Liner v. United States Torpedo Co.

12 S.W.2d 552
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1929
DocketNo. 945—5059
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 552 (Liner v. United States Torpedo Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liner v. United States Torpedo Co., 12 S.W.2d 552 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

SPEER, J.

E. R. Liner sued the United States Torpedo Company to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of negligence of the defendant in shooting an oil well owned by the plaintiff. Plaintiff owned an undivided i%2 interest in the oil and gas lease upon which the well was situated and • the casing in the well. R. P. Brown and others, owners of an interest in the lease and well, intervened. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues,. upon the answers to which judgment was rendered against the defendant. Upon appeal the Court of Civil Appeals for the Eleventh District, composed of special justices, reversed the judgment and remanded the' cause for another trial. .300 S. W. 641.

The first question presented in the application for writ of error challenges the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals that the trial court erred in permitting counsel for appellees (plaintiffs in error) to ask the witness Kingston, an expert witness for the appellant, a hypothetical question which’ did not present for consideration that salt water was being swabbed from the well, in seeking' an answer whether or not it was proper to shoot the well. The Court of Civil Appeals at tl^s point held: “The question, omitting to include the element of salt water therein, failed to embrace a very important fact that had support in the evidence. The question should have been so framed as to reflect the theory of the parties propounding it as shown by the facts admitted, or in evidence, and we do not think the appellee was entitled to' ask an improper question of this character and thereby cast upon the opposing counsel the burden of supplying its omissions or deficiencies. The objection should have been sustained.”

In this the Court of Civil Appeals erred. The evidence was sharply conflicting as, to whether or not salt water was being swabbed into the tank at the time, and this being true the party propounding the question was entitled to submit it and have it answered upon the assumption that its version of the facts was correct. If the opposite party desired to further affect the answer by the consideration of its version of the testimony with respect to salt water, it of course had the right to interrogate the witness with respect to the affect of swabbing salt water but such right upon its part would not defeat the plaintiff and interveners from having the expert’s opinion upon the facts their evidence tended to show. Gulf, etc., Co. v. Compton, 75 Tex. 667, 13 S. W. 667; Fort Worth, etc., Co. v. Greathouse, 82 Tex. 104, 17 S. W. 834; Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. Johnson (Tex. Civ. App.) 49 S. W. 265; Id., 92 Tex. 380, 48 S. W. 568; Schaff v. Shepherd (Tex. Civ. App.) 196 S. W. 232 (writ refused); 22 C. J. p. 724.

Moreover, the entire inquiry was entirely beside the issues in the case, as indisputably the defendant was employed for the express purpose of shooting the well and undertook that task; whereupon it became its duty in the performance of its undertaking to use ordinary care. So that the question of the propriety of shooting the well whether there was, or was not, salt water swabbing, was entirely immaterial.

It is next complained that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in reversing the trial court for admitting the testimony of the witness Mimms as to a conversation between him and Blair, who represented the defendant in error in the attempt to shoot the well. The matter is thus disposed of by the Court of Civil Appeals:

“The witness Mimms testified that soon after the premature explosion he rode back to town with Bill Blair, the shooter, and, when they had gone a mile or so from the well, Blair said to him: ‘You know that is hell, and would not happen to a big company; - it has got to happen to some poor devil like Liner that can’t afford it.’ I said, “Yes; it is hard on him, bad for Liner.” Then Blair. [554]*554said, “You know I am going to see the boys and see if I can get them to help him out.” That is what he said to me.’
“This testimony was objected to by defendant ‘because the agent had no authority to bind the company by such conversation, and such conversation would not be binding upon the defendant company.’
“Blair’s statements were evidently offered as an admission of liability on the part of the appellant, or of negligence upon his part. We can see no other purpose in tendering such testimony, but the objection of appellant clearly contends that Blair, ‘the agent, had no authority to bind the company by such conversation. * * * ’ Blair’s statements were not admissible as admission of liability of appellant nor of negligence upon his part, noi* were they admissible to bind the appellant in the respect suggested. Further and independently we do not think, under the facts of the ease, that the statements when made were within the scope of the agent’s authority. * * * At most, Blair’s statement was but an, expression of sympathy and inadmissible as such. * * * However, we are convinced that the statements of Blair introduced in evidence were of such a character that the admission thereof was highly prejudicial, and in all probability said statements were appropriated by the jury for the very purpose for which they were not admissible.”

. In this we think the court erred. Blair was the employ# and representative of the defendant company sent specially for the purpose of shooting the well under its contract with plaintiff in error Liner. Undoubtedly he was such employ# and representative of the company during all the time the company was engaged in the task of shooting the well. This included the going to the work and the returning therefrom. The statement quoted, was not under the circumstances shown a part of the res geste, but it was within the apparent scope of the authority of the company’s representative having the work in charge, and as such was admissible as an admission upon the part of the company.

But this is at last theory, for when the statement is examined it will be found not to justify the inference of an admission of liability on the part of the torpedo company, but clearly it amounts to a denial of liability, and, as indicated by the Court of Civil Appeals, an expression of sympathy for Liner, whom the speaker declared to be a poor devil not able to afford the loss. No doubt this expression of sympathy and indication of poverty of Liner was not admissible, but no such objection was made to the evidence, and the trial court’s ruling can only be reviewed in the light of the precise objections made.

Furthermore, there was other evidence not objected to, to the same effect. At the moment of the premature blast, Liner accused Blair of causing the same through a too fast descent of the squib. Whereupon Blair said: “Liner, that makes me sick. * * * It is too bad it could not happen to a large company or some one able to stand it.”

As against the objections urged to his want of authority to speak for the torpedo company, this testimony was as much subject to exclusion as that first quoted above and, being admitted without objection, renders harmless at all events the ruling being discussed.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liner-v-united-states-torpedo-co-texcommnapp-1929.