Burrell Engineering & Construction Co. v. Grisier

189 S.W. 102, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 990
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1916
DocketNo. 8405. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 102 (Burrell Engineering & Construction Co. v. Grisier) 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
Burrell Engineering & Construction Co. v. Grisier, 189 S.W. 102, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 990 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The Burrell Engineering & Construction Company, as contractors, erected a building in the city of Wichita Falls. An elevator was constructed at the side of the building for the purpose of hoisting material used in- the building. The car upon which the material was elevated worked between four posts, and was raised and lowered by means of a cable, the movement of which was controlled by an engine. The cable wound around a drum, and the engineer by means of a lever operated by his foot, could cause the cable to wind or unwind around the drum, and thus raise or lower the elevator car or cage. Fred Grisier was employed by the company as ground foreman in charge of other .employes who gathered and mixed material for making concrete used in the construction of the building. When the concreté was ready for such use, it‘ yas placed upon the elevator and hoisted to the men who were spreading it. Grisier, for some purpose incident to the duties of his employment, rode up on the elevator upon one of the trips carrying concrete, and after the concrete was unloaded he started down upon the elevator, when the same Slipped and fell with him, a distance of some 30 or 40 feet, resulting in his injuries. He instituted this suit against the company for damages for such injuries, and from a judgment in his favor, for $3,000, the defendant has prosecuted this writ of error.

In answer to special issues the jury found that the defendant did not' exercise ordinary care to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work and reasonably safe means to get to and from the different places where his duties called him; that defendant did' not use ordinary care to keep the elevator and hoisting engine in a reasonably safe state of repair; and that defendant’s negligence so found was the proximate cause óf plaintiff’s injuries. The jury also found that at the time of his injuries plaintiff had no actual knowledge that the hoisting engine was out of repair or the danger incident to riding thereon at the time, and that a person of ordinary-prudence engaged as the plaintiff was would not have known of such dangers. The negligence of the defendant so found by the jury was alleged in plaintiff’s petition hs a basis for the recovery. ’

While plaintiff was on the witness stand he was asked by his counsel whether or not he was a man of family, to which be answered that he had a wife and two babies. After the question had been asked and answered, counsel for defendant objected, on the ground that it was irrelevant and immaterial. The objection was sustained by the court, after which ruling counsel for the plaintiff, in the presence of the jury, made the following remarks to the court:

“I think the jury has a right to know whether or not a man is married. It is not prejudicial — that could not injure anybody. I never heard of a case being reversed on an error like that, because a man testified that he ^vas a married man in any kind of a lawsuit.”

A bill of exception was reserved by defendant’s counsel to the remarks of plaintiff’s counsel, as well as to the' testimony given by the plaintiff, but it does not appear that any request was made of the court to exclude the remarks. It is well settled by the authorities that such testimony in a suit of this character is inadmissible and so prejudicial in some instances as to constitute reversible error, notwithstanding its exclusion by the court. M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Thomas, 132 S. W. 974; M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Hannig, 91 Tex. 347, 43 S. W. 508. It is also well settled that not every error committed in the trial of a cáse will cause a reversal, and that if it reasonably appears from the record that an error probably .did not operate to the prejudice of the complaining party, an assignment of error addressed thereto will be overruled. As the trial judge in the present instance Instructed the jury not to consider the testimony complained of, then, in the absence of some showing in the record that such testimony and remarks of counsel were probably considered to the prejudice of the defendant, it must be presumed that the instructions'of the court were obeyed. Furthermore, defendant’s counsel did not request the court to exclude the remarks of plaintiff’s counsel, which doubtless would have been done upon request for another instruction in writing in the submission of the ease to- the jury not to consider such testimony and remarks. After a careful consideration of the evidence relating to defendant’s alleged liability and the injuries sustained by the plaintiff, and the amount of damages allowed by the jury,, we are unable to say that the evidence introduced and the remarks of counsel referred to would be a sufficient ground for reversal of the judgment, and, accordingly, the assignment of error now under discussion is. overruled. Smyth v. Caswell, 67 Tex. 567, 4 S. W. 848; Wells Fargo v. Benjamin, 165 S. W. 120; Id., 179 S. W. 513.

W. D. Pierson, a witness for the plaintiff, .testified that about a week before the accident he heard one of the employes request permission of Leo Jones, defendant’s superintendent in charge of the work, to repair the engine which he told Jones at the *104 time was in bad shape, and to which request Jones replied:

“No, we are going to make it go until we get through this job before we do anything with it if we can.”

The defendant objected to that testimony in so far as it related to the statement of the employé making the request of Jones, upon the following grounds:

“In the first place it is hearsay, in the second place it is coming from an absolutely unknown source, the witness not undertaking to tell how it was, who it was, or what the man was doing, even with any degree of certainty who made the remark, and we have no opportunity whatever of contradicting any such testimony as that, any cross-examination — the witness who made the remark — we are left in the dark as to who he was and whether it was true or untrue.”

In the one and only proposition submitted under an assignment of error to the ruling of the court in admitting the testimony, the only ground of objection urged is that it was hearsay. The reply by Jones to the request could not be understood without proof of the request, and as no objection was urged to such reply, proof of the request was admissible to explain its meaning. Furthermore, as there was other evidence tending to show defects in the engine at the time the request was made, the statement of the unknown employé that the engine was in bad order, made in connection with his request for permission to repair it, was admissible to show that notice of such defect was then brought to the knowledge of Jones, the superintendent. In the absence of a request for an instruction to the jury limiting the effect of such testimony to the purpose alone for which it was admissible, appellant cannot complain that the jury may have considered it as proof that the engine was in an unsafe condition.

By other assignments of error it is insisted that the evidence is wholly insufficient to show what caused the elevator to fall; insufficient to support a finding of negligence alleged in the petition as a basis for the recovery; that the only evidence from which such negligence could possibly be inferred was that it showed that the accident happened, which would be insufficient; that if any negligence was proven, there was no evidence to show any causal connection between it and the accident in controversy.

J. E.

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189 S.W. 102, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrell-engineering-construction-co-v-grisier-texapp-1916.