(dissenting):
I had hoped that the thrust of our difficult decision in Castro 1 would be held under the restraint of our earlier decision in Impson,2 as I understand Impson. I feel this is not so under the opinion of the majority. Obviously, just any so-called excuse will not do; otherwise, we have, in effect, abolished the doctrine of negligence per se.
Gurecky, the victim here, had vainly maneuvered his vehicle onto the right shoulder of his side of the highway before he was struck by the truck driven by Gonzalez. Gonzalez had crossed over the left side of the highway in an undisputed violation of statute. But the judgments below in Gurecky’s favor have been reversed upon the holding that there was “some evidence in the record of an excuse for Gonzalez’s presence on the wrong side of the road”, thus invoking Castro. Under Castro, of course, the jury is not given the opportunity to explicitly determine whether the claimed excuse rested in reasonable fact.
The threshold problem is not whether Gonzalez was negligent. It is undisputed *304that he crossed over the left side of the highway in violation of statute when he ran down Gurecky. The problem is whether the evidence raises an excuse sufficient to get him out from under negligence per se, and under the rule announced in Castro.
The claimed excuse here is articulated by the majority to be that the “pickup was weaving on the road by reason of the deflated right rear tire, that things happened quickly, and that Gonzalez lost control of his car by reason of the low tire.” As I read the testimony, and particularly that of Gonzalez, there is no probative evidence thus raising the issue of excusable neglect under the holdings in Castro and Impson-, to the contrary, the causative factor of the statutory violation was not a deflated tire but a later and unnecessary decision by Gonzalez. The crucial point is, as I see it, that the conduct of Gonzalez in violation of statute was deliberate action of his own doing and, as stated in Impson, falls within the realm of due care. The collision was not the result of an emergency created by an excusable occurrence; it was caused by a statutory violation resulting from ill-advised and negligent conduct.
The circumstances as I understand them from the record were these. The collision occurred on Highway 35, in Matagorda County, Texas, on the afternoon of September 15, 1969. The highway is asphalt surfaced and consists of two lanes with an improved shoulder adjoining the outside of each lane. The highway is straight and over flat terrain in the area of the accident. The weather was clear. The surface of the highway was dry. Immediately preceding the collision, Gurecky was proceeding in a westerly direction and Gonzalez was proceeding to the east. As the two vehicles were approaching one another, the truck driven by Gonzalez crossed to the left side of the highway and collided with Gurecky’s car. The point of impact was on the improved shoulder adjacent to Gur-ecky’s right half of the roadway.
Gonzalez did not speak English and testified through an interpreter with some difficulty. He said that something went wrong with the right rear tire on the truck which gave him the feeling that it was a flat; that the truck veered to the right, whereupon he tried to avoid “a deep hole” and a ditch on the right side; that he pulled the truck to the left to keep from going toward the ditch on the right; and that he did not apply his brakes until he saw the approaching Gurecky automobile, at which time he was on the right side of the road. Gurecky and Gonzalez agree in their testimony upon the controlling circumstance that Gonzalez had regained his side of the road before the second crossing to the left and the ensuing collision. Gur-ecky testified that he saw the truck swing into his lane and thereafter return to the right side of the road; that he moved to his right to give as much clearance as possible; and that after getting back into the right lane the truck swung back to the left side of the road and to the shoulder of the highway where the collision occurred. Gonzalez also testified that he had left his lane when “having this trouble and went into the other lane, but I had pulled back. But, upon getting closer I had applied my brakes making my back end whip around and that car ran into me.” At one point Gonzalez stated that he did not apply his brakes until he had pulled the truck back to the right and that “when I seen this car very close I applied my brakes”; and, further, that this was the first time he had applied the brakes. He also testified that the front end of his truck was on his side of the highway when he made the hard brake application.
The highway patrolman who was called to the scene and arrived within approximately 15 to 20 minutes stated that he examined the deflated tire and did not find any lacerations or holes to indicate that a blowout had occurred; he said “the tire was intact ... no holes or anything.” The officer also examined the markings remaining on the pavement which he said *305established that the pickup did not make “a sharp swerve” but made a “gradual exit off the road.”
