Kansas City, M. O. Ry. Texas v. Pysher

195 S.W. 981, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 603
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1917
DocketNo. 691.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 981 (Kansas City, M. O. Ry. Texas v. Pysher) 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
Kansas City, M. O. Ry. Texas v. Pysher, 195 S.W. 981, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 603 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

Appellee, A. W. Pysher, brought this suit in the county court of Nolan county against the Kansas City,, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained, alleging that on or about May 28, 1915, he had a consignment of automobiles in a certain car belonging to appellant, and that he was instructed by appellant’s agent to open the door of the car and receive the consignment; that upon opening the car door a loose piece of casting, which should have been securely fastened, fell upon his head, causing the injuries of which he complains. The particular negligence assigned is as follows:

“That it was the duty of the defendant to have its car repaired and to have-the piece of casting, which was loose and fell upon him and inflicted his injury, safely and securely fastened, but that defendant failed to do so, and that its failure is negligence, and that plaintiff has suffered the damages aforesaid because of said negligence.”

Appellant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and special denial of any negligence contributing to the injury, and alleged that the injury was caused by the negligence of appellee, in that he -Undertook: to go into said car and open the door and break the seals thereon, and that if there were any defects same were known, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have been known, to appellee, and that in failing to observe any such defects and guard against them appellee was guilty of negligence proximately causing his injury. By supplemental answer appellee denied that-he was guilty of negligence, admits that he was injured while undertaking to go into the car and while opening the car door after breaking the seals under the direction of appellant’s agent, the appellee having the said consignment therein, that he was not a car inspector, and could not by the exercise of ordinary care have known about the loose casting, and opened the car door in the usual and customary manner in which such doors are opened. The case was submitted to the ju,ry on a general charge, and the jury found in appellee’s favor and assessed damages. After the evidence was heard appellant submitted to and requested the court to give a peremptory charge in its favor, and the court’s refusal to give said charge is made the basis of its first assignment of error.

By the second assignment appellant insists that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict and the judgment.

Appellant’s contention under these assignments is that the undisputed evidence showed that the defect in the car, the loose casting, causing the injury, was one in a foreign car loaded by the consignor at Detroit, Mich., under seals placed thereon by consignor, and consigned to appellee’s principal at Sweet-water, Tex., and that said car had been given the usual inspection when received by appellant at Altus, Okl., and was under the same seals, and that, in accordance with custom, the car was set to unloading platform to be unloaded by consignee under the same seals, that said seals were broken by consignee’s agent acting with appellee in unloading tije car, the delivery of the car being complete, and that the defect which caused the injury was a hidden defect concealed on the inside of the car, not discoverable by ordinary inspection for the running condition of the car, and, no fact or circumstances being shown imposing upon appellant any duty to inspect the inside of said car for such hidden defect as to appellee, there is no basis in the evidence for the submission of any issues of negligence upon the part of appellant.

In none' of the pleadings was it alleged that the car was a foreign car, and appel-lee’s counter proposition to this assignment and proposition thereunder is that appellant did not plead that the ear was a foreign one, nor that appellant did not know of the .defect in the car, and could not have -known by ordinary inspection; therefore there is no basis for the assignment.

[1] Appellee, however; alleged that:

“Plaintiff had a consignment of automobiles in a certain car belonging to the defendant, and *982 the negligence assigned'is its failure to have the car repaired and the loose casting, which was on the inside of the car, securely fastened.”

This allegation had reference to the car in question. Appellant’s general denial would b£ sufficient to put at issue the ownership of the car and a denial of the negligence assigned. If the car in question was owned by appellant and had been sent to the consignor to receive the consignment of automobiles, or if the appellant was instrumental in having the consignment loaded in the car, a different question would be presented, as in that case, where the defect was in the car itself, appellant might be charged with a knowledge of a defect in the car not observable from an ordinary inspection for transportation over its line of road. The undisputed evidence, however, shows that the car was a Missouri Pacific car, No. 80437, and was loaded out of Detroit, Mich., with Ford automobiles and sealed at Detroit, on both sides with the Ford Motor Company (the shipper’s) seals,. and consigned to the Adams Machine & Automobile Company, at Sweetwater, Tex., in whose employ appel-lee then was, and for whom he was working in opening and unloading the car at the time he was injured. While the record is not clear as to the initial railroad, we infer from the record that the shipment left Detroit over the Michigan Central Railroad, was later billed out of St. Louis, Mo., over the Missouri Pacific Railroad, and was received by appellant, as the ultimate carrier, at Al-tus, Okl., and by it transported to its destination at Sweetwater, and delivered to the consignee for unloading.

R. M. Adams, of the Adams Machine & Automobile Company, consignee, a witness for appellee, among other things, testified:

“I know the plaintiff. * * * He was working for me. * * * I was present when these cars were unloaded, and at that time I had paid the freight and all charges, and we had to open the car. We had no instruction from the agent or any one about opening the car. We had paid the bill of lading, and naturally I had permission to open the car. It was my custom after paying the freight charges to proceed to open the .car, and on this occasion we went to the place where the car was and proceeded to open it. * * * I was at the car when the injury occurred, but I did not actually see the accident. * * * I examined the car and the iron that was supposed to have hit him. We had opened one door to the car, and he was inside the car shoving the other door open, and this piece of casting which was the top of the door came down on him. * * * This casting wasn’t on the door exactly, it was at the top of the car where the door slides, and it should have been fastened by two bolts, two holes were there where the bolts had been, and they were missing, that is, one was gone. As well as I remember, the holes for the bolts were shattered, and so badly that one bolt couldn’t hold. The wood looked rotten and shattered and was inadequate to hold the bolt. * * * When the door started back this iron fell from the inside of the car and hit him on the head. * * * It was not a part of the door; it was a fastening for the door. The piece that fell came from the inside of the car, and I don’t think anybody could have seen it from the outside of the car.”

Witness Zack 0.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 981, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-m-o-ry-texas-v-pysher-texapp-1917.