City of Abilene v. Fillmon

342 S.W.2d 227, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1899
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1960
Docket3601
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 342 S.W.2d 227 (City of Abilene v. Fillmon) 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
City of Abilene v. Fillmon, 342 S.W.2d 227, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1899 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

Mrs. Ava N. Fillmon brought this suit for damages against the City of Abilene. Plaintiff alleged that she sustained serious personal injuries as a result of a fall in the alley back of her house while fleeing from wasps which attacked her as she was attempting to repair her back fence. She alleged that the city was guilty of negligence in constructing, maintaining and allowing a ridge of dirt to remain at the edge of the improved portion of the alley; that in attempting to escape from the wasps she fell across the ridge and broke her hip, and that the negligence of the city was the proximate cause of her injuries. The case was tried before a jury and based upon the verdict, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of $4,650. The City of Abilene has appealed.

Points of error urged by appellant are that the court erred in overruling its motion for summary judgment because (1) the claim and notice of injury filed by appellee was insufficient; that the judgment should be reversed and rendered for appellant because (2) there was a material variance between the notice filed by appellee and the facts she alleged and proved at the trial, and (3) there was no evidence of probative force to support the findings of the jury that appellant was guilty of negligence proximately causing appellee’s injuries.

*229 Appellant also urges (4) that the evidence was insufficient to support the findings of the jury.

Chapter 30, section 31-1 of the code of the City of Abilene provides:

Notice,, Within Thirty Days.
“Before the City of Abilene shall be liable for personal injuries of any kind, the person injured or someone in his behalf shall give the Mayor or the Board of Commissioners of said City notice in writing of such injury within thirty days after the same has been sustained, stating specifically in such notice when, where and how the injury occurred, and the apparent extent thereof, and the failure to so notify the City within the time and manner specified shall exonerate, excuse, and exempt the City from all liability whatsoever.”

Appellee’s injury occurred on August 6, 1957. Less than 30 days later on August 24, 1957, appellee filed notice with the city in the form of a letter substantially as follows :

“I live at 1209 Cedar Street here in the City of Abilene and on the 6th of August of this year, I went out in my alley to see about what the City employees were doing.
“When I got out in the alley, I stumbled over a high furrow that the city employees had left after going down the alley with a blade. The fall caused me to break my hip and I am presently in St Ann’s hospital with doctor’s bills and hospital bills piling up that I am wholly unable to pay. * ⅜ *

Mrs. Fillmon’s notice to the City of Abilene was in writing and delivered to the Mayor and Commissioners as provided by the code. It advised the city when, where and how her injury occurred and the apparent nature and extent of her injury. The notice advised the city that her injury occurred (1) on August 6, 1957, (2) “in my alley”, (3) that she “stumbled over a high furrow that the city employees had' left after going down the alley with a blade”, and that the fall caused her to break her hip and to incur extensive medical and hospital expenses. The notice of injury delivered to the city was in substantial compliance with the city code and we overrule appellant’s contention that it was insufficient as a matter of law.

Appellant also urges that there was a material variance between the notice of injury received by the city and the facts alleged and proved by Mrs. Fillmon. The variance relied upon by appellant is that Mrs. Fillmon stated in her notice that she sustained a fall and was injured by stumbling over “a high furrow” in her alley “that the city employees left after going down the alley with a blade”, while she alleged in her petition that she either slipped or tripped on a “ridge” in the alley, and that she and her witnesses by their testimony described the condition of the alley which caused her fall and injury as a “ridge, levee, knoll or embankment”. In our opinion this contention is not well taken. There is no material difference between a “ridge” and a “high furrow” left by the blade of a road grader. A description of the defect causing injury is not by specific language required to be included in the notice provided for by the code of the City of Abilene. The necessity for the description of such defect was by reason of the requirement for a statement of “how the injury occurred”. The statement of how the injury occurred was with sufficient accuracy to give the city ample opportunity to investigate the accident while the facts were fresh and conditions were substantially the same. This is the purpose of notice requirements such as here involved. The variation in the facts as described in the notice of injury and as shown in appellee’s allegations and proof is not of a material nature. Actually there is no variance at all but the same thing is said in different words *230 which have substantially the same meaning. The variance is not of such a nature as to handicap the city in the defense of a case against it or to deprive the city of any of the benefits contemplated by Chapter 30, section 31-1 of the code.

We next consider points bearing upon the questions of whether there is any evidence and whether the evidence is sufficient to support the findings that appellant was guilty of negligence proximately causing Mrs. Fillmon’s fall and resulting injury. The jury found that there was a caliche or gravel ridge in the alley, that Mrs. Fillmon tripped on or fell across it, that she thereby received injuries, that appellant knew or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known of the ridge, that appellant was guilty of negligence in allowing the ridge to remain in the alley and that such negligence was a proximate cause of Mrs. Fill-mon’s injury.

The evidence shows that Mrs. Fillmon did fall and sustain injury in the alley at the rear of her home. The alley was 20 feet wide, dedicated, accepted and for many years used by adjacent property owners and the public, and has been continuously supervised and maintained by the City of Abilene. For some time prior to Mrs. Fill-mon’s injury in August of 1957 the alley had been partially hard surfaced with gravel or caliche. Utility lines for water, gas, electricity and telephone were in the alley and also gas and water heaters. Ordinances required all occupants of buildings in the city to deposit their trash and garbage in receptacles at alley entrances.

There was ample evidence that there was a “ridge” or “furrow” in the alley behind Mrs. Fillmon’s property which ran approximately the full length of the alley and about two or two and a half feet from the fence at the rear of appellee’s lot. The ridge was described by witnesses as being about 12 to 14 inches high, about 2 feet wide at the bottom and 4 to 6 inches wide at the top. Pictures taken two or three days after the accident were introduced in evidence and substantially corroborated the description given by the witnesses.

There was ample evidence that the city had knowledge, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known, of the existence of the ridge. The effect of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
342 S.W.2d 227, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-abilene-v-fillmon-texapp-1960.