United States Express Co. v. Taylor

156 S.W. 617, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 617 (United States Express Co. v. Taylor) 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
United States Express Co. v. Taylor, 156 S.W. 617, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1110 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinions

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries instituted in the district court of Potter county by appellee Taylor against the appellant, the United States Express Company, in the trial of which verdict and judgment were rendered upon appellee's third amended original petition, in which it was alleged in substance: That one of the drivers of appellant's teams, hitched to one of its express wagons, while on one of the main streets of Amarillo, negligently "popped" a large whip in an unusual, loud, and reckless manner, "stamped" his feet on the boards of said express wagon (and other allegations not necessary to mention), and which caused appellee's horse, hitched to a buggy, in which he was sitting at the time, to become suddenly frightened, throwing him from the buggy, injuring him physically in numerous particulars; occasioning suffering and pain, causing the destruction of his buggy, and the value of his horse as a buggy horse; further demanding reimbursement for amounts paid for medicines, physician's services, etc. After denial and exceptions, appellant specially pleaded an ordinance of the city of Amarillo, which, in substance, required that persons traveling in any kind of vehicle meeting each other in any street of the city that "each person so meeting shall turn off and go to the right side of the street," "so as to enable such vehicles to pass each other without accident," prescribing a penalty for its violation, alleging compliance of the ordinance by the driver of the express wagon, and the violation of it by appellee, in effect, that when its driver was traveling on the proper side of the street, and meeting the appellee who was on the left or west side of the street, "that the presence of appellee on the left side of said street at said time and his failure to turn to the right as required by the ordinance" precluded a recovery; appellant further alleging "that if appellee had had hold of the line or lines, or had had a secure hold" of the same, that he could have prevented the horse from running, which also prevented recovery. Just prior to the time the horse became frightened appellee had driven, according to his statement based upon recollection, from the opposite side of Polk street, and had turned in parallel to the curb of the sidewalk, the horse and buggy fronting north and at rest, and appellee, while sitting in the buggy, had assumed such a position facing the sidewalk that he was talking to a party standing upon the curb to the left of appellee when the horse started; appellant's driver of the express wagon, describing appellee's position at this time, as "leaning on his left elbow, resting on the side of the buggy seat," talking to the man on the sidewalk, with the lines "down on the dashboard," which latter statement in regard to the position of the harness reins was denied by appellee by the assertion that *Page 619 the lines were in his hands at that moment, when the horse started. The express driver, driving a team of large draft horses hitched to an express company's vehicle, was coming in the opposite direction, and going south on Polk street, to some place of business for express packages for the business of the company, and when almost facing appellee's horse in the position mentioned with appellee in the buggy, as stated, struck the horses, or one of them (just which we are unable to definitely infer), causing his whip to "pop" and "crack" within a few feet of and sufficiently close to appellee's horse as to suddenly frighten him, causing him to "rear up" and run, producing the injury and damage for which he recovered. Appellant's driver saw the appellee, his horse and buggy, and the position of all at the time he was "popping" the whip, which was from 5 1/2 to 6 feet in length, which with the usual reach and extension of a man's arm in popping a whip of the length of this one, and the position toward appellee's horse at the time, and the knowledge of the express driver, and his proximity to the horse and buggy, constituted his acts negligence. Appellant's driver testified on direct examination that he was 20 or 25 feet from the buggy horse when he popped the whip, and on cross-examination said: "I was close enough to Mr. Taylor when his horse started to turn that I had to stop my team at once in order to keep his horse and buggy from hitting my team." The frightened horse swerved and "pulled down to the south," in the language of the witness Whitcomb, the same direction the express wagon was traveling. Appellant's agent and driver further testified, "It is a fact that just as Mr. Taylor's horse went to wheel, that I had popped thewhip," and had previously said that the team was slow, and he "had to hit pretty good licks," and when he hit his horse on this particular occasion he thought "the whip cracked." Whitcomb, a drug clerk, standing near on the sidewalk at the time, and a disinterested witness, said, "The express wagon was close to Mr. Taylor's horse at the time of the accident and when he was popping the whip" that he did not remember how loud, or that he really cracked the whip, but that "the whip was making some noise," and he remembered that "it hit the horses," and the wagon and "horses were coming right toward Taylor at the time Taylor's horse turned," and another witness, Betty, testified that the express driver at the preceding corner, Fifth and Polk streets, before reaching Taylor's horse in the same block, was "slashing and popping his whip over the horses." Appellee said he did not have time enough to see what occurred in detail, but when he saw his horse just in the act of turning very short, and "saw what it was that caused the horse's fright. I saw a large express wagon with a very high top and was drawn by two horses. They were driven by a man who was slashing his horses with a whip, once or twice I saw him strike the horse I know, maybe twice, and they were plunging. They looked like they were coming right into my horse, and they were very close."

First. Appellant insists that on account of the city ordinance, appellee having violated the same, for which he would not have been injured, the trial court should have peremptorily instructed the jury to find in its favor, and the recitation by us of the substance of the ordinance is sufficient in discussing it. Appellant's brief contains numerous cases where persons, temporarily for a reasonable time, for business, or rest, stop upon the highway, or withdraw from it (the latter case was of a team hitched off the highway, which had broken loose and ran into the highway and was injured by a defective bridge), have not lost the rights of a traveler; and because the ordinance in this case uses the language, "in cases of persons traveling," in any vehicle, "meeting each other in any highway," that perforce of the decisions above, the appellee in this case, although at rest, talking to another on the sidewalk, had not lost his status as a traveler, and extends the logic, we presume, that he was "traveling" within the spirit of the ordinance. And again, on account of the ordinance using the additional language, "each person so meeting shall turn off and go to the right side of the street," and because the Court of Criminal Appeals held in the case of Pitts v. State, 29 Tex.App. 374[29 Tex.Crim. 374], 16 S.W. 189, that, "whenever parties were brought into such proximity as would enable defendant to act in the premises, * * * this would constitute a meeting, such as the law contemplates" (construing the manslaughter statute), ergo, this was a "meeting" within the scope of the ordinance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 617, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-express-co-v-taylor-texapp-1912.