Small v. San Antonio Traction Co.

148 S.W. 833, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 833 (Small v. San Antonio Traction Co.) 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
Small v. San Antonio Traction Co., 148 S.W. 833, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1130 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

Appellants Wm. Small and Margaret Small sued appellee, San Antonio Traction Company, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by said Margaret Small, through the negligence of said company and its employes, while alighting from a street car of said company. Plaintiffs alleged that the car was brought to a stop for the purpose of permitting said Margaret Small to alight, that it did not stop long enough to permit her to alight, but when she was in the act of alighting defendant’s servants in charge of the car negligently caused or permitted it to suddenly move, lurch, and jerk, and by reason of this negligence said Margaret Small was thrown violently to the ground. The case was tried before a jury, which returned a verdict for the defendant, and judgment was entered accordingly, from which plaintiffs have appealed.

[1] By their first assignment of error appellants complain because the court refused to permit the witness Dr. H. D. Barnitz to testify that a pregnant woman is by nature and instinct much more cautious in undertaking anything that involves the risk of any hurt to her person than is a woman who is not pregnant. Objection was made that the evidence was irrelevant and incompetent, that the witness was not qualified to give an opinion, that it was not a proper subject for expert testimony, and was immaterial. Mrs. Small had testified, “At the time I had the fall I was pregnant;” and again: “I was advanced about two months in pregnancy. I expected that I was pregnant when I was on the car.” She and her daughter testified that the car had stopped, and as she was alighting the car gave a lurch or forward motion of some kind, and she fell to the ground. Six other witnesses testified that the ear was still in motion when Mrs. Small started to get off; their testimony varying only in regard to the distance the car moved after she fell. The witness Perez testified, on direct examination: “The car did not go over a foot after she stepped off, because she fell on her back.” And on cross-examination he said: “The car did not move over three feet after Mrs. Small stepped off.” Upon being recalled, he testified: “The car went but three feet after the lady fell on her back.” He admitted that in a statement signed by him he gave the distance as five or six feet.. The witness Gotherd was conductor of the car from which Mrs. Small stepped. He testified the car moved eight or ten feet after she jumped off, but admitted that in a statement made shortly after the occurrence he gave the distance as less than a foot. Other witnesses stated the distance the car moved was from six feet to as much as a car’s length.

Appellants contend there is a very narrow margin between the evidence of Perez and Gotherd and that of Mrs. Small and her daughter, who testified the car had actually stopped before she fell, and that therefore the slightest additional evidence was calculated to turn the scale; that consequently the evidence relating to the instinctive caution of pregnant women should have been admitted as tending to show that Mrs. Small would not have undertaken to alight while the car was in motion — in other words, to show that it was unlikely or inprobable that Mrs. Small would undertake to alight while the car was in motion. Appellants’ counsel admit that they have found no decision directly in point upon this proposition, but contend ably and ingeniously that instinctive caution is very similar to habitual caution; that habitual caution has been held admissible, and therefore evidence tending to show instinctive caution should be admitted.

Evidence that either the plaintiff or the defendant was ordinarily of either careful or careless habits is generally inadmissible. Elliot on Evidence, vol. 1, § 186. The weight of authority is against the admission of such evidence on the question of contributory negligence. Cyc. vol. 29, p. 619. Exceptions to the rule have sometimes been made when no witness was present, and the exact manner in which the accident happened is not shown. Note 67, Cyc. vol. 29, p. 619.

[2] When the question is as to how a person conducted himself at a particular time, it is not competent to show that prior thereto he was generally careless or the reverse. Gillett on Indirect & Collateral Evidence, § 68. The reasons for the exclusion of such evidence are that it is only of slight value to establish any fact in issue, and it is calculated to lead the jury into collateral inquiry which will confuse and obscure real issues.

Our Supreme Court, in the case of M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Johnson, 92 Tex. 382, 383, 48 S. W. 569, says: “We think the rule is well settled that, when the question is whether or not a person has been negligent in doing or in failure to do a particular act, evidence is not admissible to show that he has been *835 guilty of a similar act of negligence or even habitually negligent upon a similar occasion. * * * In Tenney v. Tuttle, above cited [1 Allen (Mass.) 185], the court say: ‘When the precise act or omission of a defendant is proved, the question of whether it is actionable negligence is to be decided by the character of that act or omission, and not by the character for care and caution that the defendant may sustain.’ The principle has been frequently recognized and sometimes applied in this court. Railway v. Evansich, 61 Tex. 3; Railway v. Scott, 68 Tex. 694 [5 S. W. 501]; Railway v. Rowland, 82 Tex. 166 [18 S. W. 96]; Cunningham v. Railway, 88 Tex. 534 [31 S. W. 629], * * * The principle, as applicable to this class of cases generally, is that when the habit of care or negligence, as the case may be, has no connection with the specific facts in evidence bearing upon the question of care, evidence of such care or habit is without sufficient probative force to effect the determination of the ’ question.”

In the case of Mayton v. Sonnefield, 48 S. W. 609, the court held that it was not competent to prove the plaintiff was a careless, reckless man, that he had been careless upon some other occasion, for the purpose of establishing contributory negligence on his part.

In the case of T. & P. Ry. Co. v. Frank, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 86, 88 S. W. 383, the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third District said: “No error was committed in refusing to permit the engineer and fireman who were running the train on the occasion in question to testify that it was their habit or custom tó ring the bell and blow the whistle at the place where the accident occurred.”

We think it is clear, from the authorities referred to, that plaintiffs could not have been permitted to strengthen the testimony of Mrs. Small by evidence that she was habitually very cautious in anything that involved the risk of any hurt to her person. Yet this testimony, we think, would have a greater probative force than the testimony that pregnant women, by nature and instinct, are very much more cautious than those not pregnant, because the latter evidence would only, at most, show that Mrs. Small at this time was naturally much more cautious than at a time when not pregnant, but leaves the matter uncertain as to whether or not under normal circumstances she was naturally reckless or prudent, and to what extent her habits of caution have been strengthened by her condition. The evidence excluded does not purport to prove that pregnancy will make any woman very cautious with reference to her physical welfare, but only that it will make her much more cautious than she would have been if not pregnant.

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Related

Dodson v. Montes
276 S.W. 749 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
San Antonio Traction Co. v. Corley
154 S.W. 621 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)

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148 S.W. 833, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-san-antonio-traction-co-texapp-1912.