City of Beaumont v. Silas

200 S.W.2d 690, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 687
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1947
DocketNo. 4411
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 200 S.W.2d 690 (City of Beaumont v. Silas) 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 Beaumont v. Silas, 200 S.W.2d 690, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 687 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

MURRAY, Justice. ■

This is an appeal by the City of Beaumont from a judgment of the district court of Jefferson county in favor of Man-child Silas for damages for personal injuries received by him while working as an employee of said City’s street and bridge department.

On July 1, 1941, appellee Manchild Silas was at work as a laborer in the street and bridge department of appellant City of Beaumont. The gang with which he was working was engaged in laying a new stretch of sewer line on Park street, connecting certain premises there with a main sewer line which served jointly as a storm sewer and sanitary sewer. In the course of this task, it became necessary to dig a ditch, tearing up in connection therewith a small portion of a concrete sidewalk and driveway. Concrete was used to replace the broken sidewalk and driveway, and in part also to back fill the sewer line. Ap-pellee was sent with other workmen on a truck to the city’s warehouse to procure some sacks of cement. While he was in the act of picking up a sack of cement to load it on the truck, other sacks of cement fell upon him from the stacked sacks in the warehouse and caused him serious ■bodily injuries, including the fracture of one of the lumbar segments of his spine.

The appellant city provided him with medical and hospital care and also with an operation upon his injured back. It also continued to carry him on its payroll from the time of his injury until he filed suit against,the city almost two years later. After his physical condition improved, he worked with his old gang occasionally but never with any great degree of regularity. During this time the City continued to pay him each two weeks about the same wages he had received when he was able to do full time work, without regard to the amount or character of work he actually performed during that time. The city engineer, under whose direction the employees of the street and bridge department worked, advised him shortly after he was hurt that he would not need a lawyer and that the city would take care of him as long as he was hurt. •

[692]*692The appellee in his first amended original petition alleged that the sacks of cement in the city’s warehouse were improperly stacked, that is, that the sacks of 'cement each weighing abopt 100 pounds were stacked one upon the other (instead of being cross-stacked) to a height of 15 sacks and alleged negligence on the part of the city in failing to inspect the stacking 'of such cement, in failing to have any one supervise and direct the removal of such cement, in failing to warn-the appellee of the dangers of the place in which he was working, in failing to require that the cement be stacked in a safe and secure manner, in failing to have some competent person examine the stacks of cement to determine whether they were safe, in not requiring that the cement sacks be first removed from the upper tiers of each' stack, and in requiring the appellee to work in such place which was unsafe. The appellee in his supplemental petition also pleaded, and later introduced in evidence, Section 70, Paragraph 2 of the charter of the City of Beaumont by which the city is empowered to “provide rules and regulations for maintaining employees when disabled while performing their duties.”

The city defended first by a plea in abatement, based upon Section 70, Subsection 31 of the charter of the City of Beaumont, which reads as follows:

“Written notice of personal injuries or property damage. Before the City of Beaumont shall be liable for damages of any kind, the person injured or whose property is damaged, or someone in his behalf, shall file with the Commission a notice in writing of such injury within sixty days after the same has been received, stating specifically in such notice when, where, and how the injury occurred and the extent thereof, and the names and addresses of any person or persons, if any, witnessing the same, if such names and addresses can be ascertained by reasonable diligence.”

It further alleged and it was admitted, that the appellee had never given any notice in writing to the City Commission of his injuries relied upon in his suit and had given no notice of tire matters as required by such Section 70, Subsection ,31 of the' charter of the City. The City further answered with numerous special exceptions, and general denial and special denials relating to its alleged negligence in regard to the stacking of the cement sacks. It also pleaded in bar Section 70, Subsection 31, above quoted; contributory negligence, unavoidable accident, and assumption of risk. It further pleaded in the alternative that the injuries received by the appellee, if any, were of temporary nature and that he had entirely recovered therefrom. It further pleaded in the alternative that the cement sacks in question were stacked by the WPA, an agency of the federal government, and it was not responsible for any injuries caused by the manner in which the cement was stacked. It further pleaded in the alternative that on the date appellee received his injuries he was employed by the city in constructing and maintaining its public sewerage system, and was thereby engaged in governmental activities of such city and that it was therefore not liable for any injuries received by him. The pleading of the appellant contained ‘ other matters of defense and by way of cross action against the appellee for money paid to him after his injuries, which matters were not brought up on appeal' and for that reason are not set out here in detail.

Upon a trial to a jury it was determined by the verdict of the jury,. in answer to special issues submitted, that a stack of cement sacks in the city’s warehouse fell, striking the appellee and injuring him; that in unstacking the cement appellee was working in a dangerous and unsafe place; that the city failed to have some competent person examine the cement stacks to determine whether they, were safe, that such failure was negligence and a proximate cause of appellee’s injuries; that the ap-pellee was so inexperienced in unstacking cement that he did not realize he was working in a dangerous and unsafe place; that the cement on which he was working was not stacked in the usual normal manner ; that 'the city failed to warn appellee that such place was dangerous and unsafe, that such failure' was negligence and a proximate cause of his injuries; that the city failed to.use ordinary care to require [693]

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W.2d 690, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-beaumont-v-silas-texapp-1947.