Garrett v. City of Wichita Falls

329 S.W.2d 491, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1959
Docket16047
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 329 S.W.2d 491 (Garrett v. City of Wichita Falls) 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
Garrett v. City of Wichita Falls, 329 S.W.2d 491, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2230 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Mrs. C. H. Garrett sustained personal injuries when she stepped in a hole in the park strip between the sidewalk and curb near the county courthouse in Wichita Falls. The area is a part of the public domain of the City of Wichita Falls. By reason of said injuries Mrs. Garrett and her husband brought a suit for damages against the city. Trial was to a jury, and though finding the city to have been negligent the jury also answered special issues convicting plaintiff, Mrs. Garrett, of contributory negligence. Judgment on the ver- *493 diet was entered for the defendant city and the plaintiffs appealed.

Reversed and remanded.

Under plaintiff’s allegations and evidence the jury found that the hole into which Mrs. Garrett stepped was located at or near the space at the curb of the street where cars were ordinarily parked, where the defendant city invited persons to park their cars by placing parking meters along the curb, and was at a point where persons would ordinarily walk when leaving or entering automobiles parked at such curb. The jury further found that the city, by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, could (and would) have discovered the danger and hazard existent by reason of the hole in time to have remedied the same before the injury, and that its failure to discover and remedy the hazard before said time was a proximate cause of the injuries which resulted. Further, the jury found that the said defendant was negligent in allowing grass to grow around and across the hole so that its presence was concealed, and which was negligence and a proximate cause of the injury. Without necessity to resolve a question relative to whether the findings set out in the sentence next preceding this would have withstood an attack, we have concluded that a prima facie case was made out under the theory of implied notice of defect which the defendant city negligently failed to remedy. See 59 A.L.R. 387, Annotation, “Liability for injury on park strip between sidewalk and curb”, supplemented at 19 A.L.R.2d 1053.

In its answer the city advanced a general denial in paragraph 1, plea of unavoidable accident in paragraph 3, and in paragraph 2 plead as follows: “This defendant would further show the court that the damages sustained by the plaintiff were the result of her own negligence and failure to use ordinary care and to keep a proper lookout for her own safety, and she ought not to recover from this defendant anything.” There was no request for any special issues submitting any question as to the plaintiff’s failure to keep a proper lookout. The questions which did submit the city’s theory of defense were as follows:

No. 17. “Do you find * * * that the Plaintiff in walking in a dark place to which she was not accustomed, * * * was guilty of contributory negligence as that term is herein defined?”, to which the jury answered, “Yes”; No. 18. “Do you find * * * that the Plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in walking upon the grass near the curb without using ordinary care for her own safety?”, to which the jury answered, “Yes”; No. 19. “Do you find * * * that the plaintiff could have entered her car from the street side just prior to the accident?”, to which the jury answered', “Yes”; and No. 20. “Do you find * * * that the failure to enter the car from the street side, * * * was contributory negligence, as that term is herein defined?”, to which the jury answered, “No”.

The plaintiff specially excepted to the allegations made by the city in paragraph 2 of its answer and asserted it was an attempt to plead contributory negligence in general terms without setting out any specific act or acts of negligence on the part of the plaintiff whereby she might be advised of what act or acts were claimed to constitute contributory negligence, or describing in specific terms any act or omission on the part of said plaintiff which would amount to negligence and proximate cause of the injuries of which she complained. The exceptions were duly and timely presented to the trial court and were overruled, to which action the plaintiff excepted.

In the plaintiff’s objections and exceptions to the Court’s Charge to the Jury, special issues Nos. 17 and 18 were objected to for a variety of reasons, including complaint that said issues were not raised by the pleadings and as framed amounted to a *494 general charge calling for opinion and conclusion on the part of the jury as to whether plaintiff was contributorily negligent under all of the facts of the case, without confining them to specific acts.

After the verdict of the jury had been returned and accepted and the jury discharged, the defendant city, apparently with leave of the trial court, filed a so-called trial amendment in which acts on the part of the plaintiff were alleged to constitute contributory negligence in ' that:

“(1) The plaintiff walked in a dark place, at which she was not accustomed, and hence was guilty of contributory negligence; (2) The plaintiff, in walking upon the grass near the curb without using ordinary care for her own safety, was guilty of contributory negligence.”

Of course, if defects in form or substance of an adversary pleading are not challenged before the time special issues are submitted to the jury in a jury case they are waived. In such a case,’ amendment of such pleadings to cure defects are not necessary in any event, though they may, in the discretion of the court, be allowed even after the verdict but before the time of judgment. The same thing would be true if the amendment merely places in the written record issues not previously raised by the pleadings, but in fact tried by express or implied consent. McDonald, Texas Civil Practice, p. 738, “Supplemental and Amended Pleadings,” sec. 8.08, “ — C. Expiration of Time to Amend,” and p. 737, sec. 8.07, “ — B. Trial Amendment.” But in the instant case the defect in form, at least, of the material part of the city’s pleading was not waived, the issues submitted to the jury could not be said to have been tried by any express or implied consent of the parties, and therefore the trial amendment should not have been received or considered. The matter of proper lookout, which probably was sufficiently plead, is not here involved in our consideration, for no issue thereon was submitted. The trial amendment having been allowed too late in any event, its admission did not operate to eliminate the plaintiff’s ground of objection which theretofore was valid and subsisting.

Being of the opinion that the trial amendment was improper and should not have been allowed, we advert to the special exception filed to paragraph 2 of the city’s answer, as said answer obtains-other than as to the matter of proper lookout. Issues of form are of course raised by special exceptions which point out formal defects complained of as to allegations, of the opposite party. Townes’ Texas Pleading, Second Edition, p. 380. Special exceptions, in addition to their application to the opponent’s pleading as to substance, suggest that said pleadings are not legally sufficient to entitle the party to the action asked of the court because of their form. Townes’ Texas Pleading, Second Edition, p. 531.

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329 S.W.2d 491, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-city-of-wichita-falls-texapp-1959.