Ice Service Company v. Scruggs

284 S.W.2d 185, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 1955
Docket15646
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 284 S.W.2d 185 (Ice Service Company v. Scruggs) 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
Ice Service Company v. Scruggs, 284 S.W.2d 185, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2177 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

From a judgment for the plaintiff in a slip-and-fall case, the defendants appealed. The defendants were not the proprietors •of the premises, but were the actors who deposited the substance upon which the plaintiff slipped, causing his fall.

Judgment affirmed.

Finch E. Scruggs was employed in> a •cafeteria operated by and located upon the premises of Sheppard Air Force Base near Wichita. Falls, Texas.' He was covered by Workmen’s Compensation insurance through the Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Company of Wisconsin, which Company had paid to him the sum of $5,000 in settlement of his claim for compensation because of injuries sustained while working in the cafeteria on or about August 25, 1952. Subsequently, Scruggs recovered a $6,500 judgment of the defendants (appellants here) on account of his common-law damages sustained as result of these same injuries. The compensation insurer was awarded the $5,000 it had paid plaintiff Scruggs, through its subrogation rights, and the remainder was awarded to the plaintiff. The injuries, because of which the compensation was paid, and by reason of which Scruggs sought damages against the defendants, were received as the result of his having fallen when he slipped on water deposited through the melting of particles of ice, at a time when he was on the cafeteria premises. The defendants, sued by Scruggs for common-law damages, were the -Ice Service Company, a corporation, and its employee, Theodore E. Fithian. The Ice Service Company manufactured and marketed ice and Fithian was the iceman who transported the ice by truck to the Company’s patrojis,. among, whom was numbered the employer of the plaintiff. Both defendants are appellants here.

Upon the occasion in question, Fithian arrived at the dock of the cafeteria with his truckload of ice, received instruction from thp plaintiff upon the matter of the amount of crushed ice desired to be delivered, ground the amount desired in the “grinder” attached to the truck, and manually transported the crushed ice by a’canvas carrying bag into the premises of the cafeteria where he deposited some in the part of the serving counter from which salads were dispensed and some in the part of the serving counter from which milk was dispensed. He made one or more trips with ice in his canvas carrying bag, passing by some heavy weighing scales en route. The path traversed was along a route where the floor had shortly prior thereto been inspected and found clear and free of ice or water. *188 No other person had occasion to or did transport crushed ice or ice in any other form in the vicinity of the weighing scales between the time of the inspection and the time the plaintiff fell some fifteen to thirty minutes thereafter as a result of slipping on a pool formed from melted ice particles. At the time of the plaintiff’s fall there were partially melted ice particles in the immediate vicinity of the spot which caused the plaintiff’s fall. Plaintiff was either walking rapidly or “trotting” at the time of his fall, as he was hurrying to answer the telephone.

In falling, the plaintiff struck his hack upon a part of the weighing scales, occasioning his injuries. Plaintiff worked throughout that day, but went to see a doctor in the afternoon. He continued to work at the cafeteria until September 30, 1952. About a month later, plaintiff underwent hospitalized treatment.

Only one iceman visited the premises on the particular morning in question, and there was direct testimony to the facts set out above, but no direct testimony that on this particular morning ice particles spilled from the canvas carrying bag. Therefore, the evidence connecting the plaintiff’s fall and resulting injury with the defendants was circumstantial in character. In this lies the premise for the appellants’ first three points. It is contended that there was either no evidence whatever, no evidence of probative force, or insufficient evidence to support any finding of primary negligence against the defendants, wherefore the trial court should have instructed a verdict in behalf of the appellants or rendered a judgment non obstante veredicto for them, as per the motions made in these respects at varying stages of the trial; or that this court should order a new trial because of the insufficiency of the evidence to support plaintiff’s judgment.

These points of error are overruled. Under the points, the appellants contend that only by basing one presumption upon another might it be said that a case of primary negligence could have been established, since no one saw any ice fall from the bag being carried by Fithian, and since the only connection which could be made between the puddle of water which caused the plaintiff’s fall and ice from Fithian’s bag would be by the evidence to the effect that there were other adjacent puddles of water in which particles of ice were present. Appellants say that it is a presumption that the puddle in which the plaintiff slipped was caused by the melting' of ice particles, and that it must be presumed that such particles fell from Fithi-an’s carrying bag. While we recognize and acknowledge that the law prohibits the finding of negligence through a presumption based upon a presumption, we take-occasion to point out that a presumption is-something different and distinct from an inference which is within the particular province of a jury. In other words, “ * * * a presumption is a rule which the law makes upon a given state of facts, while an inference is a conclusion which, by means-of data founded upon common experience,, natural reason draws from facts which are proved; * * 31 C.J.S., Evidence, § 115, p. 725, Classes of Presumptions and Distinctions — Distinguished from inference, sec. 115. See also Strain v. Martin, Tex.Civ.App.Eastland, 1944, 183 S.W.2d. 246; Joske v. Irvine, 1898, 91 Tex. 574, 44 S.W. 1059; Norfolk Coca-Cola Bottling Works v. Krausse, 1934, 162 Va. 107, 173 S.E. 497; Erie R. Co. v. Murphy, 2 Cir., 1925, 9 F.2d 525; Neely v. Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co., 1936, 322 Pa. 417, 185-A. 784, 789.

The question is whether there is-any evidence in the record from which the jury might have properly found negligence-proximately causing the plaintiff to slip and fall. In the case of Houston E. & W. T. Ry. Co. v. Boone, 1912, 105 Tex. 188, 146 S.W. 533, 535, the court quoted with approval from Thompson’s Commentaries on the Law of Negligence, vol. 6, sec. 7863, as-follows: “ ‘ * * * a verdict for negligence may be supported by inference; but such inference must be a logical, probable, and reasonable deduction from proved or conceded facts. Negligence cannot be a mere matter of conjecture, but must be fairly inferable from the evidence. This- *189 principle permits the admission of circumstantial evidence to contradict positive and direct testimony given by eyewitnesses. It is not incumbent upon the plaintiff, after proving an accident which implies negligence, to show the particular negligence, when from the circumstances it is not in his power to do so.’ ”

Nor in this case should it be said that the presence of the substance on the floor which caused the plaintiff to slip and fall might be as well and properly attributed to the milkman who had passed the same way with his milk bottles, or from water which had run onto the spot from an icebox or other facility in the cafeteria.

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W.2d 185, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ice-service-company-v-scruggs-texapp-1955.