Hernischel v. Texas Drug Co.

61 S.W. 419, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 61 S.W. 419 (Hernischel v. Texas Drug 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
Hernischel v. Texas Drug Co., 61 S.W. 419, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 10 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

GILL, Associate Justice.

This action was brought by the appellant, Mrs. A. E. Hernischel, against the Texas Drug Company, the appellee, to recover damages for loss of the services of her minor son occasioned by personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him as a result of the negligence of appellee. On the trial the court, after the evidence was adduced, instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the appellee, which was done, and judgment rendered accordingly. This is an appeal from that judgment.

Appellant’s son was injured in the following manner. He was an employe on the third floor of the drug company’s business house, and while so employed a fire broke out on one of the lower floors which prevented his escape by the elevator or stairways, and to escape death by fire he jumped from the third story window to the office roof, about fifteen feet below, whereby he was injured as alleged. Appellant seeks to fix lia *2 bility upon the appellee: (1) Because it was alleged to be operating a factory in a building over two stories high, and had, in violation of one of the city' ordinances of Dallas, Texas, failed to provide suitable fire escapes to the building so occupied. (2) The building, by reason of the character of stock carried and, business done, was peculiarly liable to sudden and dangerous fires, and they failed to provide a safe place for said employe to work, and failed to provide rules and proper means for the extinguishment of fires. (3) The appellee, knowing of the presence of the appellant’s son upon the third floor and of his danger after fire broke out, failed to notify him of his danger, but left him to ascertain if and escape as best he could.

Appellee answered by general denial, plea of contributory negligence, and specially denied that it was operating at factory within the purview of the city ordinances.

It was established without dispute that appellee, a corporation, was the lessee of a four-story brick building in the city of Dallas, Texas, in which it conducted its business and kept most of its stock of goods. It was a wholesale drug concern, engaged in buying in large quantities from the manufacturers, drugs, medicines, and druggists’ sundries and such goods as are usually handled by the retail druggist, and selling at wholesale to the retail druggists throughout the State. It had on hand at the time of the fire a stock of goods of the value of $125,000. In the basement was kept the furnace for heating the building. In another part of the basement were kept cigars in boxes and alcohol, liquors, etc., in barrels and cases. The packing room in which goods were put up for shipment was also in the basement, and this contained hay, straw, etc., for use in packing. The greater part of its inflammable stuff, such as whiskies, paints, turpentines, oils, etc., was stored in another building.

On the first floor was the city department, ,the offices and a part of the stock consisting of bottled goods, pill boxes, and cases of drugs. In the remaining stories of the building were kept the stock of goods usually carried by the company. A part of the third floor was used by one Eberle, a stockholder in the company and the company’s chemist, who was continually engaged in bottling goods bought in large quantities and placing them in convenient shape and quantity for the retail houses for which they were intended. He also compounded prescriptions and formulas in quantities and put them up in convenient form for the retail trade. In doing this he used the ingredients bought at wholesale and mixed them in their prescribed and proper proportions. His duties in these respects kept him and one boy (Ed. Hernischel) busy, daily. Another boy was occasionally, called in to assist, and a negro boy on the same floor assisted them occasionally in lifting heavy packages.

There was situated on this floor a stove for use in heating the various compounds together with utensils and vessels for the fluids, among which was a 50-gallon pot or boiler and several 50-pound lard cans. He had also a hand mill for grinding drugs, like the mill usually used in grocery stores for grinding coffee. They had no machinery in use in the dis *3 charge of their duties. The entire product or output of Eberle and his assistants in this laboratory was less than 2 per cent of the business of the concern, and three-fourths of that output consisted not of compounded goods but of rebottled goods which had been bought in bulk in large quantities. Ho persons were stationed on that floor except Eberle and the three others above mentioned.

The fourth story was visited by the employes only as occasion required, no one being in constant charge of it. The building was 50 feet wide and 100 feet deep. The means of egress from the second and third stories was a stairway, five feet in width and conveniently located, and a large elevator operated by water power. They also had large windows and doors, and from the second story one could easily step from the window to the roof of the office, which was only about fourteen feet from the ground. There were no fire escapes on the outside of the building, and the only means of egree are stated above.

The city ordinances in question are as follows: “Article 487. That the owners or lessees of all hotels, theaters, hoarding houses, tenement houses, and factories over two stories high in the city of Dallas, are hereby required to provide the same with good and suitable fire escapes, amply sufficient to furnish means of egree to all inmates in case of fire. Article 337, Code 1898. That the owners or lessees of all hotels, theaters, hording houses, tenement houses, and factories over two stories high in the city of Dallas, are hereby required to provide the same with good and suitable fire escapes, amply sufficient to furnish means of safe egress to all inmates in case of fire.”

They had open barrels of water on each floor, with buckets attached, and had a water faucet on the third floor and one in the basement. ' On the third floor were also several ladders, some of which would have enabled a person to descend from the third story to the rogf of the office without injury. On the day of the fire Eberle, the chemist, requested Ed. Hernischel to remain during the dinner hour from 12 to 1 and stir a mixture which he was preparing, and the latter was so engaged when the fire occurred. It was the custom of the employes, including Hernischel, to be out of the building and at their meals from 12 to 1 o’clock, as that hour had been given them for the purpose. The employes and officers in the city and office department on the lower floor remained on duty during that time. The fire occurred during the noon hour. Ho one except Eberle knew that Hernischel had remained on the third floor, and Eberle was at home when the fire occurred. There was a speaking tube from the office to the third floor, and Hernischel could have been notified in two or three minutes, had his presence there been known. The fire started on the first floor, and was so sudden and furious that the office employes had barely time to put a few books and papers in the safe and escape. When Hernischel heard the alarm he tried to make his way down the stairs, but was prevented by the smoke and flames. He then jumped from the third story window to the office roof and was severely injured.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 419, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernischel-v-texas-drug-co-texapp-1901.