159 S.W.2d 119 | Tex. | 1942
This is a county court case in which plaintiff sued defendant for $666.60 damages for demolishing his automobile at a railroad crossing in the city limits of Lufkin, Texas, alleging such amount to be the reasonable cash market value, "then and there," of the automobile. The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals (
1 The holding that Southland Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Cotten,
The phrase referred to was used in the Cotten case in defining "proximate cause" in the charge there complained of, but the charge was held to be defective because it did not embody theidea of "a new independent cause," — not because of failure to define the phrase "moving and efficient cause." The opinion points out, citing Phoenix Refining Co. v. Tipps,
The Court of Civil Appeals erred in reversing and remanding the case for refusal of the trial court to define "moving and efficient cause." See in this connection Texas Motor Coaches v. Palmer,
The court in disposing of the remaining "points of error" urged by defendant states merely that they "need not occur upon another trial." No additional brief has been filed by defendant in error in this court. Upon consulting his brief filed in the court below we find that complaint is first made of the action of the trial court in refusing to grant his motion for continuance. The facts stated by the trial court in qualifying the bill of exception preserving the point bring the case within the holding of American National Insurance Co. v. Hammon et al,
2 The second proposition is to the effect that the trial court should have granted defendant's motion for an instructed verdict because of a total want of evidence to sustain the jury's findings of negligence for failure of defendant to slow down the motor car, failure to keep a proper lookout for approaching vehicles, and that defendant was negligent, after signaling Guy Nerren to drive plaintiff's car across the railroad tracks, for failure to stop the motor car. The third proposition which is discussed along with the second urges that Guy Nerren's negligence in his manner of driving the car upon the tracks, caused the collision. We overrule those assignments, being of the view that evidence is pointed out in the record to support the jury's findings.
3 Other propositions urge that the trial court erred in refusing to define the term "natural and continuous sequence" and "proper lookout." There was no error in failing to define these terms. Writ of error has been repeatedly refused by this Court *321
in cases in which the Courts of Civil Appeals upheld the action of the trial courts in refusing to define "natural and continuance sequence." International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, etc., of America v. Huval (Civ. App.),
The Courts of Civil Appeals are in conflict with respect to the necessity of defining "proper lookout." The San Antonio Court, under what it felt was an obligation "to yield to superior authority," reluctantly committed itself to the doctrine that it was necessary, upon request, to do so. At the same time Justice Smith, speaking for the Court, took occasion in a well timed judicial lament to point out that "the decisions have gone so far in requiring trial courts to define terms used by them in jury instructions that it is becoming increasingly difficult for a trial judge to submit even an ordinarily simple case upon special issues without committing reversible error." The case did not reach this court.
Subsequently, the late Judge Martin (then Associate Justice of the Amarillo Court) who wrote the opinion in Foster v. Beckman, supra, held to the contrary in Commercial Standard Ins. Co. v. Shudde,
4 The concluding proposition complains that the county court erred in rendering judgment against defendant for $530.00 as damages to his car in that there is no jury finding as to its reasonable cash market value immediately prior to and immediately following the collision, at the particular place it occurred. The respective values were established but the questions submitting the issue did not include the element of place. Two questions were submitted inquiring respectively what was the reasonable cash market value of the automobile "as it existed immediately prior to" and "immediately following" the collision, but the element of "place" was not included in either question. The first question was answered, $550.00; the second, $20.00. *322 Judgment was rendered accordingly for the difference, $530.00. The sole objection of defendant is that the questions did not include the element of "place." It is without merit under the record before us.
Ara v. Rutland (Com. App.),
Only witnesses for plaintiff testified as to value, Guy Nerren, J.C. Murphy and John Massingill, the owner. All resided at Lufkin where the damage occurred. Nerren testified as to his familiarity with the value of automobiles of the kind in question "in Lufkin and vicinity," and placed the value at "around $700.00," just prior to the collision. Murphy, who bought the salvage from the wreck for $20.00, testified he was an automobile mechanic, had been in that business about 12 years and had had occasion to buy and sell automobiles during that time and placed the value of the car just before it was wrecked at between $600.00 and $700.00. Massingill testified he was familiar with the market value of automobiles of that type "in Lufkin and this vicinity" and placed the value immediately before the collision at $800.00. Defendant offered no testimony as to value, and no objection upon any ground was made to any testimony offered by plaintiff on the damage feature of the case.
The testimony is subject to the construction that the damage testified about was at Lufkin, no other point being mentioned. Since there was a total lack of evidence of value at any other point it was not reversible error to fail to include in the questions as to damage the element of "place." The jury could not have been misled.
In view of the authorities invoked by defendant to sustain his contention we take occasion to say that Ara v. Rutland deals with the question of a total lack of evidence of the value of shoes at the place in question and is not in point for the reason (1) that there is not in the present case a total lack of evidence of "place" and (2) because second-hand automobiles have practically a uniform value throughout the State. We point out also that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals in the Anderson case (the holding of which as to what was the correct rule for measuring damages to the automobile in question was predicated on Ara v. Rutland) was permitted *323 by this court to stand (the application for the writ was dismissed rather than refused) solely because the case was correctly reversed and remanded upon another ground.
The Court of Civil Appeals erred in failing to affirm the action of the trial court in the particulars pointed out. The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed and that of the trial court is affirmed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court January 21, 1942.
Rehearing overruled February 18, 1942.