168 S.W. 35 | Tex. App. | 1914
The first assignment of error presents for review the ruling of the court, in admitting the testimony of the witness St. Claire Sherrod, to the effect that witness had on at least two occasions met De Course Allen driving an automobile along the public road, and that said De Course Alien on each occasion had failed and refused to give him any part of the road. Appellant's objection to this testimony is that it was calculated to prejudice the jury against the boy and against appellant, as well as against the case. The issue of the boy's recklessness, carelessness, and incompetency was raised by the pleadings. Appellant had introduced several witnesses who testified that they had been in the car with the boy, and that he was careful and a competent driver, and that they had never known him to be guilty of any carelessness in the operation of his automobile. It was further shown that the boy had owned the car for several months, during which time he had driven it about 3,000 miles. It further appears from the record that the automobile in question was a powerful machine of the "underslung" type; that the driver's seat was only six or eight inches high, and when driving it the boy's face barely reached the driving wheel. We think this testimony was admissible to rebut the contention of appellant that his boy was careful and competent. The safety of the public demands that drivers of vehicles should be familiar with and observe the law of the road and the rights of other travelers. This testimony tended to show that the boy was either ignorant or heedless of the law of the road, and we think had a bearing directly upon the issue raised by the pleadings. It was further admissible as tending to sustain appellee's contention that while seated in his car he was not able to look over the steering wheel and the front of the machine and see objects ahead of him. H. T. C. Ry. Co. v. Willie,
Plaintiff alleges that his wife was knocked down and run over by a heavy automobile, *37 "thereby inflicting upon her body painful, serious, and permanent injuries, lacerations, cuts, and bruises, which caused her then, and continuously since has caused her, intense pain throughout various portions of her body; * * * that her right foot and ankle was seriously and permanently bruised, the bones thereof fractured, and the muscles, tendons, and ligaments seriously and permanently lacerated, strained, and injured, causing a lameness inside of right foot which has continued from that time until this, and which will continue permanently; that along her left side and across the upper portion of her body the muscles, tendons, and ligaments of the same are seriously bruised, strained, cut, and lacerated, which caused her great physical pain"; and further declares that she has suffered great physical and mental pain by reason thereof, beginning at the time of the accident until the present, and that she will continue to suffer great physical and mental pain growing out of said injuries for years and to some degree as long as she lives. Over the objection of appellant, Mrs. Bland was permitted to testify that before being injured she was in comparatively good health, but that since the injury she was a nervous wreck. The objection to this testimony was that there was no pleading to sustain it. In our opinion this objection is not well taken. The rule, as announced in 13 Cyc. 189, is:
"The mind and nervous system being so intimately connected with the body and so likely to be affected by physical injuries, proof of impairment of these faculties is admissible under allegations in substance setting up grievous or permanent injuries."
This rule has been cited with approval and followed by the courts of this state. Rapid Transit Ry. Co. v. Allen,
Appellant submits the third and fourth assignments of error together and urges the propositions that, since an automobile is not per se a dangerous instrument, before appellant can be held liable for damages caused by his minor son, in operating it with his permission, the plaintiff must show by a preponderance of the evidence that such minor son was incompetent to properly and carefully operate it under ordinary conditions, and that this fact was known to the parent, and that the jury must further find that an ordinarily prudent person would not have, under the same circumstances, permitted such minor to operate the car. It is further urged under these assignments that it must appear that the son was engaged in the business of the parent and therefore occupied the position of a servant, or that the parent was guilty of negligence in permitting his son to operate it, and it is not sufficient that the father's act made it possible for the child to cause the injuries complained of, nor is it sufficient that the parent might have anticipated the injury. The objection under these assignments is to that part of the charge wherein it is said:
"In order to render a parent liable for an injury caused by the negligence of his child, it is essential that it should appear from the evidence that the parent might reasonably have anticipated the injury as a consequence of permitting the child to employ the instrument which produced the injury, and it must appear that the father's negligence made it possible for the child to cause the injury complained of."
Appellant requested a special charge, wherein the court was asked to instruct the jury that an automobile was not such a dangerous instrument as would authorize a finding that the defendant was negligent simply from the fact that he permitted his minor son to operate such automobile, and that plaintiff must further show by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant's son was incompetent to properly and carefully operate the machine under ordinary conditions, that this fact was known to defendant and that an ordinarily prudent person would not have under the same circumstances permitted said minor to operate it. We have reviewed the charge of the court and believe it presents the law applicable to the facts, as favorably to appellant as he had a right to demand. It is not contended that an automobile is a dangerous instrument per se, when operated by a careful and competent driver, and the courts have so held frequently. McIntyre v. Orner,
"But no one can deny that an automobile in the hands of a careless and incompetent driver would be a dangerous machine to turn loose on busy streets and would constitute a menace to travelers."
