Atex Const. Co. v. Farrow

71 S.W.2d 323, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 467
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1934
DocketNo. 7948.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 71 S.W.2d 323 (Atex Const. Co. v. Farrow) 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
Atex Const. Co. v. Farrow, 71 S.W.2d 323, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 467 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

Appellees, E. H. Farrow and his wife, Ora Farrow, sued appellants to recover damages for the death of their minor son, alleging that in August, 1927, the appellants, operating under the firm or partnership name of Atex Construction Company, were engaged in constructing a gas line, which work required blasting with dynamite, and for which purposes the appellants kept on hand large quantities- of dynamite caps to be used in the charge and explosion of dynamite for blasting rock out of the ditch in which the gas pipe was placed; that in the course of such work the appellants camped in the O. D. Richardson pasture near the residence of appellees, and at which camp site they kept large quantities of dynamite caps to be used as aforementioned; that, when the camp site was abandoned, the appellants,, their agents, servants, and employees, the names of whom appellees did not know, negligently left and allowed to remain scattered upon the ground at and about the. camp site large quantities of dynamite caps, which were unprotected, unguarded, and exposed, and which were allowed to remain in an open pasture in a densely settled community; and that on August 12, 1930, while playing with other children, their minor son, E. H. Farrow, Jr., found a large quantity of said dynamite caps, and gathered a large number of such caps in his hands, which resulted in their explosion and caused his death.

Appellants, answered by a general demurrer, special exceptions challenging the sufficiency of the pleadings to identify the agents and employees claimed to have been negligent, and general and special denials.

In answer to special issues submitted, the jury found: (1) That the agents, servants, and employees of appellants occupied the campsite in question; (2) that they had dynamite caps .in their possession at the campsite ; (3) that the possession of the dynamite caps was in the course of their employment; (4) that they left dynamite caps at or about *324 or around the camp site; (5) that the leaving of said caps at the camp site constituted negligence; (6) that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries which resulted in the death of the minor child; and that the damages suffered by appellees aggregated $11,000. Judgment was accordingly rendered for appellees; hence this appeal.

The evidence showed that during August, 1927, the appellants, operating under the firm or partnership name of Atex Construction Company, were engaged in constructing a gas line near the city of San Angelo. In doing the work, appellants used five separate gangs or crews. The first was known as Skagg' Bros.’ crew, who were independent ■ contractors, and who contracted with the Atex Construction Company to excavate “a suitable ditch 28 inches in depth, through dirt and caliche * * * capable of being cut by a No. 4 Buckeye Trenching Machine.” Where rock was encountered and the ditching machine would not cut it, a followup or special hand crew was used. This second crew was composed of several men, and was equipped with an air compressor for drilling rock and with dynamite and dynamite caps for blasting the rock out of the ditch in which the pipe was to be placed. This dynamite crew was in charge of E. L. King, as foreman, and “it was the Atex Construction Company’s gang.” The remaining crews were engaged in lining-up, welding, tying-in, and lowering the pipe in the ditch after its completion. In the course of constructing the gas line, appellants established a camp site for three or four days in August, 1927, in the pasture of O. D. Richardson, near the San Angelo-Bronte public road, for the purpose of keeping their tools, machinery, wagons and teams, and supplies at night; and the only person left at the camp site was a watchman who guarded the property. During the time the camp was so located, appellants’ dynamite crew did some blasting at Red creek, about one mile from the camp, working some three or four days. Appellants’ agent or employee Cotten delivered a supply of dynamite and dynamite caps to E. L. King at San Angelo, which were brought on an Atex Construction Company truck to Red creek, where the blasting was done. It was not shown where the dynamite caps were kept at night. One of the dynamite crew testified that he left his tools at the camp in Richardson pasture at night. About fifteen minutes after the Richardson pasture camp site was abandoned by appellants, and while the outfit was still in sight, Mr. and Mrs. Richardson passed by it on their way to. town, and saw several boxes of dynamite caps sitting on the ground, and Mrs. Richardson saw them when they returned in the afternoon, but Mr. Richardson did not see them again. The camp site was about 250 yards from the home of appellees, and on August 12, 1930, while playing witlj other children, their minor son, E. H. Farrow, Jr., found a large quantity of dynamite caps about 20 feet north of the camp site, and gathered a large number of such caps in his hands, which resulted in their explosion and caused his death. The children took the dynamite caps to play with because of their similarity to ordinary rifle shells. After the death of the boy at the old camp site, several dynamite caps were 'found scattered over the ground at and near the old camp site. Neither Cotten who delivered the dynamite caps to King at San Angelo, nor King, the foreman of the dynamite crew, nor the. watchman at the camp site where the dynamite caps were found, was produced as witness by appellants; nor was their absence accounted for by the appellants. The evidence was undisputed that the dynamite caps were dangerous and could be easily exploded by a jar, which is also a matter of common knowledge. Appellants’ witnesses testified that they did not haul them on wagons or any equipment used by the last three mentioned crews, and that it would have been dangerous to have hauled them on any of the wagons or equipment which left the camp site shortly before the dynamite caps were seen there by Mr. and Mrs. Richardson. No other person or persons had used dynamite caps at or near the camp site in question.

Appellants contend that, while this proof may have shown the presence of some of their employees and equipment at the camp site and the discovery after its abandonment of the dynamite caps, still this proof was not sufficient to fix their liability for the death of the boy who picked up the dynamite caps at the abandoned camp site and was killed by their explosion in his hands, in absence of further proof showing that these sa"me employees were employed to do some character of work which involved the possession or use of the dynamite caps. The rule of law stated has been adopted in Texas and other jurisdictions; but, contrary to the contention of appellants, the evidence showed that their employees charged with safely keeping these dangerous instrumentalities in their custody or possession negligently failed to do so.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W.2d 323, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atex-const-co-v-farrow-texapp-1934.