Brazos Graphics, Inc. v. Arvin Industries, Inc.

574 S.W.2d 240, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3957
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1978
Docket5920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 574 S.W.2d 240 (Brazos Graphics, Inc. v. Arvin Industries, Inc.) 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
Brazos Graphics, Inc. v. Arvin Industries, Inc., 574 S.W.2d 240, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3957 (Tex. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES, Justice.

This is a products liability case. Plaintiff-Appellant Brazos Graphics, Inc. brought this suit against Defendant-Appel-lee Arvin Industries, Inc., in which suit Pleas of Intervention were filed by four insurance companies who had paid fire losses under their respective policies.

On January 19, 1976, Plaintiff-Appellant’s place of business in Bryan, Texas, was substantially damaged by a fire. Plaintiff-Appellant and Intervenors claimed that a small electric heater manufactured by Arvin was defectively designed and caused the fire.

Trial was had before a jury, and in response to special issues the jury found (or failed to find) as follows:

(1) Failed to find that Arvin’s failure to equip the heater with a heat shield around the line cord inside the case rendered the heater defective.

(2) No answer (and none necessary) to the issue inquiring if such defect was a producing cause of the fire in question.

(3) Failed to find that Arvin’s failure to clamp the electric cord in such a manner as to avoid crimping or pinching the insulation rendered the heater defective in design.

(4) No answer (and none necessary) to the issue inquiring if such defect was a producing cause of the fire in question.

Special Issues 5, 6, 7, and 8 were all damage issues. No answers were made to these issues, and none were necessary.

Based upon the jury verdict the trial court entered judgment that Plaintiff Brazos Graphics, Inc. and Intervenors take nothing against Defendant Arvin Industries, Inc., from which Plaintiff and Inter-venors appeal. We affirm.

Appellants assert five points of error, points one through four complaining of the trial court’s admitting into evidence Defendant’s Exhibit No. 8 as a business record, while the fifth and final point complains of the trial court’s sustaining of Ap-pellee’s objection to Appellants’ jury argument. We overrule all of Appellants’ points and contentions and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Appellants contend the trial court erred in admitting into evidence Defendant’s Exhibit 8 as a business record for the asserted reasons that (1) said exhibit is not a memorandum or record of an act, event, or condition but rather is a summary and hearsay; (2) there is no evidence and insufficient evidence that the person who made such exhibit or transmitted information to be included therein had personal knowledge of the act, event or condition to be included therein; (3) there is no evidence and insufficient evidence of the proponent’s qualifications as a foundation to the introduction of opinion testimony; and (4) Appellants were denied an opportunity to cross-examine and challenge opinion testimony stated within the exhibit.

Appellants tried this case on a design defect theory. Appellants’ experts testified that the Arvin Model 29H10 heater in question was defectively designed because the line cord insulation was exposed to radiant heat, which they say in their opinion caused insulation breakdown and electrical malfunction. Appellants’ experts recommended a heat shielding device to remedy this asserted defect in design. Appellants’ experts gave this opinion testimony without reference to the actual temperatures existing in the 29H10 heater during operation or the rated capacity of the line cord insulation used.

*242 To counter this opinion evidence, Appel-lee offered Defendant’s Exhibit No. 8, same consisting of 22 pages of the Business Records of Underwriters Laboratories, Inc., Columbus, Indiana, an independent testing laboratory. Said exhibit showed the actual temperatures existing at specific locations in the heater during operation. According to recitations in said exhibit, U.L.’s engineers obtained these temperature figures by actually taking readings from a sample heater having the same design as the heater in question. The readings showed that the heaters’ design exposed the line cord insulation to a temperature of 100° Fahrenheit, about 1.4 degrees above normal body temperature, during operation. The rated capacity of the line cord insulation was shown to be 194° Fahrenheit; therefore, the temperature readings shown in the exhibit served as a basis for Appellee’s expert testimony to the effect that the insulation temperatures were well within acceptable and safe limits. In this way was Defendant’s Exhibit 8 used to answer and rebut Appellants’ contention that the heater in question was defectively designed.

As stated, Defendant’s Exhibit No. 8 primarily consisted of the United Laboratories, Inc., records of test results. It was filed by Appellee with the Court with over fourteen days’ notice to Appellants’ counsel as a business record under Article 3737e, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes. The records were attached to an affidavit by a custodian thereof, under the provisions of Section 5 of said statute, said affidavit being in the form recommended by and set out in Section 7 of Article 3737e.

It is significant that when Appellee offered Defendant’s Exhibit 8 into evidence, Appellants objected generally to the exhibit as a whole upon two grounds, to wit, that it was hearsay and irrelevant. Only the hearsay objection has been carried forward on this appeal. Therefore we have the situation where the Appellants did not level objections to specific portions of the exhibit, but instead made a general objection to the exhibit as a whole on the ground that it is hearsay. Now, on appeal by way of their points of error, Appellants make complaints against specific portions of the exhibit as being inadmissible. Our examination of the exhibit reveals that most of same is admissible since it has been qualified as an exception to the hearsay rule under Article 3737e, commonly called the Business Records Act. Moreover, the exhibit is largely factual in nature. On the other hand, there are portions of the exhibit that would have been properly excluded, had Appellants timely pointed them out to the trial court with specific objections. For example, there are references in the exhibit to previous tests which had been made of this particular model heater by U.L., with no showing of what the previous tests consisted of, or by whom conducted. A matter such as this, as well as others contained in the exhibit, would no doubt have been excluded by the trial court in the face of a specific objection at the time the exhibit was offered in evidence. But no specific objections were made to any portions of the exhibit.

It has been held that an objection should not be general, but specific. It must be such as to be understood by the court, and such that it can be obviated by the opposing party, if possible, by other evidence; that a general objection to admission of evidence is insufficient as a basis for appellate review. Dabney v. Keene (El Paso CA 1946) 195 S.W.2d 682, 684, NRE; Loumparoff v. Housing Authority of City of Dallas (Dallas CA 1953) 261 S.W.2d 224, 228, no writ. Also see Herrin Transportation Co. v. Pursley (Beaumont CA 1968) 424 S.W.2d 660, 664, NRE.

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574 S.W.2d 240, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brazos-graphics-inc-v-arvin-industries-inc-texapp-1978.