Dixon v. Robinson

276 S.W. 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1925
DocketNo. 2531.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 770 (Dixon v. Robinson) 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
Dixon v. Robinson, 276 S.W. 770 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

This suit was brought in the district court of Wilbarger county against the Dixon Dry Goods Company, a corporation, J. A. Dixon, and O. A. Swinburn, defendants, by Roy H. Robinson, Lucile Jones, and her husband Joe Jones, adult children of J. A. Robinson, deceased, for themselves, and by Mrs. M. F. Robinson, the surviving wife of the deceased, for-herself and as next friend of Mary and Martha Robinson, the minor daughters of herself and her deceased husband, and' also as next friend of Robin and *771 Florence Robinson, tbe two minor children of tbe deceased husband, J. A. Robinson.

Plaintiffs allege that o.n March 8, 1924, the Dixon Dry Goods Company, J. A. Dixon, and O. A. Swinburn, the latter acting for himself and as agent for his codefendants, were engaged in removing the foundation walls of a previously burned brick building on certain named lots in the town of Vernon, and that said lots were situated at the intersection of Main and Texas streets, and constituted one of the main business corners in the city, and was surrounded by business houses where large numbers of people congregated; that the defendants while engaged in removing said foundation walls carelessly and negligently placed or caused to be placed under the walls dynamite and had same discharged in a careless and negligent manner, and by the explosion of the dynamite pieces of brick and other hard substances were thrown great distances with great force, and the defendants thereby put in operation a dangerous instrumentality which imperiled the lives of people near said premises. On said alleged date the husband of Mrs. M. F. Robinson and the father.of the other plaintiffs was engaged in the mercantile business in a building about 150 feet from where the dynamite was being .exploded, and while seated at his desk in the rear of his building, without any warning and without taking any precaution against inflicting injuries, the defendants negligently exploded a charge of dynamite, and a brick bat thrown by the explosion thereof struck J. D. Robinson on the head, crushing his skull, from the effects of which he died June 14,1924. Plaintiffs sufficiently allege the negligence of defendants, the age of deceased, and his earning capacity, and seek the recovery of $50,000 damages.

The defendants Dixon Dry Goods Company and J. A. Dixon answered by general demurrer, general denial, and specifically denied that their codefendant, O. A. Swinburn, or any one else engaged in the work of removing the foundation or walls from the lots described, were their employes, servants, or agents, and deny that the Dixon Dry Goods Company was the owner or interested in the building when burned, or the. foundation at the time of the alleged accident, specifically ■alleging that said company was interested in neither the ownership of the lots, the foundation, or the work of removing same.

They specially answered that O. A. Swin-burn was and had been long prior to the alleged accident an independent contractor, engaged in constructing buildings and structures of various kinds, and especially of brick and like material, and preparing for the construction thereof, and was known to the defendant J. A. Dixon as such, who prior to the alleged accident contracted with the said Swin-burn for a valuable consideration, as an independent contractor, to remove the foundation from the site of the burned building, and to do the work of excavating the old foundation preparatory to the erection of a new building on said site, and, if the accident occurred as alleged, it was in the prosecution of said work by O. A. Swinburn as an independent contractor; that neither of the defendants were present nor had anything to do with the work nor the manner thereof, nor any control or direction thereof, but that such work was under the entire and exclusive direction and control of their codefendant, O. A. Swinburn, as independent contractor, and neither the Dixon Dry Goods Company nor J. A. Dixon were experienced in such work and relied entirely upon their codefend-ant as such independent contractor to properly carry out his contract of removing the foundation in which neither of them were interested, except in the result to be accomplished.

The defendant O. A. Swinburn answered plaintiffs’ cause of action by general demurrer and general denial, and in reply to the answer of his codefendants filed his general denial.

The ease was tried to a jury, and at the conclusion of the testimony the court peremptorily instructed a verdict in favor of the Dixon Dry Goods Company against 'all the plaintiffs, and in favor of all of the defendants against Roy H. Robinson, Ducile Jones, and Joe Jones,, to which action of the court no objection is urged.

The case as to the other plaintiffs and the other defendants was submitted on special issues, and, upon the findings of the jury to such issues as they answered, the court entered judgment against the defendants J. A. Dixon and O. A. Swinburn, jointly and severally, for the sum of $10,000, and apportioned said amount among the plaintiffs in conformity to the jury’s verdict.

The defendants J. A. Dixon and O. A. Swin-burn each filed his separate appeal bond, and the case is before us for review on the respective assignments of error urged by Said defendants in their respective briefs.

We will first dispose of the appeal of J. A. Dixon, who attacks as error by separate assignments the ruling of the trial court in refusing to give special issues Nos. 1, 2, and 3 requested by him, submitting to the jury certain alleged controverted issues of fact, the finding upon which issues by the jury would be decisive of whether or not O. A. Swinburn was engaged in removing the foundation walls of the building as an independent contractor, and, as such, directing and supervising the discharge of the dynamite which resulted in the injury to J. A. Robinson, from the effects of which he died.

In his answer, J. A. Dixon pleaded affirmatively, as a defense, that O. A. Swinburn was an independent contractor, and that he contracted with him as such to remove the foundation walls from the building site; that he had nothing to do with the work, the *772 method or manner thereof, nor any control or direction thereof; and that no authorized agent of his had any connection therewith, hut it was left entirely and exclusively to O. A. Swinbum, as an independent contractor.

Mr. Dixon testified, in substance, that he went with Mr. Swinburn to the building site, pointed out to him what he wanted done, and mentioned, among other things, the removal of the foundation walls, as well as the excavation of the site preparatory to the erection of a new building; that he employed Mr. Swinburn for a consideration of $750 to do the work; and that Mr. Swinburn was to determine the method and manner of doing the work, and have control and supervision thereof.-

Mr. Swinbum testified that he was employed by Mr. Dixon for the sum. of $750, not to remove the brick foundation walls of the old burned building, but to excavate the dirt on the building site a certain depth preparatory to the erection of a new building, but that his contract did not include the removal of the brick walls of the old foundation,

There is other testimony in the record tending to support the contention of each of these witnesses as to the contract between them, and a finding by the jury that the removal

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-robinson-texapp-1925.