Swiff v. Michaelis

110 S.W.2d 933, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1937
DocketNo. 10406.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 933 (Swiff v. Michaelis) 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
Swiff v. Michaelis, 110 S.W.2d 933, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1290 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This is an action by appellee to recover damages to his automobile and person resulting from a collision with a truck belonging to appellant, which occurred on the Galvestón-Houston Highway the night of November 5, 1934, not far from League City.

The negligence charged by appellee, among other things, was that the driver of appellant’s truck allowed it to remain standing upon the paved and traveled portion of the highway, at night and when it was raining, when it was possible to have parked it on the shoulder of the road; also in leaving the truck without leaving a clear and unobstructed width of not less than IS feet upon the mainly traveled portion of the highway opposite such standing truck, free for the passage of other vehicles; also in failing to have any lamp or light upon the truck lighted while it was thus parked upon the traveled portion of the highway; in sending the truck upon the highway without a clearance lamp on its left side, at its rear, displaying a red or yellow light visible under normal atmospheric conditions for a distance of 500 feet at the left rear of the vehicle, and without having in lieu of such clearance lamp an adequate reflector conforming in color and marginal location to a clearance lamp and visible at least 200 feet when opposed by the light of a motor vehicle displaying lawful undimmed lights at night on an unlighted highway, in violation of section 9, art. 827a, Vernon’s Ann.P.C.; all of which were severally alleged to be the proximate cause of the collision.

Appellant answered by general denial, and by pleading contributory negligence on the part of appellee in many particulars; in traveling over the highway at night at a high and reckless speed, when it was extremely dark, and when an unusually blinding rain was falling which blotted out all vision, and which charged plaintiff with knowledge that cars would probably be caused to stall on the highway. 'Appellant further answered that the truck was in proper shape when it left Galveston, but its motor was drowned out by the terrific rain, and when stalled was on its proper side of the highway, and could not be moved, further during the storm, despite continued efforts to do so. That while so stalled, appellant’s loaded truck, weighing 14,000 pounds, was run into from the rear with terrific force, bumping it forward some 70 feet, smashing the windshield, scattering tools over the highway, breaking its bedrail at the back, and breaking and disconnecting the truck’s rear lights and their wires; all being proximately caused by the negligence of appellee. Appellant also alleged under the facts and circumstances appellee knowingly, willfully, and recklessly assumed the risk of a collision with any car that might be stranded on the highway due to the heavy rain. Appellant also sought damages for injuries to his truck.

The evidence in this case in uncommonly conflicting. It appears, however, without conflict that on the night in question it rained very hard at times, and slacked up at times. One of appellee’s witnesses, who was working for a garage at League City that night, testified that-during the night he saw 15 automobiles whose engines had been drowned out. Appellee’s version of the collision and the surrounding circumstances is fairly presented by the two following excerpts from his testimony:

“For about an hour before I left (Galveston) it was raining tremendously hard, and I decided not to start until the next morning. Then it practically stopped, and after it at least slacked -up I started on the trip, *934 and I got, I don't know how many miles, a few miles this side of League City, when it started raining extremely hard. In .fact, I have never seen it rain harder. However, I pulled into a filling station and waited for it to stop or slack up and it slacked up considerable, and I started out again, and after I had gone a few miles it started raining again hard, but not too hard but what I could see another cad on the highway. There were several of them that were going very slow, as slow as ten miles an hour. I wasn’t going over twenty-five or thirty at most. It wasn’t raining too hard for me to see the other cars, including some trucks that had tail lights and side lights.
“I had no difficulty in passing them. There was a car coming towards me with bright lights, and I didn’t see this truck that I hit until I juét looked up all at once and it looked like I was right into a building, and had there been lights I am sure I would have seen it. I am not a fast driver.”

Again:

“Q. Was that extremely heavy rain coming down when you came into the collision with the truck? A. Not the heaviest, no.
“Q. That rainfall that was falling then, had you seen rain as heavy as that? A. Yes.
“Q. Was it unusually heavy then? A. It was heavier than usual, but it wasn’t heavy enough to obstruct my view in any way driving. My windshield worked perfectly and my lights were perfect and I was driving at a reasonably slow rate of speed. In fact, if I had been driving very fast, the platform of this truck was so high-it just scraped the top of my radiator, even as fast as 40 or 45 miles, I would have gone right under that truck, and as it was the truck— there wasn’t any more than 4 feet, in my opinion, that separated the two cars, and the glass from my two lights was in front of my car, and even some of it was under the back end of the truck.”

The evidence of appellant’s witnesses was to the effect that the truck’s engine had been drowned out, and that it was raining too hard to dry the coils at the time of, and before, the collision; that the two negroes in charge of the truck had attempted to push it off the paved portion of the highway, but, being loaded with 14 bales of cotton, and being of the trailer type, having six wheels, and weighing as it was then loaded about 14,000 pounds, they found it was impossible; and that besides, the shoulder of the highway was not broad enoug'h at that point to have moved the truck onto it. Appellant’s evidence further was that the truck had been inspected before it left Galveston, and its engine and lights were in perfect condition; that it had been again inspected at Dickinson, where it refilled with gasoline. The taillights were found to be burning perfectly. The men in charge of the truck were sitting in the cab when the collision occurred. Their testimony was that the violence of the impact knocked the truck’s windshield out, the tool box loose, and scattered tools and nails that were in it along the highway for some 70 feet, the distance the truck was bumped forward; and that the wires connecting the taillights were broken, and the taillights were extinguished. That the moment preceding the collision, all the lights of the truck were burning. Appellant’s evidence further was that when appellee asked the negroes why their taillights were not burning they replied they had been until ap-pellee struck the truck and broke the rear wires; and that one of them demonstrated by connecting the broken wires, making the taillights come on. This last testimony ap-pellee denied point blank at first, but finally testified that he could not be absolutely sure this demonstration did not occur, but positively did not believe that it did. The undisputed evidence showed that appellee had been knocked unconscious or stunned, but regained consciousness about the time the negroes got to him. They helped him out of his car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.W.2d 933, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swiff-v-michaelis-texapp-1937.