Starnes v. Sumners

239 S.W.2d 880, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2063
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 1951
Docket6154
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 239 S.W.2d 880 (Starnes v. Sumners) 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
Starnes v. Sumners, 239 S.W.2d 880, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2063 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

PITTS, ’Chief Justice.

This is a venue action growing out of a suit originally filed by appellee, J.. J.' Sum-ners, against appellants, W. C. Starnes and his minor son, Gadys Wayne Starnes, for alleged damages by reason of an automo *882 bile collision occurring on or about August 13, 1950, in Lubbock County Texas. Each appellant filed his plea of privilege to be sued in Wilbarger County, Texas, where they both resided. Appellee seasonably filed and presented his controverting pleas seeking to maintain venue in Lubbock County under the provisions of exception 9 of Article 1995, Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes, by alleging a trespass was committed by appellants against him in Lubbock 'County within the meaning of the said statute.

It appearing that appellant, Gadys Waype Starnes, was a minor only 19 years of age,' the trial court appointed Honorable Syrian E. Marbut, a practicing attorney at law, to represent the said appellant and proceeded to hear the venue issues without a jury. After the hearing both pleas of privilege were overruled by order of the trial court from which order both appellants perfected their appeal jointly to this court.

The controlling issues to be here determined are (1) whether or not Gadys Wayne Starnes was acting within the scope of his employment as an agent, servant, employee or representative of his father, W. C. Starnes, at the time and place of the collision in question; and (2) whether or not' Gadys Wayne Starnes was guilty of any affirmative act of negligence that constituted a trespass in Lubbock County which resulted in appellee’s alleged damages.

It is conceded, that appellee as plaintiff had the duty of pleading and proving the necessary facts to establish venue but he had the duty to establish by competent proof the necessary facts only to the satisfaction of the trial court, the trier of the facts. Appellee pleaded Gadys Wayne Starnes, at the time of the collision and at all times material thereto, was acting within the course and scope of his employment as agent, servant, employee and representative of his father, W. C. Starnes, and it is presumed that the trial court so found in the absence of any request for findings and none to the contrary found in the record. ..

We have before us the testimony of both appellants, appellee and his wife, who was riding in the automobile with him at the time of the .collision. There is little variance in any of the testimony and therefore ■little controversy, if any, about any of the facts. The record reveals that at the time of the collision in question appellant, Gadys Wayne Starnes, was unmarried and the minor son of appellant, W. C. Starnes; that Gadys Wayne usually resided with his father and had been working for him most of the time since June 1947, much of which work consisted of driving a truck; that from May 1950 until the date of the collision in question Gadys and one James Jobe were employed by appellant, W. C. Starnes, who was engaged in the “dump truck business”; that the two boys were driving two trucks for Gadys’ father in Wilbarger County helping to build a farm-to-market road; that W. C. Starnes had gotten the jobs for them, furnished both trucks and bore all of the operating expenses and the truck drivers were paid for their services out of the proceeds earned and that Gadys Wayne operated a 1942 GMC dump truck, the same one he was operating at the time of the collision in question. W. C. Starnes testified, in effect, that his son Gadys had been working for him most of the time since he had been large enough to work; that Gadys was a dependable boy and he often relied upon Gadys’ judgment, permitted Gadys to check on his bank account and trusted him to look after business matters; that in July prior to the collision in question he orally agreed to pay Gadys 25% of the gross earnings of the-truck driven by him and to pay him a bonus on the side, if they got along all right, for looking after the other truck, keeping it in operation and seeing that the driver thereof was properly paid; that W. C. Starnes owned both trucks and obligated himself to pay for all operating expenses and that such arrangements existed at the time of the collision in question. The record further reveals that the farm-to-market road in Wilbarger County •had been completed early in August of 1950 and W. C. Starnes wanted his truck drivers to-find other wo.rk even if they, had *883 to go elsewhere to find it; that W. C. Starnes first mentioned a prospective job for the boys at Lamesa, Texas, and arranged with Gadys Wayne to drive his father’s 1942 GMC dump truck, which-.he had been previously driving, from Vernon to Lamesa, Texas, to learn more about the prospective job there for the two trucks similar to the job the boys had been engaged with in Wilbarger County and W. C. Starnes paid all of the operating expenses of that trip; that in the course of the trip made by Gadys Wayne to Lam-esa on the said mission the collision in question occurred which resulted in appel-lee’s alleged damages.

Appellant, W. C. Starnes, charges that the trial court erred in overruling his plea of- privilege and contends that appellant, Gadys Wayne Starnes, who was driving the said truck involved in the collision, was an independent contractor and not an employee of his father, W. C. Starnes. While it appears from the record that W. C. Starnes did permit Gadys Wayne, his trustworthy son, to exercise some discretion in transacting the business, yet W. C. Starnes did not relinquish his own right to control the operation of the business. Under the facts revealed by the record it is our opinion that the trial court was justified in finding and concluding that Gadys Wayne Starnes was engaged within the course of his employment as the agent and employee of his father, W. C. Starnes, at the time and place of the collision in question and that Gadys Wayne Starnes was not an independent, contractor at the said time and place. Maryland Casualty Co. v. Kent, Tex.Com.App., 3 S.W.2d 414; Spears Dairy, Inc. v. Bohrer, Tex.Civ.App., 54 S.W.2d 872; King v. Brenham Automobile Co., Tex.Civ.App., 145 S.W. 278; Tex.Jur., 10 Year Supp.,. Vol. 2, Page 234, Sec. 270; 19 A.L.R. 248.

As a basis for recovery appellee pleaded specific acts of negligence, both' active and passive in nature. As a basis for recovery as well as for venue purposes, however, appellee relies on the following alleged acts of affirmative or active negligence committed by Gadys Wayne Starnes as agent and employee of his father, W. C. Starnes:

“(1) In driving such truck into the rear of the automobile in which plaintiff and his ’wife were riding;
“(2) In driving such motor truck, immediately prior to the collision, at a closer distance to such passenger car than was reasonable and prudent under the conditions and circumstances then and there existing;
“(3) In driving and operating said motor truck at a rate of speed greater than an ordinarily prudent person would- have driven and operated the same under the same or similar circumstances;
“(4) In driving such motor truck into and against the automobile in which plain tiff and his wife were riding;

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W.2d 880, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starnes-v-sumners-texapp-1951.