Holly Sugar Company of Hereford v. Aguirre

487 S.W.2d 421, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2934
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1972
Docket8304
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 487 S.W.2d 421 (Holly Sugar Company of Hereford v. Aguirre) 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
Holly Sugar Company of Hereford v. Aguirre, 487 S.W.2d 421, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2934 (Tex. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Justice.

A jury-verdict judgment awarded a business invitee damages for personal injuries suffered on the premises of, and negligently caused by, an occupier defendant. Appeal from this judgment has been taken on the grounds of legal and factual insufficiency of the evidence, and the failure of the trial court to submit an affirmative defense. Reversed and remanded.

The parties are referred to by their trial court designations. Plaintiff Pablo Aguirre was a truck driver engaged in hauling sugar beets from the fields to the plant of defendant Holly Sugar Company of Hereford. Following the normal procedure, plaintiff drove into defendant’s premises and up the inclined on ramp and stopped on the level portion of the ramp of a beet piler. A piler is a large semi-stationary complex of machinery and equipment utilized to receive, unload and pile sugar beets to await processing. Plaintiff left the truck motor running in the eviden-tially revealed custom of all the truck drivers delivering beets, placed the gear in neutral position and, so plaintiff testified, set the emergency brake which was in good operating condition. A hook on a hydraulic lift, a part of the piler complex, was attached to a ring on the right side of the truck bed by one of defendant’s employees. Another employee of defendant operated the hydraulic lift to elevate the right side of the bed, causing the load of beets to be dumped through a drop-gate on the left side of the bed into a receiving hopper and onto a conveyor belt. 1 A sam- *423 pie of the beets, taken for laboratory testing, was being gathered in a sack by another one of defendant’s employees called a sampler. Defendant also employed a fourth workman, who was present, for general work around the piler. Plaintiff and the four employees were the only persons present when plaintiff sustained his injuries, and all gave testimony at the trial.

During the dumping process, all or part of the drop-gate on plaintiff’s truck broke or came loose and fell into the hopper. After the load of beets was dumped, the truck bed was lowered to its normal position. Plaintiff got out of the truck to retrieve the drop-gate. Plaintiff’s testimony is that, while he was standing between the truck and the hopper trying to get the drop-gate out of the hopper, the truck began shaking and vibrating from side to side due to the operation of the motors and belts of the piler and the hydraulic lift hook that was still attached to the truck bed. The testimony of the employees of defendant was that the hook was detached, and they further testified, and the jury found, that the truck began to roll forward. All of defendant’s employees, except the sampler who was not then aware of the happening, tried to hold the truck with their hands. The sampler then looked at plaintiff, who motioned to the sampler, and when the sampler approached his position, plaintiff asked him to stop the truck. Plaintiff also said that he told the sampler not to put the truck in gear, but the sampler testified that he did not hear these words. A great deal of noise was generated by the piler. The sampler ran around the front of the truck cab to the right hand door. Plaintiff recalled that the sampler crawled through the door’s window space, but the sampler said he opened the door. In any event, the sampler leaned across the seat in a prone position and put his hand on the foot brake pedal. He did not notice the emergency brake. It is agreed that, at that moment, someone yelled to put the truck in gear, but each witness denied having made the statement. The sampler testified that he did not know, and could not tell because of the noise, that the truck motor was running. He engaged the gear and the truck lurched forward or sideways, catching the plaintiff between the truck bed and the hopper with the resultant injuries to plaintiff. None of defendant’s four employees was looking at the plaintiff at the time the accident happened.

Upon submission of special issues on two pleaded grounds of recovery, the jury answered that the defendant’s sampler was not negligent in putting the truck in gear, but that defendant, “by and through its agents, servants, or employees, failed to keep a proper lookout for the plaintiff on the occasion in question,” and that such failure was negligence, which “was a proximate cause of the occurrence in question.” The jury fixed plaintiff’s monetary damages at $17,500.00. In response to the defensive matters pleaded and submitted, the jury found that the conditions and hazards were not open and obvious to plaintiff; that he failed to move from danger, but such was not negligence; that plaintiff did not fail to have a functioning emergency brake; that the truck was not partially down on the off ramp; and that plaintiff was not negligent in failing to “kill” the engine and put the vehicle in gear before getting out of the truck. The defendant requested submission of its tendered cluster of special issues, in substantially correct form, inquiring whether as defendant had pleaded, the plaintiff failed to set his emergency brake before getting out of the truck cab, and, conditioned on a finding of such failure, the further inquiries of negligence and proximate cause. The court denied the request and refused to include the issues in the charge. The defendant properly preserved his objections and exceptions to the court’s action.

Defendant’s first nine points of error challenge the proper lookout, negligence and proximate cause special issues on which its liability is predicated. The grounds offered are those of no evidence *424 to support the submission of,.or the jury’s answers to, the special issues, and that the jury’s answers thereto are against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. Thus, only the evidence and the permissible inferences most favorable to the submission of the issues and the jury’s answers thereto must be considered first to determine if there is any evidence of probative force in support thereof, and, if so, then all of the evidence must be considered to determine if the verdict is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong. University of Texas: Calvert, “No Evidence” and “Insufficient Evidence” Points of Error, 38 Texas L.Rev. 361 (1960).

It is defendant’s position that it was plaintiff’s truck, over which plaintiff exercised sole control and for which defendant had no responsibility, that caused plaintiff’s injuries. It follows, therefore, defendant argues, that as a matter of law its employees were under no duty to keep a lookout for plaintiff as an invitee, that no lookout duty was breached, and that any failure to keep a lookout was not a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. This is so, defendant says, because no character of lookout would have prevented the injuries as incurred under the circumstances. We disagree.

Defendant, as owner of the premises, owed plaintiff, as a business invitee, the duty of exercising reasonable or ordinary care for plaintiff’s safety while on the premises. Crum v. Stasney, 404 S.W.2d 72 (Tex.Civ.App. — Eastland 1966, no writ), and not to negligently injure plaintiff. Christian v. Dishongh, 449 S.W.2d 823 (Tex.Civ.App. — Houston [14th Dist.] 1969, no writ).

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Bluebook (online)
487 S.W.2d 421, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holly-sugar-company-of-hereford-v-aguirre-texapp-1972.