their use upon public roads is fully authorized. Sumner County v. Interurban Trans. Co., 141 Tenn. 493, 213 S.W. 412. Public roads belong to the State and are subject to legislative control, which control may be delegated to local authorities. West v. City of Waco, 116 Tex. 472, 294 S.W. 832.

The Legislature has authorized the county commissioners of any precinct, by Revised Civil Statute Art. 6716, under rules therein specified, to forbid or restrict the use of highways, or portions of them, inclusive of bridges, when, among other things, a bridge may be found to have become unsafe. Under said rules, several years ago, the load limit which was permitted to be transported across the bridge in question was limited to six tons — 12,000 pounds. Notice of such maximum load limit was posted near each end of the bridge, on the right side thereof to a driver approaching the bridge. The rules require that such notices be posted so as to enable drivers to make detours to avoid the closed or restricted portion of the highway affected. But the only remedy given the public by said rules is that anyone feeling aggrieved, may complain to the county judge in writing, and seek a revocation or modification of the order. The county judge's action on such complaint is final. Such provision, as we construe it, applies to anyone who might feel aggrieved that the notice of the load limit for the bridge was not posted at such a distance from the bridge as to enable a driver to detour, and take some other road. There is no evidence that any complaint was ever made of the location of the notices of the load limitation for the bridge.

Section 3 of said Art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.2d 268, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-oil-co-v-jackson-county-texapp-1945.