Latimer v. Walgreen Drug Co. of Texas

233 S.W.2d 209, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1608
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 25, 1950
Docket6076
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 233 S.W.2d 209 (Latimer v. Walgreen Drug Co. of Texas) 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
Latimer v. Walgreen Drug Co. of Texas, 233 S.W.2d 209, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1608 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This suit was instituted by appellant, Bertha Latimer, a feme sole, against appellee, Walgreen Drug Company of Texas, a corporation, and against C. S. Lambie, individually, and C. S. Lambie and Company, a corporation, seeking to recover damages in the sum of $9,462.25 per personal injuries sustained by her by reason of the negligence of the named defendants. However, no appeal has been perfected as against C. S. Lambie individually or C. S. Lambie and Company. This case was tried jointly with a companion case bearing the next serial number on both the trial court’s docket and this court’s docket styled George W. Kennedy et ux. v. Walgreen Drug Company of Texas, alleging damages in that case in the sum of $11,070 by reason of injuries sustained by George W. Kennedy’s wife, Virgie Kennedy, at the same time and in the same manner that appellant herein was injured. The cases were consolidated and tried together in the trial court with the same result in each case and they have been likewise consolidated in this court by request of the parties and are here presented in the same manner and on the same briefs.

The cases were tried to a jury but the trial court, after the evidence closed, upon its own motion, without taking any action upon the motions of all defendants for an instructed verdict in their favor, instructed a verdict for all of the defendants and against appellant herein for want of sufficient evidence to support her alleged claims for damages. Appellant perfected her appeal against Walgreen Drug Company of Texas alone and presents her appeal to this court upon three points of error. She charges that there was sufficient evidence to raise jury issues on the questions of negligence, proximate cause and contributory negligence.

The record reveals that Walgreen Drug Company owns and operates a drugstore located in a building on the southwest corner of the intersection of Polk and Eighth Streets in Amarillo, facing Polk Street, with an entrance at the northeast corner of the store facing the intersection and another entrance on Eighth Street toward the back of the store. The latter entrance or door is not used by the public but is used by the help in the store and for deliveries made to the store. About three feet back of this door is an elevator door opening on Eighth Street and leading to appellee’s *211 store basement. The north wall of the drugstore building adjacent to Eighth Street is approximately 100 feet or more in length. There are sidewalks adjacent to the drugstore building and separating it from the street curbs both in front on Polk Street and along the north side on Eighth Street. The alleged injuries occurred on the sidewalk on Eighth Street, on the north side of the drugstore. It was stipulated that the sidewalk where the alleged injuries occurred is 16 feet wide. For several days before the alleged injuries oh March 5, 1948, there was a period of very cold weather in Amarillo accompanied by rain, snow and sleet, covering the streets and sidewalks, including the sidewalk in question, with a thick coat of ice. Just east of the two street doors opening on Eighth Street there was a pile of scrap lumber of some sort piled on the sidewalk against the north wall of the drugstore covering about three feet space measured from the wall on the sidewalk and extending several feet along the wall. Appellant herein and Virgie Kennedy, one of the appellants in the companion case, were walking along the sidewalk on Eighth Street going east soon after two p. m. o’clock on the alleged date expecting to enter the Walgreen Drugstore at the front corner street entrance. They had come onto the sidewalk from another business establishment door opening on Eighth Street only a short distance west of the back of appellee’s drugstore and they were walking next to the wall on the ice covered street until they reached the pile of scrap lumber in question. They started around the scrap lumber when both of them slipped on the ice and fell which resulted in the alleged injuries.

Appellant alleged that appellee, its agents and employees, caused the scrap lumber to be piled on the sidewalk at the place and time in question and were negligent in permitting the sidewalk in question to be and remain in a condition dangerous for the safe travel thereon of pedestrians; that such obstruction blocked the passageway on the sidewalk in violation of a city ordinance, constituting negligence on thé part of appellee, which was the proximate cause of appellant’s falling that resulted in her injuries; that appellee and its agents and employees were negligent in their failure to act as a reasonably prudent person would have done in clearing the sidewalk in question and in making it safe 'for pedestrians and that such negligence proximately caused the injuries; that appellee and its agents and employees were likewise negligent. in allowing the ice and snow to remain upon the sidewalk adjacent to its building in violation of a city ordinance and that such was the proximate cause of appellant’s fall that resulted in her injuries.

Appellant and her witnesses described the alleged obstruction on the sidewalk as being scrap lumber with some sheet metal or strips of metal mixed with it There was testimony that it was on the sidewalk before noon on the same day. But there was no testimony showing or tending to show who put the scrap lumber or metal on the sidewalk or when or why such was put there. Appellee’s agents and employees who operated the drugstore testified they did not put it there or authorize it being put there and did not know -it was there. Appellant and her companion, Virgie Kennedy, both testified they did not know who put it there. There was evidence to the effect that C. S. Lambie and Company had done some construction work under contract for appellee inside the drugstore but such was completed the latter part of February before the alleged injuries occurred on March 5, 1948. Some one-inch lumber, some two-by-fours, some two-by-twelves, some molding type lumber, some sheet metal, sheet rock, brick and concrete had been used in the construction work but a “clean up” man for Lambie testified that he cleaned up the premises on February 16 after th? bulk of the consrtuction. work was completed and removed all unused materials. Thereafter a little inside work was done by a carpenter on February 26 but most of the work done after February 16 was done by painters and plasterers, who finished their work on February 27.

Appellant acknowledges familiarity with the rule of law stated by the Supreme Court in the case of Grapotte *212 Adams, 130 Tex. 587, 111 S.W.2d 690, to the effect that sidewalks in a city are a part of the street, and a duty to exercise ordinary care to maintain them in reasonably safe condition for the use of the public rests upon the city, and not upon the abutting property owner. However, appellant now seeks to recover under her allegations to the effect that appellee, through its agents and employees, was negligent in creating a dangerous hazard on the sidewalk by leaving the alleged obstructions thereon adjacent to its drugstore. Appellee denies liability for any damages and for such alleged obstructions being on the sidewalk in question and denies any knowledge of such being there.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W.2d 209, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latimer-v-walgreen-drug-co-of-texas-texapp-1950.