William Cameron Co. v. Downing

147 S.W.2d 963
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1941
DocketNo. 3976.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 963 (William Cameron Co. v. Downing) 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
William Cameron Co. v. Downing, 147 S.W.2d 963 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

PRICE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from the District Court of Crane County. Plaintiff, L. C. Downing, sought damages for personal injuries charged to have been inflicted upon his person through the negligence of the’.defendant, William Cameron Company, Inc.

The parties will be here designated as they were in the trial court.

Trial was before the court and a jury. On the verdict returned by the jury, the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $17,500, and from this judgment defendant has perfected this appeal.

The case, as alleged by plaintiff, involved a collision between an automobile in which he was riding and a truck driven by an employee of defendant. The collision took place on the public highway not far from the town of Wolfforth. The truck and automobile just prior to the collision were proceeding along the highway in opposite directions. Plaintiff charged a negligent rate of speed on the part of the truck, failure to keep a proper lookout on the part of the driver thereof, and the operation thereof on the left-hand side of the road; discovered peril was likewise alleged and relied upon.

Defendant replied by general denial and detailed plea of contributory negligence.

The jury found substantially as follows: Defendant’s truck at and just prior to the collision was operated at a negligent rate of speed, which was the proximate cause of the collision; that at and immediately prior to the time of the collision the truck was operated on defendant’s left-hand side of the highway; that this was negligence and a proximate cause of the collision; that at the time of such operation of the truck on such portion of the highway same was not unobstructed, for a distance of fifty yards ahead,of the truck; defendant’s employee negligently failed to keep a proper lookout ; that this was a proximate cause of the collision. Issues submitting discovered peril were likewise found in favor of the plaintiff. The issue .of unavoidable accident was found in favor of plaintiff. It was further found that Bynum, the driver of the car in which plaintiff was riding, failed to use ordinary care to keep a proper lookout, but that same was not a proximate cause of the accident. Other issues submitting contributory negligence were found in favor of. plaintiff. Further, that at the time of the collision plaintiff and Bynum, the driver of the car, were going to Lubbock in the course of a joint enterprise.

Defendant assigns error as to the conveyance to the jury of information that it was protected by indemnity insurance. The factual basis of this contention as reflected by the record is as to three separate incidents :

First, in the course of a discussion between the court and counsel as to whether plaintiff’s suit should be abated, on account of lack of mental capacity of plaintiff, counsel for plaintiff stated: “The insurance company knew and has known ever since the law suit was filed that we alleged a mental impairment of his mental faculties.” Whereupon counsel for defendant said: “We object to the statement that the insurance company knew, and we move to declare a mistrial.” Counsel for the plaintiff then said: “I mean the Cameron Lumber Company.” The court then asked Mr. Watts, the attorney for the plaintiff, if there was any insurance involved in the case. He replied as follows: “There is no insurance company in this case. I meant to say the Cameron Lumber Company. The court knows we try a great many of these compensation cases where the insurance companies are defendants, and for that reason I made the mistake of referring to the defendant as the insurance company.” The court overruled the motion of defendant to declare a mistrial.

Second, while the plaintiff’s wife was on the stand, counsel for plaintiff asked her the following question: “Just state what the adjuster did in connection with taking or attempting to take a statement in connection with that part of it.” Mrs. Downing replied: “He tried to get him to say Mr. Bynum was looking back talking to his son Billy, and he said ‘wasn’t he,’ and my husband said T don’t know, I don’t know.’ ” Defendant made motion to declare a mistrial. The judge said: “The court doesn’t know who ‘he’ is. Overruled.” Mr. Watts, counsel for the plaintiff, then said: “I just called him an adjuster, a statement taker and I presumed that he was working for Cameron because he was apparently out there taking statements for Cameron and I always call those statement takers ‘adjusters’; as I heretofore said *966 Cameron Lumber Company ⅛ the only defendant in this suit, and I don’t intend for it to be otherwise.” Defendant objected to the statement, and the court overruled same. Defendant renewed his motion, which the court overruled.

Third, in his opening- argument, counsel for the plaintiff used this language: “But this Mr. Tripp, this adjuster, who tells you - ” Defendant’s counsel interrupted the argument and took exception thereto and moved the court to declare a mistrial. Whereupon counsel for the plaintiff, in the presence of the jury, said: “Well, your Honor, he is working for the Cameron Lumber Company, swore he was, and any statement taker is always, in my opinion, an adjuster, any investigator.”

The solution of the question tendered depends on whether the three incidents reasonably conveyed to the minds of the jury that the defendant was protected by indemnity insurance. The record reflects that defendant was not an insurance company. It was referred to as such. This reference by counsel for the plaintiff, we believe, was through pure inadvertence. However, viewed from the standpoint of defendant, it was a grave infringement of its rights, and the prompt exception as to same was natural and within its legal rights. Perhaps the better practice would have been to have requested the withdrawal of the jury and then made the motion for a mistrial. To the jury, if there was not some matter of underlying importance in the matter, it must have seemed “much ado about nothing.” The explanation of Mr. Watts was literally true. There was no question of insurance properly involved in the legitimate issues arising in the trial. He promptly said by “insurance company” he had meant the defendant, . Cameron Lumber Company. This incident, as reflected by the bill of exceptions, standing alone, would not, in our opinion, constitute reversible error. It is not every casual or inadvertent reference to an insurance company in the course of a trial that would necessitate a mistrial. The allusion by question and in argument to defendant’s witness, Tripp, as an adjuster is upon a somewhat different basis. If it may be said that this by reasonable import tended to suggest to the jury that defendant was or might be protected by insurance, it was deliberately done. When the term was first used in the question, it provoked exception and protest from the defendant. The reasonable expecta-ción, we think, that its use in argument would have the same result. The conviction is forced that these two references were artful rather than artless. Nearly every business has terms peculiar to such business. An adjuster in the insurance business is an agent of the company charged with the investigation and adjustment of claims against the company. This, we think, is a general acceptation of the term among the public at large. The intervention of an adjuster suggests an insurance company. Defendant’s name suggests that it was not such.

In the case of Jackson v. Edmondson, 129 S.W.2d 369, 372,

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147 S.W.2d 963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-cameron-co-v-downing-texapp-1941.