A. Cohen & Co. v. Rittimann

139 S.W. 59, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 59 (A. Cohen & Co. v. Rittimann) 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
A. Cohen & Co. v. Rittimann, 139 S.W. 59, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1177 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

FLY, J.

This is a suit for damages instituted by appellee against appellant, in which it was alleged that appellee and his family were residing on the same block in San Antonio on which appellant was conducting a business of curing hides of cows and horses and other animals, which were brought to the place of business in a green state, and were allowed to remain in a condition of decay and decomposition; that the flesh was cut from the hides and piled up and left to rot and decay, and hides were hung up in a decaying condition, which caused great numbers of flies to accumulate, and that they were poisoned by substances used in curing the hides, and that they drifted into residences in the vicinity and died in great numbers; and that the odors from the hides and meat filled the atmosphere, which entered residences, causing sicuness and *60 death. Appellee alleged that his daughter, Anna Bell Rittimann, 25 years of age, sickened from breathing the poisoned atmosphere, and died, and that appellee had been deprived of her labor in his house to his damage in the sum of $20,000. Appellant filed general and special demurrers and a general denial, and specially answered that the appellant was engaged in his lawful business and had exercised due care in curing hides, and that appellee had moved into the vicinity of the place of business of appellant knowing the kind of business conducted by appellant, in a locality set apart by an ordinance of the city of San Antonio for slaughterhouses and other like industries. The cause was tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appel-lee for $1,000.

A physician who treated appellee’s daughter in her last sickness swore that she suffered with asthma, and that disease and malarial fever caused her death. He stated that malarial fever is produced in no other way except through the bite of a certain kind of mosquito, but stated further: “Decomposing, decaying, rotting matter is in small particles disseminating themselves into the air all the time, and a person breathing that air, it would have a tendency to depreciate human health, to undermine it; every day coming in contact with things like that it would get into the system through the lungs. The lungs are a kind of sifter. You take air into the lungs, through that the blood receives the oxygen, and then it is disseminated through the body generally. The lungs and the body would become, more or less, impregnated with the dead matter. The tendency to affect a person of a weak disposition would be to undermine the health of the person in that condition of health. A person in a weak condition would not be so apt to throw it off as a person who is robust. I saw Mr. Rittimann’s daughter frequently. I believe the condition of that atmosphere undermined her health to such an extent that she was not in such condition to throw off diseases that she would otherwise have been. I say that condition weakened her, run down her health, caused her to be weakened and in a condition she would not have been in had she lived in other surroundings. Her chances for .recovery would certainly have been decidedly better if she had been in different surroundings where there were other conditions and she had continued healthy and strong. When a person’s physical condition is run down and emaciated, they are more susceptible to • diseases, and of course, their ability to resist diseases is less. This girl was depleted and weak. She was run down when she was taken down with this malarial form of fever that she had. I do not know how long she was sick with the fever. I can’t say, X don’t remember.” It was shown that a place like appellant’s was a menace to health and that the place was not conducted in a sanitary way, nor as it should have been. A witness stated that the condition of it was improved after the death of the girl, and that “there was decidedly room for improvement.”

There was testimony conflicting in a degree with that of Dr. Berry given by Dr. Caffery, who testified that no particles of decaying matter accompany the odors, and that such odors are not disease bearers, and are not dangerous except in close rooms where they consume the oxygen. Dr. Caf-fery said: “I say it is absolutely impossible for bad atmosphere, an atmosphere from putrid matter, or scent, or odors to be disseminated in the blood and in the system by getting in contact with the lungs. Absolutely impossible for the system to become, charged with decaying matter through odors. Ordinary odors arising from either decomposed vegetable or organic matter are not poisonous in themselves.” He, however, admitted that, if the atmosphere was full of gases, it reduces the amount of oxygen and the person becomes sick by a lack of oxygen, so he and Dr. Berry arrived at the same conclusion, that of sickness from filthy gases, by different methods of reasoning.

Dr. Aurelio Garcia de la Lama swore that the preparations used ' on the hides were injurious to health, and that “decaying meats get into the air and a person’s lungs and hurt the blood. A person breathing decaying particles of meat that fill the air it hurts them. There is a whole lot of sickness caused by that. The odor in the air is caused on account of the hides; such odor or scent would hurt the health. The continual breathing of this atmosphere, impregnated with that odor, ’ would always be sickness. It would produce all kinds of sickness.” Among the diseases he enumerated were typhoid fever, colic, sores on the body, and sores in the mouth. One physician stated that he did not know “whether there is any other way for the communication of malaria, except by mosquito bite, but that is the theory of the present date.” He testified further: “If you were to sit down by a dead horse and breathe the air week in and week out, breathe particles of that dead horse, it would always be detrimental. It takes a great deal of decay of that kind to affect the body. I do not think an hour would do it, nor a day wouldn’t do it; but very likely continuously living in it would vitiate the entire system.” Another physician testified that inhaling putrid matter might produce bilious fever, and also testified: “The effect of this smell would make the surrounding atmosphere unhealthy to breathe. Rotting is a process of decomposition, and the meat is gradually giving off an odor. Inhalation of this odor vitiates the system, generally, if it got into the circulation. When the air gets into the lungs, impregnated with putrid *61 matter, it is taken into the entire system. Where a person' is continually breathing such air, the. blood is not pure. It cannot be healthy. We would all have a hideyard in the room for that purpose if it was healthy. The putrid matter in the air when you breathe it is transferred from the tissues through the blood.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City Ice Delivery Co. v. Suggs
60 S.W.2d 538 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1933)
Burrows v. Texas N. O. R. Co.
54 S.W.2d 1090 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1932)
Boyle v. Pure Oil Co.
16 S.W.2d 146 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1929)
Houston E. & W. T. Ry. Co. v. Jackson
299 S.W. 885 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1927)
Arlington Heights Sanitarium v. Deaderick
272 S.W. 497 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Texas Employers' Ins. v. Jimenez
267 S.W. 752 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
San Antonio Public Service Co. v. Mitchell
238 S.W. 265 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
Kirby Lumber Co. v. Bratcher
191 S.W. 700 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)
Ft. Worth & R. G. Ry. Co. v. McMurray
173 S.W. 929 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1914)
Southwestern Casualty Ins. Co. v. Heisterman
167 S.W. 1095 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 59, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-cohen-co-v-rittimann-texapp-1911.