Cameron Mill and Elevator Co. v. Anderson

78 S.W. 971, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 229, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 522
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 971 (Cameron 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
Cameron Mill and Elevator Co. v. Anderson, 78 S.W. 971, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 229, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 522 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

In this case appellee sped for the loss of the value of services of her minor son, F. M. Anderson, resulting from injuries received by him in failing into an unguarded excavation in an unlighted street in the city of Fort Worth, made for" the appellant company by an independent contractor, and for the value of services in nursing and for expenses of medical' treatment rendered necessary by reason of said injuries. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of $7500.

The circumstances leading up to and attending the injury and that relate to the undertaking of the independent contractor are stated in the opinion, not yet published, in the companion c^se of. the Cameron Mill and Elevator Company v. F. M. Anderson, decided by us on December 19, 1903, 2 Texas Law Journal, 432. We also there give our conclusions to the effect that appellant is liable under the circumstances for the negligence of its independent contractor in leaving the pit in question unprotected, and hence these matters need not be here repeated. We therefore overrule all assignments of error involving the vital question of appellant’s liability, and devote ourselves to questions presented that pertain to the regularity of the trial, which terminated April 14, 1903.

Appellee, among other things, alleged in substance that at the date of the injuries alleged her said son was 14 years of age; that the value of his services from the date of his injuries to the date of filing her petition was $500; that during the same period liability for necessary medical treatment to the extent of $750 had been incurred, and that the value of appellee’s services in nursing her son was $1500. The further allegations in these particulars were, “That in the future plaintiff will be compelled to devote her entire time and attention to nursing and *230 caring for her said son, and will be compelled to incur great expense in caring for him, and in the payment of doctor’s and medical bills, and will also lose the value of the services of her said son, in all to her damage in the further sum of fifteen thousand dollars, for all of which she now sues.”

There is evidence to the effect that the minor, P. M. Anderson, was. seriously and permanently injured on the night of May 10, 1902, and that his earnings of about $20 per month had been regularly delivered to appellee. There was also evidence tending to show that medicines, medical services and careful and continuous nursing would be necessary as-theretofore during the remaining minority of the injured boy, the appellee testifying that her services in this respect were worth $1.50 per day and $1.50 per night. Appellee is not a professional nurse, and but one other witness gave the value of such services. This was a Dr. Me-Morris, whose testimony is objected to as shown by the following bill of' exception: “Be it remembered that upon the trial of the above styled and numbered cause Dr. McMorris, a witness for plaintiff, on direct examination was asked: ‘Do you know what the reasonable value of services was for nurses in Port Worth?’ Witness answered: ‘I think the’ rule is about—’ Defendant’s counsel interrupted with a question. Plaintiff’s counsel asked: ‘Pirst, do you know?’ Witness answered: ‘Well, I can tell what I have heard several nurses state.’ Defendant’s, counsel requested that the witness answer the question ‘yes or no.’ Witness answered: T have never hired any—.’ Plaintiff’s counsel interrupted and asked: ‘How do you get your information?’ Witness answered : ‘Three dollars a day.’ Defendant’s counsel said: ‘We take an. exception; the witness has stuck in the three dollars a day in spite of objections.’ The court said: ‘State first whether or not—you must, qualify—whether or not you know the value.’ Witness answered: ‘Well, I am going to say this: I only know from what I have been told.’ Defendant’s counsel moved to exclude the answer until the witness was qualified; that he has already answered three dollars a day. The court said: T will exclude that if I.decide he is not sufficiently qualified; for the present the answer is excluded from your consideration as to the amount.’ By plaintiff’s attorney: Q. ‘Do you know the value of' professional services, reasonable and ordinary value of professional nurse in the town?’ Objected to; objection sustained. Q. ‘Do you know the value of the services of a nurse here, the reasonable ‘ value of the services of a nurse?’ A. ‘I can answer this way: I have never hired any nurse, but I have talked to several, and know what they said their regular price was.’ Objected to as hearsay. Court: ‘I say the witness should answer that he knows what is customarily paid nurses; I think that would qualify him; I don’t understand him to answer it that way.’ Q. ‘It matters not how you get your information or the information that you have; are you acquainted with the reasonable value of the services of a nurse to care for him?’ Objected to because counsel undertakes to’ say it makes no difference how he got his information. Court: T think *231 the witness has already answered qualifying the question; what he knows about it what he was told.’ Q. ‘From that information do you know the value of services ?’ Witness answered: ‘Three dollars a day.’ Defendant objected because proper predicate had not been laid in the way of qualification. Court: ‘Unless the qualification is more extensive, better laid than at the present time, I think the objection is good.’ Q. ‘Have you made any inquiry; have you had any nurses; know any nursing patients ?’ A. ‘Yes, sir.’ Q. ‘Do you know what has been paid around, what they charge ?’ A. ‘One young fellow that was—.’ •Q. ‘Need not give the amount. Do you know what they have received for their services?’ A. T know what they told me; yes, sir, three dollars.’ Defendant’s counsel: ‘We ask your honor to instruct the witness not to volunteer.’ Court: ‘Don’t give the amount.’ Witness: ‘I didn’t know that.’ Q. ‘Now, without first stating what they have received, I will ask you if you made an inquiry ?’ Defendant’s counsel : ‘Does that “three dollars” go in this time ?’ Court: ‘Gentlemen of the jury, you will not consider at the present time the amount the doctor stated.’ Q. ‘You have been practicing here in Fort Worth?’ A. ‘Yes, sir.’ Q. ‘Are there nurses that go around and nurse the sick here?’ A. ‘Yes, sir.’ Q. ‘Have you conversed with them about what they received—don’t state what they received.’ A. ‘Yes, sir.’ Q. ‘Have you had any occasions to employ professional nurses ?’ A. ‘Yes, sir.’ Q. ‘Have you investigated to find what the usual price for nurses is for the sick, any that you have hired for yourself ?’ A. T can tell you what a fellow told me that waited on Hampton—.’ Q. ‘No, not that; do you know what nurses reasonably receive ?’ A. ‘Yes, sir.’ Defendant objected. Q. ‘Now, what is the reasonable value—.’ Defendant excepted. Q. ‘From what you know, then, do you think you know the reasonable value of their services?’ Defendant’s counsel: ‘It is not a question of thinking, but of knowledge.’ Q. ‘Do you know the reasonable value of the services of a person to wait on the sick?’ Court: ‘Yes or no.’ A. ‘Yes, sir.’ Q. ‘Do you, yes or no, without stating what it is?’ Court: ‘He answered yes.’ Witness: ‘Well, yes.’ Q. ‘Well, then, what is it?’ A. ‘Well, the rule is from two and a half to three dollars a day.’ And the defendant then and there excepting, now tenders this its bill of exception and asks that same be approved and made of record in this cause, which is done.”

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 971, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 229, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-mill-and-elevator-co-v-anderson-texapp-1904.