Fort Smith Gas Co. v. Lewis

150 S.W.2d 622, 202 Ark. 427, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 5, 1941
Docket4-6340
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 S.W.2d 622 (Fort Smith Gas Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fort Smith Gas Co. v. Lewis, 150 S.W.2d 622, 202 Ark. 427, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 169 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

Humphreys, J.

This suit was brought by appellee against appellant in the circuit court of Crawford county to recover $3,000 in damages for injuries received by him in falling over a board three or four feet high sticking in a hole it had dug in the traveled portion of a street in Alma, Arkansas, to find a leak in its gas line laid underground, without placing any light or signals on or near said board to warn the traveling public of the dangerous condition carelessly and negligently created by it.

Appellant filed an answer denying all the material allegations in the complaint and pleading as an affirmative defense contributory negligence on the part of appellee. The cause w.as submitted to a jury upon the pleadings, instructions of the court and the testimony introduced by the parties, resulting in a verdict and consequent judgment for $500 against appellant, from which is this appeal.

The undisputed evidence reflects that appellant was and is a corporation owning, transporting, selling’ and distributing natural gas in Crawford county, Arkansas, including the town of Alma, and in the course of the operation of one of its pipe lines in Alma at the intersection of highways 64 and 71 and in front of the Homer Wilmon Cafe it dug two holes in the concrete apron in front of said cafe extending* out to the concrete on the street hunting for a leak in the pipe line, and after filling the holes with dirt several inches above the concrete carelessly and negligently stuck boards upright in the filled holes extending three or four feet above the dirt and leaving them several nights without any lights or signals to warn the traveling public of the dangerous condition created by it; that on the night of August 11, 1940, about ten o’clock, appellee who was in the cafe started home and while walking' at an ordinary gait and after taking six or seven steps, he came in contact with the board sticking np three or four feet in one of the holes and fell to the pavement and injured his back.

Appellee testified at length as to where he lived, his age, a trip he had made to Oklahoma where he worked for about a month before he was injured, and his return trip to his home by way of Alma, the time he reached Alma and the Wilmon Cafe on the night of August 11, 1940. It is unnecessary to set out this part of his testimony in detail. His father’s sister had married Homer Wilmon, who operated the cafe, so he ate supper and sat around in the cafe until ten o ’clock, p. m., before starting out to his father’s home some seven or eight miles from Alma, with whom he made his home. Appellee was twenty-two years of age and still resided with his parents.

Appellee testified that about ten o ’clock p. m. Wilmon closed his cafe and they walked out together .and Wilmon turned out the lights; that after the lights were turned out it was partially dark in front of the cafe, although the moon was shining; that after he separated from Wilmon he took six 'or seven steps and walked into a board sticking up in one of the holes and fell to the ground; that his feet hit the pavement as he fell and his back hit a rock or the dirt or whatever was piled up there; that this board was about three feet high; that after he fell Wilmon dragged him into the cafe and laid him down where he remained until Dr. Galloway came and gave him a shot; that the fall caused a quick jerk in his back which felt as if something was torn loose around his belt line; that he could not sit up so he laid there until an ambulance came and took him to a hospital in Fort Smith; that he was suffering great pain and was given another shot and some medicine at the hospital that night, Monday night, but the treatment did not ease him; that Tuesday morning Dr. Krock examined him and pressed around on his stomach and that evening came in and asked whether his bowels had moved and whether his kidneys had acted; that when he was informed that both had he made an X-ray which he said showed negative; that no bones were broken, but that he might have strained his hack; that lie told Mitl to go home, but ,to come back every day or so; that he went home Wednesday and remained in bed for two weeks and was not able to get up; that he suffered with his back and head and took aspirin tablets to get relief; that he went back to the hospital and Dr. Krock examined him again and told him to come back again; that he went back again and again Dr. Krock examined him, but did nothing for him; that he got able later on to walk around and tried to pick cotton, bnt had to quit on account of his back; that a little later he tried to cut wood for Jim Huls, but after sawing two cuts his back gave way and Mr. Huls had to assist Mm in getting back home; that since the fall he had been nervous and unable to work on account of the weakness in his back; that prior to his injury he was strong and able to do any kind of manual labor; that he would have gotten employment from Jim Huls or his uncle over in the bottom at $1.50 a day, but was unable to work; that he still suffers pain and is very nervous.

Homer Wilmon testified to the holes being dug by appellant and the boards being placed therein in an upright position and being left in that condition for several days without lights or other signals to warn the traveling public of the dangerous condition in which they were left, also to dragging appellee into the cafe and calling for the doctor and Mr. Crews, who had charge of appellant’s gas system; that both came,and the doctor g'ave appellee who was suffering great pain a shot and that Mr. Crews called an ambulance and sent appellee to a hospital-at Fort Smith; that Mr. Crews pulled up the boards and threw them in the alley and the next day had the dirt leveled down to the concrete and a few days thereafter covered the holes with concrete.

Appellee’s father, mother, sister, Homer Wilmon, Jim Crews, Charles McClure and T. H. Langston all testified that appellee suffered greatly. Most of them testified that he remained in -bed several weeks and at the time of the trial was still unable to work and in a very nervous condition.

Dr. Krock, who examined him several times, testified that appellee received no objective evidence of injuries to his back; that the X-ray showed negative and that while the X-ray would not reflect a strain or injury to the ligaments in his back the physical examination he gave him did not indicate any injury to the ligaments in appellee’s back; that such a fall as appellee claimed he had would not necessarily result in á nervous condition, but might by a narrow margin result in some injury to the nerves; that he did not give him any sedatives, massages or apply heat because he could not find anything to treat him for.

Appellant first contends for a reversal of the judgment because appellee’s own testimony as to how the injury occurred is not supported by the physical condition upon which the same is based. It is argued that appellee’s testimony as to how he fell is at variance with the accepted laws of physics; that if walking forward into a board his momentum would cause him to fall forward instead of backward. This would depend on whether he was walking slowly or very rapidly. He testified that he had only taken eight steps at the outside and was walking at an ordinary gait when he came in contact with the board. It is not likely that the momentum acquired in such a short distance in walking at an ordinary gait would necessarily cause him to fall forward.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W.2d 622, 202 Ark. 427, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-smith-gas-co-v-lewis-ark-1941.