Bolin v. Tenneco Oil Co.

373 S.W.2d 350, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1850
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1963
Docket4
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 373 S.W.2d 350 (Bolin v. Tenneco Oil 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
Bolin v. Tenneco Oil Co., 373 S.W.2d 350, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1850 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

SHARPE, Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment rendered by the trial court in favor of appellees, Tenneco Oil Company, a corporation, hereafter called “Tenneco”, and Loyd W. Richardson Construction Corporation, hereafter called “Richardson”, that *352 appellants, John L. Bolin, Petrea Kay Bolin, Kenneth L. Pfoff and Gwendolyn Pfoff take nothing by their suit.

Appellants, who were plaintiffs in the trial court, brought suit for damages on account of personal injuries arising out of a one car accident occurring on Mustang Island Road in Nueces County, Texas, on September 24, 1961, at a place where ap-pellees, who were defendants in the trial ■court, had made temporary repairs following damage originally caused by Hurricane •Carla on or about September 10, 11 and 12, 1961.

The record shows that on or about Sep•tember 10, 11 and 12, 1961, Hurricane Carla approached and struck the Texas ■Gulf Coast, including Mustang Island, ■causing tremendous damage. A portion of Mustang Island Road, approximately eight miles south of Port Aransas, Texas, was washed away, leaving an impassable gap •of some seventy-five feet or more in said roadway. A short distance south of said washed-out area there was a private ac■cess road leading to several oil and gas installations and facilities operated by various companies, including appellee Ten-neco. Tenneco, through its agents, caused repairs to be made to such washed-out area in the roadway by appellee Richardson so •that vehicles of Tenneco and other companies could reach their facilities by land. .Richardson deposited mud shell in said •washed-out area of the Mustang Island Road and constructed ramps at both ends thereof leading to the bottom of the washout from the pavement. After the temporary repairs were made vehicles could travel only in one lane located on the eastern side of the Mustang Island Road. 'The washed-out area was not filled to the ¡normal capacity of the road and there was a slanting drop from the top of the regular vroad bed to the bottom of the washed-out Area of about four feet. Prior to such repairs a perpendicular drop-off of about four feet had existed at either end of the ■washed-out area. Vehicles of Tenneco and the other oil companies had used the said roadway where the repairs were made for about eight days prior to the accident involved in this suit.

On Sunday, September 24, 1961, appellants John L. Bolin and his wife, Petrea Kay Bolin, together with Mr. and Mrs. Pfoff, parents of Mrs. Bolin, drove from their home in Corpus Christi, Texas, to Mustang Island on a pleasure trip. After crossing the ferry to the island and proceeding through the Town of Port Aransas they drove in a southerly direction down the beach until they arrived at a place where there was water across the beach preventing cars from travelling further south. John Bolin then noticed that cars were driving on the Mustang Island Road which parallels the beach at a distance of approximately one-quarter to one-half mile to the west thereof, and that said cars were proceeding further southward than he was able to drive his car on the beach. Appellants then got into their car, proceeded in a northerly direction back to Port Aransas and then drove on to the Mustang Island Road where they again turned southward. They passed through the washed-out area where the repairs had been made by appellees and then travelled on an access road to the beach and thereafter drove southward a short distance. After appellants had engaged in beachcombing activities for several hours, they again got into their car to make the return trip home, travelling a slightly different route from the beach back to the Mustang Island Road. Appellant John Bolin, who was driving the car at said time, testified that he arrived back at the washed-out area long before he estimated he would reach it and then his left front wheel hit part of the soft bottom on the roadway and his car went out of control and was catapulted into the washed-out area, causing injuries to all the occupants of the car. The accident occurred at about dusk when it was neither daylight nor entirely dark and John Bolin testified that he was driving with the car lights turned on.

*353 Appellants complain of the summary-judgment by means of seven points of error. By their first five points appellants contend that the trial court erred in rendering summary judgment against them because appellees, having undertaken to make repairs to the Mustang Island Road, owed them a duty to exercise care in the manner in which the same were made and that the pleadings, depositions, affidavits and interrogatories on file raised fact issues with regard to breach of duty by appellees in five different respects, that is, (1) failure to properly slope the ramps which they constructed on the road bed, (2) failure to completely fill in the washed-out area rather than constructing sloping ramps, (3) failure to properly pack down the surface of the ramps constructed by them in the road bed, (4) failure to fill in the area in which the ramps were constructed to the entire width of the highway rather than only on one side, and (5) failure to erect some type of device to warn approaching motorists of the existence of the washed-out area and ramps constructed by them. Appellants, by their sixth point, contend that the summary judgment was improper because it was not established as a matter of law that John L. Bolin was guilty of contributory negligence on the occasion in question. By their seventh point, appellants contend that the record failed to establish as a matter of law that Petrea Kay Bolin, Kenneth L. Pfoff and Gwendolyn Pfoff were guilty of contributory negligence on the occasion in question.

Appellee Tenneco contends that the summary judgment was proper for the reasons set out in seven counter-points which are, in substance, as follows: (1) There was no duty owing by it to restore the washed-out area in the road caused by Hurricane Carla to a condition suitable for normal vehicular travel, (2) there was no duty owing by ap-pellees to place any warning signs or devices at the washed-out area on a public county road, (3) no duty owing by appel-lees to appellants was breached because the temporary repairs were made only to permit company vehicles of appellee and its business invitees and associates to traverse the wash-out, and such repairs were not made for the use of the public since the appellee’s agents causing the work to be done knew the county road had been closed to public travel, (4) appellee was only under a duty not to make more dangerous the condition of the wash-out caused by Hurricane Carla under the conditions set out in Tenneco’s third counter-point stated immediately herein above, (5) the sole proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of appellant John L. Bolin, (6) the contributory negligence of John L. Bolin was a proximate cause of the accident and would bar recovery for himself and wife, Petrea Kay Bolin, and (7) any breach of duty toward appellants was on the part of Loyd Richardson Construction Company who was an independent contractor and did the work according to its own method and plan.

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Bluebook (online)
373 S.W.2d 350, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolin-v-tenneco-oil-co-texapp-1963.