City of Henderson v. Fields

194 S.W. 1003, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 445
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 9, 1917
DocketNo. 1740.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 1003 (City of Henderson v. Fields) 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 Henderson v. Fields, 194 S.W. 1003, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 445 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

*1004 WILLSON, O. J.

This was a suit by ap-pellee against appellant for damages for personal injury she suffered as a result of a fall she sustained in attempting to cross a ditch situated about a block from the public square within appellant’s corporate limits. The appeal is from a judgment in her favor.

The ditch referred to ran from north to south on the west side of High street, and crossed the sidewalk on the north side of East street. It waa 2 or 3 feet deep, about 1 foot wide at the bottom, and 3 or 4 feet wide at the top. About 2 o’clock of the morning of April 4, 1914, appellee, in going from the home of a sick neighbor on East street, west of High street, to her own home on East street, east of High street, fell into the ditch, and as a result of the fall was seriously and permanently injured. Appellee was accompanied by Mrs. Wood and Mrs. Crim. They were on the sidewalk on the north side of East street. They knew the location of the ditch, and that they would have to cross it to get to their homes, but on account of the darkness could not see it as they approached it. They were proceeding carefully, holding each other’s hands, appel-lee a short distance in advance of her companions, when they reached the ditch-. Testifying as a witness, appellee said:

“It was dark. You couldn’t see your haud before you, couldn’t see anything- in front of you, and the only way we could get along was by staying as close together as we could. We were feeling our way along the best we could to get to this place, and just before we got there I told Mrs. Wood to be careful, because it -would be terrible (she was a large woman) if .-she fell in that hole, or ditch rather; and as I -went to speak to her about it, I still had bold ■ of lief hand, I got to the edge of the ditch, just feeling along, and I went down. Just as my foot went down and in the ditch I went down; dliat seems to be as near as I can recollect — suspended in the air. I don’t think I ever bit the '.bottom until I hit it finally in falling.”

The ditch was dug by employSs of appellant about a year before the accident occurred. .I’lank thrown across it had served as a bridge for crossing over it, but some time before the night when appellee fell the plank had been removed, and the only way it could .be crossed at the time she was injured was ±o step or jump across or to go down one of its sides and up the other.

On special issues submitted to them the jury found: (1) That appellant was negligent in permitting the ditch to be in the condition it was in; (2) that its negligence was the proximate cause of the injury to appel-lee ; (3) that the injury she suffered — broken hip bone — was permanent; (4) that $4,000 would compensate her for the injury; (5) that appellee was not guilty of contributory negligence; (6) that appellant had notice of the condition of the ditch before the time appellee was injured; (7) that the condition of the ditch was not “caused by any other person or persons except officers of the city government.”

It seems that the jury also found on issues submitted .to them at appellant’s request: (X) That appellee knew of the condition of the crossing; (2) that there was no better and safer way than the one she chose to go to her home; (3) that the condition of the ditch was not caused by some other person, than those of the appellant’s officers without its knowledge and consent; (4) that before the accident occurred, “taking into consideration the length of time it had been incorporated, the number, length, and condition of the sidewalks to repair, and the amount of funds it had with which to make the repairs,” appellant had not used ordinary care to put the sidewalk appellee was walking upon in an “ordinarily safe condition” at the place where it crossed the ditch; (5) that the condition of the ditch was not due to unusually heavy rains; (6) that appellee at the time she fell was not suffering from any physical defect which was the proximate cause of her falling. We say it seems that the jury made the findings just cited. We find answers to the questions submitting the issues written on the papers containing the requests to submit them and following the questions, indicating such findings to have been made; but the answers do not appear to have been signed by the foreman of the jury, or otherwise identified as answers made by them to the questions, except that it was recited in the judgment that the answers were made by them. On the findings the court rendered judgment in appellee’s favor against appellant for $4,-000.

It is insisted that the findings should be “wholly set aside, disregarded, and held for naught,” because the answers written on the papers containing issues submitted at appellant’s request were not signed by the foreman of the jury. It has been held that the statute (article 1977, Vernon’s Statutes) which requires the verdict to be signed by the foreman is directory, and that an objection >to the verdict on that ground, made after it was received and the jury discharged, comes too late. Dunlap v. Milling Co., 43 Tex. Civ. App. 269, 95 S. W. 43; Crosby v. Stevens, 184 S. W. 705. Appellant’s objection that the findings in question were not so signed was made for the first time in its motion for a new trial in the court below. But if it appeared that appellant had promptly objected to the verdict on the ground stated, and that its objection had been overruled, it would not be a reason for setting aside the findings of the jury on other issues submitted to them. The findings of the jury on such other issues were signed by the foreman of the jury, and covering, as they did, all the material issues made by the testimony, were a sufficient basis for a judgment. The fact that it did not appear in the way the statute directed that the jury had made findings on immaterial issues, or on issues not made by testimony submitted to them at *1005 appellant’s request, or on issues which, were a mere repetition of those submitted to them by the court at his own instance, would not be a reason for setting aside findings made by them and authenticated as directed by the statute on the material issues of the case. As shown in the statement above, the findings made by the jury and properly authenticated were that in permitting the ditch to be in the condition it was in at the time ap-pellee fell into it appellant was guilty of negligence which, without fault on her part, proximately caused the injury she suffered, to her damage in the sum of $4,000. These findings authorized the judgment rendered by the court.

Appellant insists further, however, that the findings that it was guilty of negligence and that appellee was not guilty of contributory negligence proximately causing the injury were without the support of evidence.

Appellant does not deny that it owed to appellee the duty to use ordinary care to keep the sidewalk where it crossed the ditch in a reasonably safe condition for the use she was making of it at the time she was injured; but, in support of its contention that the evidence was not sufficient to show it had failed in the performance of that duty, insists that it was not incorporated until 1911, and argues that the time intervening between the date of its incorporation and 1914, when appellee was injured, was not sufficient in which to enable it to provide funds for the purpose and place the crossing in a safe condition.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 1003, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-henderson-v-fields-texapp-1917.