Court Opinion

ID: 9834005
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 23:12:55.80647+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:44:10.549706
License: Public Domain

DUNKLIN, J.
Ered Harvey, a private corporation, which is engaged in the business of maintaining and conducting a restaurant for the service of food to the public in the town of Gainesville, has appealed from a judgment rendered against it in favor of E. P. Comegys, plaintiff, for damages resulting from personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted by two of the defendant’s servants while plaintiff was a guest in. its restaurant.
Briefly stated, the facts established upon the trial, without controversy, were as follows: A passenger train upon which plaintiff was riding stopped as Gainesville, and plaintiff, together with other passengers, went into defendant’s restaurant for lunch. Plaintiff took a seat at the lunch counter, and gave to the waitress an order, which included oyster soup, having first looked over the bill of fare and ascertained the price list therefor, as well the prices of the other articles ordered. Through mistake, the waitress, who had recently been employed by defendant, and who lacked the experience of better trained employees in her position, served the plaintiff with oyster stew instead of oyster soup. Plaintiff ate the stew, believing it to be' oyster soup. After he had finished his lunch, the waitress gave him a ticket, showing the amount he owed for the lunch ticket to be CO cents instead of 35 cents, which latter was the aggregate charge of all the articles he had ordered as shown by the price list. But according to the same price list, with the oyster stew substituted for oyster soup, the bill he owed was 60 cents instead of 35 cents. After plaintiff had inspected the ticket, he called the attention of the waitress to the mistake in filling his order, and asked for another ticket, showing that he only owed 35 cents instead of 60 cents. The waitress admitted that it was her mistake, took up the ticket that she had already given the plaintiff and gave him another, showing that he owed only 35 cents. Thereupon O. D. Dooms, defendant’s manager in charge of the restaurant, appeared on the scene and instructed the waitress that she had no authority to correct such a mistake, and directed her to take up the last ticket given plaintiff and substitute therefor another, showing that he owed 60 cents for his lunch instead of 35 cents. Plaintiff, then went .to the desk' where Dooms was collecting from the patrons for meals, and offered him 35 cents in full settlement of the bill, and refused to pay the 60 cents charged. After a rather heated verbal conversation between the two men over the matter in dispute, Dooms agreed to accept the 35 cents offered by plaintiff in full settlement of the bill, which plaintiff then paid. After thus settling the bill, plaintiff started out of the door, and a fight ensued between him and Dooms, who was standing at the door from which the passengers emerged from the restaurant to the railroad platform, where the difficulty ended. Plaintiff was a larger and stouter man than Dooms, and during the fight some bystander attempted to assist Dooms, and, according to the testimony offered by plaintiff, this bystander struck plaintiff twice on the back of his head, inflicting painful injuries. A friend of plaintiff caught hold of this bystander, and thus prevented him from taking any further part in the difficulty. Iji his petition, plaintiff alleged, in-effect, that both Dooms and the other person who struck him were agents and servants of the defendant, acting within the appárent scope of their authority as'such servants, and he sought .damages for the assault he alleged was made upon him by them in the presence of a great crowd of people, which resulted in the humiliation of his feelings, as well as great bodily injuries and suffering.
[1] Complaint is made of an instruction by the court to the effect that if the difficulty occurred as a result of a mutual agreement between the plaintiff and Dooms to fight, the defendant would not be liable; the contention being that there was no evidence of any such agreement. A sufficient answer to this assignment is the fact that it was favorable to the defendant, and hence the giving of the instruction, if error at all, could not have harmed the appellant. Abilene Light & Water Co. v. Robinson, 146 S. W. 1052.
[2] Error has been assigned to the refusal of appellant’s requested instruction, to the effect that, if plaintiff, by insulting words or conduct, or by bantering O. D. Dooms to fight, provoked or brought about the difficulty, although the jury did not believe plaintiff did not strike the first blow, then the verdict should be for the defendant. There was evidence introduced tending to show that Dooms began the fight, while the testimony of other witnesses was to the effect) that plaintiff started it. The requested instruction was properly refused, since it seems to be well settled that in such a case a verbal provocation does not justify an assault, although it may be considered by the jury in mitigating the damages sought to be recovered, and the court so charged the jury. G., H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. La Prelle, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 496, 65 S. W. 488; Parham v. Langford, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 31, 93 S. W. 525; 5 Corpus Juris, 644, and decisions there cited.
[3] The instruction requested by appellant, to the effect that the fact that O. D. Dooms was an employee of the defendant, did not deprive him of the right that a human being ordinarily has, and that he had the same right as any other person to resent abuses *603and defend himself against the unlawful attach, and use such force necessary for that purpose, was (properly refused, because it was argumentativo and calculated to mislead the jury.
[4] The following is one of the paragraphs in the court’s charge:
“If any other person aided and assisted said Dooms in the assault, if there was an assault at the instigation or consent of said Dooms, the defendant would be liable for his act; also, if you find the defendant liable on account of the act of Dooms, but if said other person, of his own volition and without the instigation or consent of Dooms, took part in the fight between the plaintiff and Dooms, iff there was a fight, then and in that event Ered Harvey would in no wise be responsible for the acts of such •other person.”
[5] The giving of that charge, we think, was error, for which the judgment must be reversed, because we are of the opinion that the evidence failed to show that the bystander who took part in the difficulty and assisted Dooms by striking plaintiff did so with the consent and at the instigation of Dooms, and the giving of that charge, we believe, was calculated to, and probably did, result in harm to the appellant. In lieu of that instruction, in view of what appears to be the uncontradicted evidence that the bystander who took part in the difficulty did so without .the knowledge or consent of Dooms, we think the court should have given the instruction requested by the defendant, to the effect that defendant was in no manner responsible for any injuries inflicted by such bystander. There was no error in the refusal of defendant’s requested instruction to the effect that it was the duty of Dooms and patrons of defendant while in the restaurant to treat each other with courtesy, since such an instruction was an abstract proposition of law, with no attempt to apply it to the facts of the case.
[6] There was no error in the exclusion of the testimony offered by defendant to the effect that Mrs. Dooms, the wife of O. D. Dooms, who was in the office with her husband at the time the controversy began, was in a delicate condition, since the same was immaterial and irrelevant to any issue in the case.'
[7] The defendant offered to show by the testimony of one of its witnesses that during the difficulty Dooms was backing away from the plaintiff, and that a woman who was present and who witnessed the difficulty ran to plaintiff and begged him to stop fighting Dooms, and telling him, in effect, that it was a shame for him to fight a man so much under his size. That testimony was excluded upon plaintiff’s objection that it was immaterial and irrelevant, and a conclusion and a repetition. We are of the opinion that the testimony should have been admitted as against that objection. It was not objected to on the ground that it was hearsay. In the absence of such an objection, we are not called on to determine whether it was admissible because it was a part of the res gestae, as insisted by appellant. Although the testimony was as to hearsay declarations, it cannot be said that for that reason it was irrelevant and immaterial to any issue in the case. Hearsay testimony, when admitted without proper objection thereto, may support a judgment. Gray v. Fussell, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 261, 106 S. W. 454.
[8] The defendant offered testimony tending to show that plaintiff started the fight by seizing Dooms and pulling him out of the door of the restaurant to the platform, where the principal part of the difficulty occurred, and requested an instruction to the effect that if such evidence was true, then the verdict should be returned for the defendant. We believe it was error to refuse that instruction.
Eor the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

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