Bass v. Receivers of Kirby Lumber Co.

146 S.W. 658, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 312
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 658 (Bass v. Receivers of Kirby Lumber Co.) 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
Bass v. Receivers of Kirby Lumber Co., 146 S.W. 658, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 312 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, ,C. J.

This suit was brought by appellant against appellees to recover damages for personal injuries, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of ap-pellee’s employes.

The petition alleges, in substance, that appellant, Raymond Bass, a minor 15 years old, was, at the time of his injury, in the employment of the defendants as a water boy for their hands working in the woods a few miles from their lumber mill at Fuqua; that the defendants, in connection with their lumber business, operated a railroad to and from said lumber mill out into the woods, where his employment was; that on the occasion in question he and the other employés in *659 the woods boarded an engine and tender, operated by defendants oyer their said railroad, to come in at the close of the day’s work; that the engine and tender were provided by defendants for such use, and were intended and allowed therefor, the use being of mutual advantage in the business; that he (the plaintiff) took a seat, with others of the employes, on the pilot of the engine (which was a switch engine and adapted to that use), where it was customary for them to ride, and where, in the crowded condition of the engine and tender, they were as safe as at any other place; that, while the engine and tender were going in, the same ran into branches protruding over the track from the falling of a tree that was cut down in the course of the business, whereby plaintiff was thrown off, and his arm was so run over and injured that it had to be and was amputated near his shoulder.

The petition alleged the injury to be the proximate result (1) of negligence of the de-defendants’ agents, in that behalf, in exposing plaintiff to the extraordinary danger of the branches protruding over the track, when they knew, or ought, by the exercise of ordinary care, to have known, of the unsafe condition therefrom in time to have remedied the same, and (2) of the negligence of defendants’ employe, the engineer, (a) in failing to stop or slow up the engine after he discovered, or -would, by the exercise of ordinary care, have discovered, such obstruction and threatened danger, and (b) in failing to exercise ordinary care, with the means at hand, after he had actually discovered plaintiff’s peril from such obstruction, to stop or slow up the engine, so as to avert the injury to him. The damages were laid at $25,000.

The petition then alleges that in a former suit in the court in which the instant suit was brought, which was apparently brought by the plaintiff herein against these defendants, an agreed or compromise judgment was rendered against the defendants in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $200, but that said amount had not been accepted by the plaintiff, and was now in the registry of the court. The validity of said judgment is attacked on the grounds of fraud and false representation. The allegations of fraud and misrepresentation being, in substance, that the petition in said suit was filed and all or the proceedings had therein by attorneys representing and in the employment of the defendants, and, that in rendering said judgment, no evidence was heard or considered by the court; that plaintiff and his father, who brought the suit for him as next friend, were illiterate and ignorant of court proceedings and the right of recovery which the facts gave plaintiff, and that, anterior to the filing of said suit and the rendition of judgment therein, the defendants, through their physician and agents, who are alleged to have been Dr. Weir and a man by the name of French, and another by the name of Savage, made false rejiresentations to the plaintiff to induce him to accept $200 in settlement; the alleged false representations being substantially that if the settlement were made the Kirby Lumber Company would retain plaintiff in its employment, and give bim an opportunity for independence and advancement in life. Further false representations, alleged to have been made by said agents, were that plaintiff in fact had no right of recovery, and that he would be benefited by compromising for a nominal and paltry amount. The prayer of the petition is for annulment of the compromise judgment, and for recovery by plaintiff of the damages sustained by him.

The defendants’ answer, in addition to exceptions and a general denial, contains a plea of res adjudicata, based upon the agreed or compromise judgment, before mentioned; also plea of contributory negligence and assumed risk on the part of plaintiff in riding on the pilot of the engine, and in not using ordinary care in protecting himself from the overhanging branches, after he had discovered the same.

Upon the trial of the cause with a jury, the plaintiff, after having introduced evidence tending to establish the negligence of the defendants and consequent injury to plaintiff, as alleged in the petition, and without having introduced any evidence upon the alleged fraudulent procurement by the defendants of the former agreed judgment, rested his case. The defendants then introduced evidence contradictory of that offered by plaintiff, and also testimony which tended to establish defendants’ plea of contributory negligence, and rested their case, without offering any evidence in regard to said former judgment. Plaintiff then introduced evidence in rebuttal of the evidence adduced by the defendants, and with such rebuttal evidence offered evidence to prove the allegations of his petition in regard to the fraudur lent procurement of said agreed judgment. Upon the objection of defendants that said evidence as to fraud in the procurement of the agreed judgment was not in rebuttal of any evidence offered by the defendants, the trial court refused to permit plaintiff to introduce such evidence, and, at the request of the defendants, was about to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendants, when the plaintiff, to avoid such verdict, took a nonsuit, after duly excepting to the ruling of the court.

Thereafter, on the same day, plaintiff filed a motion to set aside the order granting the nonsuit and dismissing the cause, and to reinstate the suit. The motion to reinstate, which was sworn to by attorneys for plaintiff, was as follows:

“In the District Court of Liberty County, Texas, at its February term, 1911. Raymond Bass, by Next Friend, Marion T. Bass, v. Joe S. Rice and Cecil A. Lyon, Receivers of Kirby Lumber Company. No. 4,390. Now *660 comes the plaintiff, Raymond Bass, by his attorneys, and moves the court to reinstate this cause, in which the plaintiff was compelled to take a nonsuit under circumstances as follows:
“That at the trial the plaintiff’s attorneys made out for him a prima facie case, authorizing a recovery in his behalf against the defendant receivers for the alleged injury of which he complains, and without offering any evidence in respect to the existence or fraudulent procurement of the compromise judgment ns alleged, as manifest from the evidence. That plaintiff’s attorneys were induced to this step under the mistaken belief that said receivers, defendants, who had pleaded such compromise judgment as a defense, would introduce the same in evidence, and that it would be more orderly in a logical way, and in a practicable form, for the plaintiff then to introduce his testimony of the alleged fraudulent procurement of such judgment, which course could not and would not delay the trial of the cause at all, or in any way work to the prejudice of anybody.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 658, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bass-v-receivers-of-kirby-lumber-co-texapp-1912.