Dollahite-Levy Co. v. Phillips

99 S.W.2d 688
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1936
DocketNo. 4668
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 99 S.W.2d 688 (Dollahite-Levy Co. v. Phillips) 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
Dollahite-Levy Co. v. Phillips, 99 S.W.2d 688 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice.

The appellees, Mrs. Ida G. Phillips and her husband, C. E. Phillips, instituted this suit in the district court of Harris county against the appellant, Dollahite-Levy Company, to recover damages for personal injuries claimed to have been sustained by Mrs. Ida G. Phillips on account of the alleged negligence of appellant.

The appellees alleged in substance that appellant was engaged in operating a department store in the city of Houston, devoting several floors of a building to such business; that on the third floor was a beauty shop operated by A. Pizzo in connection with the store, and as a part of the service and for the accommodation of its feminine patrons the appellant maintained on the third floor rest rooms for ladies, each inclosed separately and with a separate entrance; that about February 13, 1933, Ida G. Phillips was in appellant’s department store as a customer and went to Pizzo’s beauty shop on the third floor, received a hair cut, and thereafter entered one of the rest rooms for ladies, attempted to seat herself on the commode, but the hinges or fastenings of the wooden seat were broken and defective and the seat slipped, throwing appellee violently to the floor, and said seat came in contact with her genitalia, resulting in an incision in the left wall of the vagina and bruising the glands on the left .side and center thereof.

She sets out her injuries and suffering in detail, all of which she says was due to the negligence of appellant, and the specific negligence alleged will be hereinafter stated.

The appellant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and pleaded numerous acts of contributory negligence.

The case was tried with a jury, all of the special issues submitted by the court were answered in favor of the appellee, and judgment was accordingly entered thereon for her in the sum of $15,000.

The record is voluminous, hut under the findings of the jury we consider it unnecessary to make any extended statement of the pleadings or evidence.

The record discloses that appellee was thirty-five years of age, and was a teacher in one of the public schools of Plouston. That she had, in 1922, undergone an operation for the removal of her gall bladder. That the following year she had an operation to remove adhesions resulting from the gall bladder operation. Later she had an operation for sinus trouble. Tn 1924 she suffered pyelitis, with pus on the kidneys. In 1930 she had an operation for the removal of her tonsils. In 1932 she had an operation for the removal of her uterus because of a fibroid tumor. Just prior to the accident in February, 1933, she was suffering with external hemorrhoids,, and was under treatment therefor. In the summer of 1933 she submitted to an operation in which one of her ovaries and Fallopian tubes were removed, and in 1934 it was discovered that some adhesions had resulted from the ovarian operation and she underwent another operation to relieve such adhesions. Notwithstanding the numerous major operations she had undergone prior to the injury involved in this suit, she had resumed her duties in school in September of 1932, and had lost no time until February, 1933, but shortly thereafter she began to suffer pain, her weight and strength began to decline, she lost time from school, and while controverted, the testimony tends to show that some of the operations she had undergone since February 13, 1933, were caused by the injury she claims to have suffered on that date.

The appellant assails as error the action of the court in refusing to direct a, verdict in its behalf because (a) the in[690]*690sufficiency of the testimony to show appel-lee was a customer of appellant at the time she entered the rest room; (b) the evidence conclusively shows that she was not a customer of appellant, but of Pizzo’s beauty shop, and there is no evidence disclosing that the customers of such shop were invited by appellant to use its rest room; (c) that she was not using the rest room as an invitee but as a mere licensee, and there is no evidence of willful or intentional wrong; (d) because the evidence is insufficient to show that appellant knew of the defect alleged, or that it had existed for such a time as to impute knowledge thereof; (e) because there is no allegation that appellant had knowledge of such defect. Complaint • is also made of other factual elements that appellee was required to establish by a preponderance of the testimony in order to recover.

We shall refrain from reciting the testimony in the record, but in view of the jury’s findings and the law, we do not believe the testmony was so uncertain, unsatisfactory, and conflicting as to require the court to direct a verdict in behalf of appellant because of the insufficiency of the testimony.

“One of the special provinces of the jury is to reconcile, if they can, conflicts and contradictions between the testimony of the witnesses and ‘adjust inconsistencies in the evidence of a witness in case they develop.’” J. Tom Bowers v. Aubra Bowers et al. (Tex.Civ.App.) 99 S.W.(2d) 334. See, also, Rose v. O’Keefe (Tex.Com.App.) 39 S.W.(2d) 877.

It is also the settled law that the court should not direct a verdict “if, discarding all adverse evidence, and giving credit to all evidence favorable to the plaintiff, and indulging every legitimate conclusion favorable to the plaintiff which might have been drawn from the facts proved, a jury might have found in favor of the plaintiff.” Dendy v. Cockerham et ux. (Tex.Civ.App.) 82 S.W.(2d) 756, 758. See, also, Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Ritchie (Tex.Civ.App.) 75 S.W.(2d) 942; Jackson v. Langford (Tex.Civ.App.) 60 S.W.(2d) 265; Gross v. Shell Pipeline Corp. (Tex.Civ.App.) 48 S.W.(2d) 377; and Bowers v. Bowers, supra.

The appellant assails as erroneous special •issue No. 3, and the explanation given in •connection therewith, because the court did not limit the jury therein to a consideration of the defect — or negligence — pleaded by appellee and to which she is restricted for a recovery, but permits the jury to speculate upon the form or shape of the seat, the insufficiency of the material therein to avoid cracks, splintering, slivering, or its general condition relative to any and- all defects that might have existed.

Special issue No. 3 submitted by the court of which complaint is made is as follows:

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the toilet which plaintiff was attempting to use, if she was attempting to use one, had a defect ? * * *
“In connection with this issue you are instructed that the word ‘defect’ is defined to mean a lack or absence of something essential to the excellence or completeness of a thing; imperfection; fault, want.”

This issue was answered in the affirmative.

Appellees in their petition alleged the defect which constituted the negligence on which they relied for recovery in the following language:

“Defendant was negligent in permitting the hinges or fastenings of the wooden seat of the commode to become defective so that said wooden seat could become detached from the commode and fall to the floor.”

'The other allegations relating to permitting such defect to continue, the use of the commode in such condition, failure to lock the door to the rest room, etc., are all predicated upon the particular allegation of negligence above quoted.

The record shows that shortly after the alleged injury, .the appellee went to the office of Dr. J. M.

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99 S.W.2d 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dollahite-levy-co-v-phillips-texapp-1936.