We do not construe the charge as instructing the jury that an automobile is a dangerous instrument per se; but we are not willing to hold that a powerful, heavy machine, such as the one in question, in the hands of an 85-pound boy, not yet in his teens, speeding along the streets of a populous and busy town, may not become a menace to the lives of persons attempting to cross the street in front of it. We do not hold that an automobile is a dangerous appliance as a matter of law. They have grown to be a part of the life of the country, and, when properly handled and driven, are useful and convenient *38 vehicles. In this connection the court charges as follows:
"In order to render a parent liable for an injury caused by the negligence of his child, it is essential that it should appear from the evidence that the parent might reasonably have anticipated the injury as the consequence of permitting the child to employ the instrument which produced the injury, and it must appear that the father's negligence made it possible for the child to cause the injury complained of."
And further:
"If therefore you find and believe from a preponderance of the testimony that the defendant, R.S. Allen, permitted his son, De Course Allen, to have and drive an automobile upon the streets of Wichita Falls, at the time of the injury, and that at such time, because of the inexperience, youth, and want of fitness and ability to run such automobile at that time and place of De Course Allen, and that at such time defendant, R.S. Allen, should have anticipated that danger and injury would or was likely to result to other persons from the running of such automobile by De Course Allen, but if you further find that De Course Allen at the time and place of the injury failed to exercise ordinary care to prevent injury to plaintiff, and that such acts upon the part of R.S. Allen, in permitting him to have and run an automobile at that time and place and the manner in which he did run the automobile at the time of the injury, was negligence, as hereinbefore defined, and that such negligence on the part of both was the proximate cause of the injury, and if you further find that plaintiff was injured as charged in her petition, then you will find for the plaintiff and assess his damages as hereinafter directed."
We think this presented the issue of negligence of both parent and his son in as favorable a light as he was entitled to have it. Contention is made that the plaintiff's petition does not allege or claim that the minor, at the time of the injury, was acting in the capacity of a servant, but is predicated entirely upon the allegation that the minor was incompetent and that the defendant was negligent in permitting him to operate the car.
The authorities are not in accord upon the question of the liability of a parent for permitting his minor child to operate an automobile when damages result to the person of another, by reason of the tort of the minor. It is held in Birch v. Abercrombie,
"The New Jersey case, Doran v. Thomsen [
In Daily v. Maxwell,
"Where a chauffeur, either with or without his master's consent, uses the machine for his own business or for his own pleasure, and negligently inflicts injury on another, the master cannot be held liable, for the reason that the negligent act, being entirely outside the scope of the servant's employment, cannot call into action the rule of respondeat superior. The fact of consent is material only in the solution of the issue of whether or not the use of the machine was, in fact, on business of the master. Cunningham v. Castle [
No question is raised in this case as to the right of the boy to use the car at his pleasure and with his father's consent. The evidence shows that by permission of his father he purchased the car from Will Brown; that it was kept at a garage; that his father paid the bills and the boy had un limited authority to call for the car at any time, day or night, and to use it not only within the city limits, but in making excursions across the country to other towns; and that his mother and father frequently accompanied him on such trips. The father testified that he arranged with the garage owner for the boy to have the car whenever he wanted it and paid all the bills and stated that whatever the boy did was right. While the boy was away at school for a few weeks, the car was cared for by the father and upon his return was delivered to him. We think the authorities quoted above announce the correct rule of liability and they are cited and adopted as announcing the law applicable to the facts of this case.
Appellant insists that there is nothing in the record to show that De Course Allen was incompetent or reckless, and that the uncontroverted evidence shows him to have been a careful and prudent driver. We think that the testimony of Sherrod and of several of the witnesses, who described the boy's conduct and management of the car at the time of the accident, and the admissions of the boy himself, to the effect that he was excited when he saw the danger the ladies were in, and that he just had a faint recollection of it, is sufficient for this purpose, and his father must be held to have known that a boy in his twelfth year, and with only a few months' experience, was inclined to be venturesome when intrusted with a vehicle of this kind on the public streets, and that danger necessarily attended his use of the car under such conditions. Thoughtlessness of youth is proverbial, and the reckless, *40
careless disposition of the average boy has always been a matter of common knowledge. The Greek word for "boy" also means "a fool," and the Hebrew word which means boy is translated "darkness," to indicate that youth is a dark and dangerous age. Very little evidence along this line was necessary to sustain the plaintiff's case. The court did not err in refusing the peremptory instructions in favor of the defendant. The courts have gone no further than to hold that an automobile is not per se a dangerous instrument in the hands of a competent driver. In McIntyre v. Orner, supra, the court qualified this nondangerous per se doctrine with the significant words, "when managed by an intelligent and prudent driver." To the same effect is the language of the court in Daily v. Maxwell,
While there are some verbal inaccuracies in the language of the charge, and while the criticisms made by appellant are in some instances tenable, the charge as a whole was a fair presentation of the case, and no such error is pointed out as would justify us in reversing the judgment.
Believing that a proper judgment has been entered, it is affirmed.