Freeman v. Fuller

127 S.W. 1194, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 6, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 127 S.W. 1194 (Freeman v. Fuller) 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
Freeman v. Fuller, 127 S.W. 1194, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 505 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

JENKINS, Associate Justice.

The appellee brought this suit against appellant as receiver of the International & Great Northern Railroad Company, alleging, among other things, that on about the 18th day of May, 1908, he was a fireman on a switch engine in the yards of said company in the city of Austin. That there was a pit in the track of said company into which ashes and cinders were emptied whenever the same became necessary, and out of which pit said cinders and ashes were, from time to time, thrown on the side of the track. That the cinders when so thrown upon the side of said track, and for a long time prior to said date, had been maintained in a smooth or level condition, and that it was necessary for the protection of the employes of said company that said cinders should be maintained in a level condition, without any holes or excavations therein. That shortly before said time defendant had, through some of its employes, negligently. dug or excavated a hole or ditch or trench about two feet wide and about two or three feet deep on the surface of said cinders near said railroad track, into which appellee fell and was injured while in the performance of his duty in attempting to empty the ashpan of an engine into said pit. That the cause of such fall was the defective condition of the ashpan and the attachments operating the same. That the lever failed to work properly, so that it became necessary to use great force to move the same, and that in applying said force said lever gave way, causing him to fall backwards into said hole or trench. He alleges negligence on the part of appellant in permitting said excavation to be made, and in permitting said ashpan and its attachments to be out' of order. He alleges ignorance of such conditions on his part, and the exercise of due care in the performance of his duties in attempting to empty said ashpan, and that he was thereby injured on the 18th day of May, 1908, describing said injuries as to their location and extent.

Appellant answered by.general demurrer and general denial and a plea of contributory negligence, in that the condition of said cinders was practically the same as it had been for years, during all of which time appellee was employed in said' business, and knew of the said condition, and that its condition was so open and obvious that he must have known of the same, and that he assumed whatever risk there was incident to said condition. Appellant also denies that there was any defect in said ashpan or the attachments thereof, or any difficulty in working the same, further than was incident to ashes or cinders getting in the same, which was usual, as was known to appellee and open *245 to his observation, and that if there was any defect in said machinery, or if any difficulty existed in working the same at the time of such injury, it was negligence in appellee not to have known or discovered the same.

Judgment was rendered for appellee for $10,000, from which appellant has appealed and assigned as errors committed in the trial of said cause the matters hereinafter discussed:

1. The first assignment of error is upon the refusal of the court to peremptorily instruct the jury to return a verdict for appellant, defendant in the court below. This special instruction was requested upon the assumption (1) that nothing is alleged in appellee’s petition as to the cause of the injuries except defects in the ashpan and its attachments; and (2) that there was no evidence as to such defects. We do hot agree with appellant in his assumption as to either the pleadings or the evidence. Appellee, after describing the hole or excavation in the cinders, and explaining how, in attempting to operate the defective attachments for cleaning the ashpan, he fell into said excavation, concludes this portion of his petition as follows: “That it was defendant’s duty to maintain the surface of the ground or cinders aforesaid in a level condition, without any holes being permitted to be placed therein, in order to render it safe for petitioner to perform his said duties, and defendant was guilty of negligence in permitting said hole to be made in said place as aforesaid, which rendered the said place unsafe for petitioner to perform his said services, and defendant was also guilty of negligence in maintaining said ashpan as aforesaid, and which negligence directly and proximately caused petitioner’s said injuries.” The contention of appellant is that the statement, “which negligence . . . caused petitioner’s said injuries,” refers to the condition of the ashpan only, and not to the condition of the cinders. We doubt if this position could have been maintained even had there been a special exception directed against this portion of the petition. In the absence of such exception we think the petition should be held to include the condition of the cinder pile, as well as the condition of the ashpan, in the alleged causes of petitioner’s injuries. Rule 17 for District Courts provides that, “in passing upon a general exception every reasonable intendment arising upon the pleading 'excepted to shall be indulged in favor of its sufficiency,” by which we understand that it shall be construed to include every allegation material to plaintiff’s recovery, which, by reasonable construction of the language used, it can be said the pleader intended to allege. In this case, where the appellee has so fully set out the alleged negligence of appellant as to the condition of the cinders and described the manner in which he received his injuries by reason thereof, it would require a very narrow and technical, if not an unreasonable, construction of the language used to say that he did not intend to include such condition among the causes of his injuries.

As to the other ground for this assignment of error, viz., that there was no evidence as to any defective condition of the ashpan attachments, the appellee, after stating that he had been a fireman for twenty years, and was familiar with the construction of the ashpan and its attachments, and after telling how the lever failed to work, *246 and that in his efforts to pull it it finally gave way suddenly and caused him to fall backwards, testified that if it had been in proper condition the lever could not have given way suddenly, but would have come over gradually. In describing the working of a model which was before him when he was testifying, he said: “This thing here caught these clamps. They are bolted bn here just one way and open at this end. If the clamp had stayed in position it would not have thrown me back, but would have come away gradually. If this lever had been in the socket, and had been properly fastened, it would not have given way as it did when I applied force to it.” A good deal of his testimony, not here quoted, was to the same effect. To the same effect also was the testimony of ICeyes, a fireman, who was working for the I. & G. H. Bailroad Company at the time of the injury, and who was familiar with this particular engine. This witness testified that the attachments of the ashpan were out of fix on the 4th and 5th of May before appellee was injured on the 18th of that month, and that he reported the same to engineers Bhodes and Moore. Moore corroborates the testimony of this witness. The testimony of Hinton, another fireman, was similar to that of Keyes, and corroborated the testimony of appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W. 1194, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-fuller-texapp-1910.