Camerom Mill and Elevator Co. v. Anderson

78 S.W. 8, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 105, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 392
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 8 (Camerom Mill and Elevator Co. v. Anderson) 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
Camerom Mill and Elevator Co. v. Anderson, 78 S.W. 8, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 105, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 392 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

SPEER, Associate Justice.

By permission of the city council, appellant caused to be dug in one of the streets of the city of Fort Worth adjacent to its elevator plant, a hole some 34 feet long, 28 feet wide, and 12 or 14 feet deep. The excavation was made for the purpose of *106 putting in some underground storage tanks for fuel oil. Into this pit appellee, a boy of 13 years, fell and was seriously injured. The accident occurred about 9 o’clock at night, at a time when none of the workmen engaged in digging the pit was in or about the place. There were no lights or barricades or signals about it, and the street was dark. Appellee, who had no previous notice of the excavation, had either just mounted, or was in the act of mounting, his bicycle, to proceed up the street when he was precipitated into the pit and injured as aforesaid. The actual work of making the excavation was being done by one McFadden under a contract with appellant by the terms of which he had exclusive control of the work. ' Appellant did not know that the pit was not guarded or protected at night, and had never given the contractor any instructions upon that point, but understood that the-contractor was competent and experienced and took it for granted that, he would do what was necessary to make the work safe.

The appellee had a judgment for $10,500, from which this appeal is-prosecuted.

The question of paramount importance in the case arises out of appellant’s contention that since the work of making the excavation was. that of an independent contractor, it is -in nowise liable for his negligence in failing to put proper safeguards about the pit. There seems-to be an absence of authority at home and a contrariety of opinion abroad as to the law applicable to the state of facts here presented. But" we conclude that the better reason is against such contention, and. requires a holding in favor of appellant’s liability.

Ordinarily, we know that the principle respondeat superior does not. extend to cases of independent contracts, but it is not alone upon this-doctrine that we predicate liability. Indeed it may be doubted if the-doctrine of respondeat superior has any application. Appellant is not the superior of McFadden in the sense that it had any control over the-men or agencies employed in the work, but its liability rests upon the-broad ground that it can not knowingly set in operation causes dangerous to the persons of others without taking all reasonable precautions to-anticipate, obviate and prevent such probable consequence. In other-words, that appellant can not cause to be dug in a public street am excavation the necessary effect of which is to create an obstruction or-defect which would render the street dangerous for travel unless properly guarded, without being liable for such injuries as are the direct result of such work. In such case it is no defense that the work was-in the hands of a competent independent contractor.

In Thomas v. Harrington, 54 Atl. Rep., 286, Lord Cockburn is-quoted as saying: “There is an obvious difference between committing, work to a contractor to be executed, from which, if properly done, no-injurious consequences can arise, and ha'nding over to him work to be done from-which mischievous consequences will arise unless preventive measures are adopted. While it may be just to hold the party authorizing work in the former case exempt from liability for injury resulting' *107 from negligence which he had no reason to anticipate, there is, on the other hand, good ground for' holding him liable for injury caused by ah act certain to be attended with injurious consequences, if such consequences aré not in fact prevented, no matter through whose default the omission to take the necessary measures for such prevention may arise.” In the case cited, which is very similar to the one before us, the Supreme Court,of Hew Hampshire say: “Such an excavation in a street is a nuisance, because it renders public travel dangerous, and makes extra precautions necessary for the protection of travelers. Hence z it becomes the duty of the defendants who authorized and caused the ditch to be dug, to protect the public from the danger occasioned , thereby. They knew the work could not be done, in its reasonable and proper prosecution, without increasing the danger of public travel in the highway at that point. The danger arose directly from the work which they required to be done, and not from the negligent manner of its performance. . In such a case one can not avoid responsibility for the consequences naturally to be apprehended in the course of the performance of the work by employing another to do the work as an independent contractor.”

In Robbins v. Chicago, 4 Wall., 657, 18 Law Ed., 432,—a case of an unguarded area in a public street,—the Supreme Court of the United States tersely announce the rule of exemption and its exception in the following words:. “Where the obstruction or defect caused or created in the street is purely collateral to the work contracted to be done, and is entirely the result of the wrongful acts of the contractor or his workmen, the rule is that the employer is not liable; but where the obstruction or defect which occasioned the injury results directly from the acts which the contractor agrees and is authorized to do, the person who employs the contractor and authorizes him to do those acts is equally liable to the injured party.”

Chief Justice Haney, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court of South Dakota, in McCarrier v. Hollister, 89 N. W. Rep., 862, said: “The contract in the case at bar contemplated an excavation in one of the principal streets of the city of Sioux Falls. The work contracted for could not be done without creating a condition in the public thoroughfare from which mischievous consequences might reasonably be expected to arise unless preventive measures were adopted. An excavation for the purpose of constructing a sewer may not be unlawful, but it is certainly intrinsically dangerous, and unless properly guarded, liable to cause personal injuries. The nature of the work demands more than its proper performance. Digging the ditch and laying the pipe are not enough. Lights, barriers, or other safeguards are required during the progress of the work to protect persons from such accidents-as the one resulting in plaintiffs injury. Where the work contemplated by the contract is of such a nature that public safety requires something more to be done than the mere construction of the improvement, we think the owner of the property owes a duty to the public to- *108 see that proper safeguards are taken, and that, where such precautions are not taken, he should not escape liability for resulting injuries.”

To the same effect is the opinion of Chief Justice Parker, of the New York Court of Appeals, in Deming v. Terminal Railway, 61 N. E. Rep., 986, wherein he says: “I have thus called attention to the principal authorities relied upon by the appellant in support of his contention that Blake v. Ferris (5 N. Y., 48) is still the law for every question decided by it, and have pointed out the fact that not one of those cases presents one of the questions decided by the Blake case, namely, that a party having authority to make the public streets dangerous for passers-by may be relieved from the burden of guarding the place of danger in the street by letting the work to an independent contractor.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 8, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 105, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camerom-mill-and-elevator-co-v-anderson-texapp-1903.