Bubble Up Bottling Co. v. Lewis

163 S.W.2d 875, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 410
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1942
DocketNo. 2275.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 875 (Bubble Up Bottling Co. v. Lewis) 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
Bubble Up Bottling Co. v. Lewis, 163 S.W.2d 875, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 410 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

E. R. Lewis brought this suit in Taylor County against J. M. Graham and W. G. Drummond, residents of Young County, *877 seeking to establish liability of the defendants, as partners doing business under the firm name of Bubble Up Bottling Company, for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff as the result of an explosion of a bottle of Bubble Up. Plaintiff, in his first amended original petition, alleged that the bottle which exploded “was bottled and distributed by the defendants with an excess quantity of pressure on the inside; that such pressure was greatly in excess of that required or needed for carbonated beverages and was of sufficient quantity to cause the bottle to explode when touched at a normal atmospheric temperature, and that such pressure was greater than the capacity of the bottle in question to withstand under the circumstances, and was greater than any such ordinary bottle could have withstood. Plaintiff says that the defendants were negligent in bottling said bottle of beverage with such excess quantity of pressure and that the defendants were negligent in delivering said bottle with such excess pressure to the plaintiff, and that each and all of such acts of negligence were the direct and proximate cause of the injuries and damages sustained by the plaintiff herein.”

The defendants, having duly filed their pleas of privilege, plaintiff, by controverting plea, sought to sustain venue under exceptions 9 and 23 to the general rule of venue. R.S.1925, Art. 1995, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. Art. 1995. In his controverting plea, and as relating to exception 9, plaintiff alleged that “The court has venue to try this cause under subdivision 9 of Art. 1995, R.S. of 1925, in that the defendants as alleged in plaintiff’s First Amended Original Petition did on or about the date alleged sell and deliver to this plaintiff a bottle of carbonated beverage known as Bubble Up, which had been manufactured' and bottled by the defendants and which said bottle contained an excess amount of pressure on the inside over and above any need or required amount for beverage purposes and in such quantity as to be beyond the capacity of the bottle in question to contain the same under ordinary temperature-conditions and when handled in the ordinary manner, and which said bottle of Bubble Up exploded from the pressure inside of said bottle while the plaintiff was handling the same in a careful manner and resulting in inflicting serious and painful injuries on the plaintiff from the fragments of glass produced by the explosion, the -manner of said explosion being more particularly described in plaintiff’s petition and the act of the defendants in delivering the said bottle to the plaintiff constitutes a crime, offense and trespass within the meaning of the venue law, and directly and proximately caused the injuries and damages complained of by the plaintiff herein.” (Italics ours.)

As relating to exception 23, plaintiff’s said controverting plea alleged that “the court has venue to try this cause under section 23 of the venue statutes in that the defendants constitute an association within the meaning of such statute and in that the cause of action or a part thereof arose in Taylor County, Texas, as fully set forth and described in plaintiff’s petition filed herein.”

From the judgment of the court overruling their pleas of' privilege, defendants have appealed. The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendants, the same as in the lower court.

We readily conclude that the venue was not, under the pleadings or evidence, sustained under exception 23. The suit as shown by plaintiff’s petition — “the best and all sufficient evidence of the nature of an action” — was not one against an association. An “association” as the word is used in exception 23 means, we think, a-legal entity which has the capacity to be sued as such. The assumption would seem a reasonable one that “association” -means the same as in R.S.1925, Art. 6133, which provides that “any * * * association, whether foreign or domestic, doing business in this State, may sue or be sued in any court of this State having jurisdiction of ,the subject matter in its * * * distinguishing name; and it shali not be necessary to make the individual *, * * members thereof parties to the suit.” According to plaintiff’s petition, defendants constituted a simple partnership. “In Texas, in harmony with the general common law rule, a partnership is suable and may sue, not as an entity by its firm name, but only by or in the names of the partners composing the firm.” 32 Tex.Jur. pr 375, sec. 100.

The next question is whether under the pleadings and evidence the judgment overruling the pleas of privilege was proper on the ground that the suit was one based upon a trespass committed in Taylor County. Plaintiff, as appears from *878 the above statement of the case, purportedly, or in form, alleged two grounds of recovery. In substance and effect, however, only one ground of recovery was alleged. If as alleged “defendants were negligent in bottling said bottle 'of beverage with-.such excess quantity of pressure” and if that was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, then the act of “delivering said bottle with such excess pressure to the plaintiff” was not an independent ground of recovery. The only wrong inherent in the latter action was the same wrong alleged in the first ground of recovery. To constitute the act of delivering the bottle to plaintiff negligence in itself independent of the negligence first charged and itself a proximate cause of the injuries, it would have been necessary for plaintiff to have alleged one or more additional elements; such, for example, as that delivery of the bottle was made with knowledge that it was dangerously overcharged. The allegations of plaintiff’s petition presented, of course, issues relating to liability and not to venue, except as the controverting plea by reiteration or adoption retendered such issues of liability as issues of venue. Plaintiff’s controverting plea stated that “plaintiff hereby refers to his First Amended Original Petition filed herein and adopts the same as part hereof and says that the matters and things stated in said petition are true and correct and by reason of such matters alleged this court has venue to try this cause.”

According to plaintiff’s controverting plea, only one of the two grounds of recovery in form alleged in the petition as constituting two different acts was averred to constitute a trespass, namely, selling and delivering the bottle of Bubble Up to plaintiff. Only by the reference to, and adoption of, the allegations of plaintiff’s petition does it appear that the manner of delivery asserted was by an alleged agent or the place of delivery was in Taylor County.. The petition alleged that “on or about said date, [October 12, 1940] the defend-' ants herein, through their agent, servant and employee, delivered a quantity of about 24 bottles of Bubble Up -to the plaintiff; that the Bubble Up was delivered to plaintiff’s place of business at Sth and Pine Streets where the said beverage was placed on the floor of plaintiff’s place of business,” etc. Other allegations showed such place of business to be in Taylor County. Thus did the pleadings, by express averments and the reasonable implications thereof, notify defendants that the only act relied upon to constitute a trespass was the act of delivering

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W.2d 875, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bubble-up-bottling-co-v-lewis-texapp-1942.