Goethe v. Gulf Lumber Co.

161 S.W.2d 514
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1942
DocketNo. 11324.
StatusPublished

This text of 161 S.W.2d 514 (Goethe v. Gulf Lumber Co.) 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
Goethe v. Gulf Lumber Co., 161 S.W.2d 514 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

Appellant’s brief makes a very succinct statement of the nature of this case, which is conceded to be correct so far as it goes, to-wit:

“J. A. Goethe, as sole plaintiff, sued Waldo H. Coffman, alleged to be doing business under the assumed names of Gulf Lumber Company and Gulf Wrecking & Lumber Company, as sole defendant, for personal injuries to plaintiff, due to plaintiff’s falling from a ladder on the premises of defendant while plaintiff was there as a business-invitee, because of defendant’s negligence and the defective condition of his premises. The case was tried before a jury, which found acts of negligence by defendant; but parts of such verdict charge contributory negligence to plaintiff, which was found to have proximately caused the injuries to plaintiff; but the jury failed to agree on the amount of damages sustained by plaintiff and returned their incomplete verdict into the court, upon which judgment was rendered for the defendant, which plaintiff has duly attacked by original and amended motions for new trial, and from the order overruling same, and has duly perfected appeal, under pauper’s oath.”

Appellant’s main points upon the appeal are:

(1) That the verdict of the jury was “so irreconcilable and conflicting on indispensable issues of fact, that same afforded no basis for the judgment rendered thereon”;
*515 (2) That the pleadings and evidence raised the issue of discovered peril in favor of the appellant, as pled and requested to he given the jury by him, and the court erred in not submitting the same in appropriate issues to the jury’s determination;
(3) The court erred in submitting jury issues 34, 35, and 36, as well as Nos. 46, 47, and 48, relating to appellant’s alleged contributory negligence, in that, respectively, the first group assumed, without evidence to support it, that appellant was holding only with his left hand to a loose piece of lumber on top of a stack in the rack, while the second group assumed, without supporting evidence, that he neither knew nor ascertained the condition of the ladder before he climbed up it; >
(4) Special issues 49, 50, and 51 were improper as being without support in the evidence, as well as constituting a comment on the weight of the evidence, while the jury’s finding under 49 that appellant tried to get the drawer off the balcony while standing on the ladder is so against the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong;
(5) The court prejudicially erred in refusing to permit appellant to testify that he would' not have climbed the ladder if the appellee had told him not to climb it, or that it was dangerous, or had pointed out the stairway and told him to take that instead;
(6) The court further erred in not submitting to the jury inquiries as to whether appellant had fallen in a portion of the premises where the appellee had directed or expected him to be, as well as issues inquiring whether the appellee had been remiss in failing to stack the lumber so as to constitute a safe handhold, or at least in failing to-warn the appellant that its use as a handhold in its then condition was unsafe; as well as, finally, in failing to advise appellant that there was a safer stairway than the ladder, upon which he might have ascended.

Appellee’s premises consisted of a long lumber-shed running east and west back from the public sidewalk, with an open hollow internal rectangle for a driveway extending clear back from the sidewalk on the west to the end of the building on the east, upon either side of which wooden racks had been built in which the lumber stock was stacked like large “pidgeon holes”, the exposed ends of the lumber of different kinds sticking out into the driveway on each side; •at about midway of this long east and west driveway a wooden balcony, raised about 8 ■feet from the ground, extended across it from north to south, while on the north side of the driveway, immediately in front of the racks on that side, what was called a “catwalk”, about 6 feet above the ground of the ■driveway, extended along the rack from the balcony on the east to the front end of the shed on the west; the ladder from which appellant fell was, roughly, at the junction of the “cat-walk” and the balcony on the northeast corner of the driveway, while across the driveway from it, at its southeast corner, there was a light stairway leading to the right and rear of the balcony; the ladder was built into the “cat-walk” at such northeast corner, while near the front edge of the adjoining balcony to the right of it there were some drawers in a stack in the balcony; there were only two rungs in the ladder above the “cat-walk”, upon the top one of which the appellant was standing and had been holding to the end of a loose piece of lumber in the rack above his head, when he reached back toward the drawers on his right, lost his balance, and fell back into the driveway.

As presaged supra, the appealed-from judgment was entered solely upon the jury’s verdict, the court having made no independent findings of its own from the evidence, and having, at the close of all the evidence, refused the appellee’s mot-ion for a peremptorily instructed verdict in his favor, about which no complaint has been presented by him here.

Neither was there any motion made by ap-pellee, pursuant to R.S. Article 2211, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2211, either for judgment non obstante veredicto, or for the disregard by the court of any special issue jury finding as having had no support in the evidence.

Neither is there anything in the judgment itself showing a disregard of any issue because not supported by the evidence, but it simply is one upon all of the issues as submitted and answered, and them alone.

Moreover, as further indicated in the preliminary statement, while the jury were cross-examined in more than 50 inquiries covering attenuated details of the factual issues of an apparently simple controversy, they ignored issue No. 52, inquiring in detail what damages the appellant had suffered, not answering it at all, which dereliction the court likewise entirely ignored by entering its judgment on the verdict with *516 out any reference thereto. 41 Tex.Jur., Failure to Answer, pars. 356, et seq.

The undisputed evidence showed that the appellant actually fell, substantially, at least, in the circumstances and under the setting above given, and that he suffered material damages; indeed, the appellee concedes as much.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.W.2d 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goethe-v-gulf-lumber-co-texapp-1942.