Blaugrund v. Paulk

203 S.W.2d 947, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1947
DocketNo. 4482.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 203 S.W.2d 947 (Blaugrund v. Paulk) 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
Blaugrund v. Paulk, 203 S.W.2d 947, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1145 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

SUTTON, Justice.

This appeal is from the 65th District Court of El Paso County.

The defendants, J. B. Blaugrund and three other individuals by the same name, as partners, operate the Welch Furniture Company in the city of El Paso. The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and -defendants. The plaintiff sued to recover for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from a fall on the floor of defendants’ furniture store which was claimed to have been “in a highly polished, slick and unusually and excessively slippery condition,” and for the cost of medical fees, supplies and services incurred as the result of such injuries. The trial on the facts was to a jury and on the verdict of the jury the court entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $5,325, costs, etc. From this judgment the defendants have appealed.

*948 There are no questions presented on the pleadings and a statement of the pleadings, except as may be made incidental to some discussion, is unnecessary.

The defendants have five points of error, among which are briefly, that the court erred, first, in overruling their motion for judgment on the verdict, since the jury found: (a) plaintiff had been warned the floor upon which she fell had been recently waxed 'and was slippery; and (b) that plaintiff knew or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care the floor was in an unusually and excessively dangerous condition; and (c) that the findings of the jury establish the fact that plaintiffs knowledge of the condition of the floor was equal to that of the defendants and hence she was precluded from a recovery. The first two, findings (a) and (b), were specific findings of the jury in response to special issues.

Plaintiff's ground of negligence was that defendants had and maintained, at the time of the fall, their floor in a “highly polished, slick and unusually and excessively slippery condition.” There was a favorable finding for plaintiff on that issue, but defendants say she can not recover thereon, for the reasons set out in their first points above.

The salient testimony and facts in the case, and for most part undenied or found by the jury, are: Plaintiff is a widow and has been since the death of her husband in 1929, and the mother of four children, two of whom were in school in 1943. At the time of her accident she was 49 years of age. She maintained both a ranch and town home. She was both housewife and ranch foreman and operator. She had, until September 1944, operated a 15-section “mountainous ranch” and a 7-section “flat country” ranch and at the time of the trial was still operating the latter. She supervised all the ranch operations; masonry work and construction; worked on buildings, in the branding pens, and went on the top of windmills for minor repairs and services, and rode the range regularly.

November 26, 1944, she slipped on a rug and fell on the floor at the home of a friend, but she testified she suffered no ill effects from that fall. The defendants set up in their answer that all the injuries plaintiff suffered from, if any, were caused by the fall of November 26, but the jury found in response to a special issue submitting that defense that she did not. On December 20, 1944, plaintiff went’ to the defendants’ store in search of some household furniture she desired to buy. She was taken by elevator to the third floor of the store by a clerk to see what they had. As she was leaving the elevator the clerk advised her the floor had been recently waxed and was slippery and cautioned her not to fall. She found pieces she wanted, but the manager’s consent to split the suite had to be secured. She started to the elevator, walking ahead of the clerk. On the way he called to her that there was something she had not seen. She turned somewhat abruptly to look and began slipping; she tried to regain her balance but was unable to do so and fell to the floor. As a result of the fall she claims she suffered serious, painful and permanent injuries to her back and thigh. The medical testimony, though conflicting as to the cause, corroborates her claims as to injury. She testified since the fall in the store she has not been able to perform her usual household duties and has been wholly unable to perform her outside ranch labors. She consulted her family physician immediately following the fall in the store and received treatment from him. On January 2, 1945, she saw Dr. Sedgwick of Las Cru-ces, N. M., and was by him referred to Dr. Perry S. Rogers, of El Paso, an Orthopedic surgeon and specialist, who saw and examined her on January 6, 1945. Dr. Marsh of Deming had been the family physician since 1942, and prior to December 20, 1944, he said her health was excellent. He attributed her condition to the fall of December 20. It is true, as said by the defendants, Dr. Sedgwick’s notes, which he relied upon, showed she complained to him of the November 26 fall, but the history she gave Dr. Rogers concerned the store fall.

On January 6, 1945, Dr. Rogers had one-quarter of an inch added to one shoe heel and the same taken off the other and ordered what is called a Taylor brace for the bene *949 fit of her back. The brace was not available until January 16, 1945. The first brace was discarded in the course of some ten days or two weeks and another of similar type substituted. The brace was described by the doctor as consisting of two upright steel bands running from the pelvis to the shoulders, from the shoulders to the arm pits to hold the shoulders back and a corset front to lift the abdomen and lower part of the trunk back within the bars. The shoes she ■used some four months and the brace for something like eight months.

Plaintiff testified after she had fallen and -was still on the floor she noticed a mark ■she had made while slipping; that the clerk called her attention to another long ■mark where some one else had slipped and said he had cautioned them before about 'leaving it in that condition. She said she noticed the floor had been recently waxed and was glossy like glass and excessively ■slippery and the clerk called her attention to the difference of the gloss where she fell and elsewhere. He denied making these ■statements, but he testified himself the linoleum in the aisle was quite slippery; that he had been afraid some one might slip on •it and fall but hadn’t mentioned it to anyone in particular nor cautioned the manager or any one in authority; that the floor was ■slippery enough he felt called upon to warn plaintiff before she went on it.

Based on the specific findings of the jury plaintiff had been warned the floor had been recently waxed and was slippery and that she knew or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care that it was in an unusually and excessively slippery and dangerous condition and the propositions asserted in the following authorities that a proprietor is liable only to an invitee for injuries sustained as a result of hidden defects and conditions known to him and unknown to the invitee, and that he is not liable for injuries caused by conditions of which the invitee has knowledge equal to that of a proprietor, and therefore an equal appreciation of the danger, 45 C.J., p. 837, Sec. 244, quoted in Marshall v. San Jacinto Building, Tex.Civ.App., 67 S.W.2d 372, error refused; Hausman Packing Co. v. Badwey, Tex.Civ.App.,

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W.2d 947, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaugrund-v-paulk-texapp-1947.