It thus appears that the unexpected deflation of a tire set in motion a series of events during which Gonzalez made two operating decisions which brought about the statutory violation and the resulting collision with the Gurecky vehicle. The first was the decision to swing the truck to the left to avoid what Gonzalez referred to as a hole or a ditch on the right (about which there was no other evidence) toward which, he said, the truck had veered; the second was the decision to make a hard application of the brakes at a time when the truck was traveling on the right side of the road as required by statute.
It is manifest to me under the undisputed facts that the act of Gonzalez in making a hard application of the brakes occurred at a time when, under his own testimony, and apart from the initial distraction of the “feeling” of Gonzalez that the right rear tire had gone flat, he had successfully steered the truck back to the right and was traveling on his side of the highway. This was also the testimony of Gurecky. Both were in agreement that the truck had returned to and was traveling upon the right side of the highway after the initial veering to the right and the zigzagging from left back to right. So it seems apparent that Gonzalez had regained sufficient control of the truck to have avoided the statutory violation and ensuing collision. There was, in point of fact, a new traffic situation created by the ill-chosen brake application, and one that was the product of this particular action on the part of Gonzalez. Braking the truck in the manner attempted by Gonzalez was not required to keep it on the same and right side of the highway, and Gonzalez himself said that this caused the swerve to the left side of the highway and into the path of the Gurecky automobile.
In my view, justifiable excuse is not raised under these circumstances. Impson clearly forecasts in text, and in expressing agreement with the views of the dissenting Justice in the intermediate court, the strictness with which the evidence will be viewed in determining whether excuse for the violation of a penal statute is raised. The violation there was an attempt to pass an automobile within a prohibited distance of a highway intersection. The violator offered a number of excuses for the violation: that he could have passed the automobile before reaching the intersection had it not unexpectedly increased its speed; that there was no yellow stripe on the highway prohibiting him from passing; that it was dark and trees and a house obscured the intersection; that the highway sign was small; that although he was familiar with the highway, he did not recall the exact location of this particular intersection; and that since the automobile was on the extreme righthand side of the highway he did not believe it would turn left. In rejecting these as legally justifiable excuses for violation of a statute, we wrote:
“All of the above matters fall within the realm of ordinary care, — or lack of care. The driver made his move deliberately, with knowledge of the law and with at least notice of the presence of the highway intersection. There was no impossibility, no reason for any particular hurry, no emergency, and no incapacity. The problem of greater risk of harm is not involved. If there was an emergency, it was only after the statutory violation had begun, and was due in large part to his own deliberate conduct.” 487 S.W.2d 694 at 697.
Under the test thus indicated in Impson, the raising of justifiable excuse turns on whether the acts of the violator are deliberate and constitute a failure to exercise due care, or were responses impelled by and attributable to circumstances not of his own doing. This is an essential safeguard, since in the nature of the situation after-the-fact explanations and excuses are easy to come by, whether in good faith or con*306trived; and under the holding in Castro, the fact finder is not required to directly determine whether the alleged basis for the excuse contention rested in reasonable fact and was the cause of the violation. These considerations also require the rule that the sufficiency of the evidence of excuse is a preliminary matter for decision of the trial court. See Phoenix Refining Co. v. Powell, 251 S.W.2d 892 (Tex.Civ.App.1952, writ ref’d n. r. e.). A blowout of a tire which is reasonably thought to be in good condition was mentioned in Impson as a situation that “could come” under category 2(d) of § 288A, Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965), as “an emergency not due to his own misconduct.” However, this reference presupposed a traffic violation directly attributable to the blowout itself, and not caused, as here, by intervening operating acts not required by the initial unexpected occurrence, and but for which the statutory violation and resulting collision would not have occurred.
I would affirm the judgments below for Gurecky.
WALKER and JOHNSON, JJ., join in this dissent.
. Southern Pacific Co. v. Castro, 493 S.W.2d 491 (Tex.1973).
. Impson v. Structural Metals, Inc., 487 S.W. 2d 694 (Tex.1972).