Alamo Oil & Refining Co. v. Curvier

136 S.W. 1132, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 970
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 1132 (Alamo Oil & Refining Co. v. Curvier) 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
Alamo Oil & Refining Co. v. Curvier, 136 S.W. 1132, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 970 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

JAMES, C. J.

The petition of appellees is for damages accruing from the death of Juan Curvier, while in the employ of appellant.

It alleged that Juan Curvier was in the discharge of his duty in appellant’s mill when a large pile of cotton seed fell upon him and smothered him; that the pile of seed was about 20 feet high, and defendant had negligently failed to furnish a proper or sufficient support for same to prevent it from falling, that if any support was furnished it the same was loose and defective and wholly insufficient to keep it from falling, and said pile was so maintained by defendant as to be in imminent danger of it falling and injuring employes, ana, notwithstanding such danger, failed to provide any proper support for it, and negligently maintained it in a manner calculated to bring about such an accident as happened to Curvier; that in such circumstances defendant negligently placed this employe to work in a position of danger and in an unsafe place; that he had only been working for defendant two nights prior to this occurrence, on which nights, as well as on the night in question, the room and the space at which this seed pile was maintained was dark, and through defendant’s negligence not sufficiently lighted to enable its employés to see and appreciate the danger to which its negligence exposed them; that Curvier did not know and appreciate the danger, and the accident occurred without fault on his part.

Defendant answered by demurrer, general denial, negligence of deceased; that if the work was dangerous, the dangers were open and obvious, were seen, or by the use of ordinary care by plaintiff could have been seen and understood; that he was fully advised of the dangers and properly instructed in reference thereto; that he assumed the risks; that the risks, if any, were the ordinary dangers attendant upon that class of work; that the place furnished him to perform his work was the usual and customary place and position furnished to workmen in that class and character of work; and the risks and dangers, if any, were known to deceased, or could have been known to him by the exercise of ordinary care.

.There was a verdict for the sum of $11,-500, apportioned among the plaintiffs.

The first assignment of error complains of the refusal to sustain defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict, after plaintiff rested his case. We find nothing in the record showing such proceeding. The second assigns as error that, if the truth of all the evidence be conceded, the evidence does not support the verdict. The third complains of the refusal of a general peremptory charge.

It appears that defendant presented to the court a number of requested charges, all but one asking for the submission of the defense on material issues; the one referred to being the peremptory instruction for the defendant., There is nothing to show that the requested instructions, which were asked upon the theory that the condition of the testimony was such as warranted submission of the matters involved in them, were asked after the court had acted upon and refused the peremptory charge and decided to submit the issues, nor were they asked to be given in the event the court refused to give the peremptory charge. They were apparently all handed to the judge and asked together. Thus the court was asked to give them all; that is, to charge upon the theory that the testimony did not warrant a submission, and also upon the theory that it did. The peremptory charge should have been given, if the testimony did not substantiate defendant’s negligence, and also if any one of the defensive issues, such as assumed risk or contributory negligence, was conclusively established by the evidence. Under such conditions the court must have been in doubt as to what defendant was really insisting on. This court has expressed itself on this very subject in Alamo Dressed Beef Co. v. Yeargan, 123 S. W. 721, where we stated that in these circumstances, if there was error in refusing the peremptory instruction and in giving the requested charges submitting the issues, defendant participated in it and could not complain.

[1] The result of this view is that the charges would stand precisely as if the charges submitting the issues had been asked without asking for a peremptory instruction, upon which theory it is well settled that defendant could not be heard to claim *1134 that there was no evidence, or insufficient evidence, to warrant their submission. In the case above cited, a writ of error was refused; but it is not certain that the Supreme Court in doing so approved the above rule; hence we will not make it dispose of the assignments in question, and will proceed to consider the evidence.

Conclusions of Pact.

There was testimony by defendant’s superintendent that deceased applied to him for work the night before this occurrence, and he told him that he had nothing in the daytime ; that the night foreman wanted a man, and to come back that night and probably he could get on, and he did it. This indicates that this was the first night of deceased’s employment. By the testimony of others, he had worked two nights previous to this. The work at which he was put on the night of his death was at the base of a cotton seed pile 30 or 35 feet high, which pile at that time, according to some of the testimony, sloped upward at an angle of 45°, and from other testimony it was about perpendicular. The work being done was by deceased and another employs, Liserio, and consisted in one of them — on this occasion Liserio —scooping out cotton seed about three or four feet from the base of the pile with a fork and pitching it over to a conveyor some distance off, where deceased transferred it to a conveyor; the object being to remove the seed to where the lint would be taken from it. ■ ■

All of the testimony shows that the seed which came down and buried Curvier fell or rolled off from the top of the pile, and not by the caving in of the pile. There was testimony showing that the seed would not necessarily roll from above when the pile stood at a perpendicular, even when you excavated out from under it. The superintendent gave this testimony: “Sometimes dirty seed will roll quicker than others. Sometimes they will roll at a pretty good slant; in fact, some seed you can dig and excavate out under, and still they won’t roll. * * * Seed is not like wheat or corn, because the seeds have lint on them, and they cling together, and you can dig seed sometimes more than perpendicular, and the seed will hang over the top lots of times.”

There was testimony that the place was dimly lighted, and that workmen could not see the upper portion of the pile. Liserio testified: “It is a fact that the cotton seed was piled very high, and that it was held back by steel or iron bands nailed to 2x4 posts and that it was an immense stack of cotton, inclosed in a sort of bin. * * * I did not notice that any of the bands were broken, but some of them were loose. You couldn’t see very well because the globes and lights were dirty. It looked dark above the pile, and I could not see the top of the pile with the lights as they were.”

The night superintendent or foreman testified: “The seed fell from the top of the pile; they fell over and buried him. I do not know whether the company knew of the condition of the pile of cotton seed or not. I was supposed to know it, and did know it. I hired' and discharged the men. Yes, sir; I knew there was danger there, and I warned the men.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 1132, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alamo-oil-refining-co-v-curvier-texapp-1911.