McDaniel Bros. v. Wilson

45 S.W.2d 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 3, 1931
DocketNos. 2080, 2081
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 45 S.W.2d 293 (McDaniel Bros. v. Wilson) 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
McDaniel Bros. v. Wilson, 45 S.W.2d 293 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

WALKER, J.

Appellants are C. H. and Howard McDaniel, individually and as partners under the firm name of McDaniel Brothers, E. L. Wilson Hardware Company, a corporation, and Southern Surety Company. Appellees are E. E. Wilson and Mrs. Maude W.' Littleton, joined pro forma by her husband, Martin W. Littleton, individually and as independent executors of the estate of Mrs. Minnie G. Starke, deceased. In the court below appel-lees were plaintiffs and appellants defendants. Appellees thus state the nature and result of the suit as tried in .the lower court:

“It was alleged that the E. L. Wilson Hardware Company was the owner of a lot immediately north of the property of appellees and on a certain date the Hardware Company and the said McDaniel Brothers, as contractors and agents, began the digging with heavy machinery of a large and deep excavation upon the property of the said Hardware Company adjoining the property of appellees, and thereafter completed the digging of said excavation, the same being dug down into the earth to a depth of twelve or fifteen feet making a cavity about sixty or seventy feet wide and one hundred forty or one hundred fifty feet long, it being so dug within a distance of five or eight feet of the foundation of the north wall of the building of appellees; that the digging of said cavity or excavation had the effect to deprive the land of appellees and improvements thereon situated of the proper and natural lateral support.
“We will here quote the very important, paragraph 4 of the petition of appellees ás follows:
“ ‘That the said E. L. Wilson Hardware Company or the said McDaniel Brothers did not comply with the'law or ordinances of the municipal corporation of the City of Beaumont in connection with the making of such excavation on the property of said E. L. Wilson Hardware Company.
“ ‘That an ordinance of the City of Beaumont, passed January 10th, 1922 and in force and effect at the time of the acts herein complained of, such ordinance being known as the “Building, Electrical and Plumbing Code,” provided among other things, substantially as follows:
“ ‘Excavations—
“ ‘ (a) All excavations for buildings shall be so guarded and protected as to prevent the same from becoming dangerous to life or property and shall be sheath-piled by the person or persons causing the excavations to be made when necessary to prevent the adjoining earth from caving in by reason of its own weight, or by reason of any weight that may rest upon it. Whenever there shall be any excavations hereafter commenced, upon any lot or piece of land and there shall be a building or buildings on the adjoining lot, the person or persons making such excavations shall, at his, her, or their expense," protect, underpin or make perfectly safe the adjoining property.
“ ‘(b) Whenever an excavation for building or other purposes shall be intended to be or shall be carried below the grade, the person causing such excavations to be made shall at all times from the commencement until the completion thereof at his own expense preserve any adjoining or contiguous wall, structure, yard, bank of earth or rock from injury, and support the same by proper foundations or retaining walls, so that they shall be and remain practically as safe as before such excavations were commenced, whether the said adjoining or contiguous wall, structure, yard, bank, of earth or rock from injury, are down more or less than grade.
“ ‘For this purpose such approved foundations or retaining walls may be built upon the property upon which such wall, structure, yard or bank of earth or rock is situated.’
“That the said E. L. Wilson Hardware Company or McDaniel Brothers did not so guard and protect the said excavation as to prevent the same from becoming dangerous to life or property, and .did not protect, underpin or make safe the adjoining property of these plaintiffs, and although the excavation made on the property of said E. L. Wilson Hardware Company was carried below the grade, the said defendants did not at the commencement thereof or thereafter preserve the adjoining or contiguous wall, structure and building of these ■ plaintiffs, or support the same by proper foundations or retaining walls, so that same might remain safe.
“In Paragraph 5, as additional ground of liability, certain alleged acts of negligence as at common law were set forth, it being alleged that appellants were negligent in not removing and taking out the earth in making such excavation in sections, allowing the excava[295]*295tion to remain open and exposed to the elements for an unnecessary and unreasonable length of time, etc.
“In paragraph 6, it was alleged in substance, that as a result and effect of the acts of appellants, the earth underlying the foundation of appellees’ building was caused to sink, slip, slide and move in the direction of said excavation causing the walls of the building to crack, move and sink, become greatly weakened, dislocating the joists of the building, causing the windows in storerooms to become dislocated and out of plumb and breaking glass of said show windows and causing a general dislocating and weakening of walls of the building, etc. The items of damage were then set forth in detail.
“To this petition the appellants McDaniel Brothers and E. L. Wilson Hardware Company filed separate answers, being only a general demurrer and general denial. Neither party in any way questioned the validity, effect and operation of the City Ordinance and Building Code above referred to nor did the E. L. Wilson Hardware Company specially plead as against appellants, that the acts in question were those of an independent contractor.
“The Hardware Company by cross action asked for judgment over against McDaniel Brothers and judgment against the party that they brought into the suit, the Southern Surety Company of New York, by reason of the terms of a contract between the Hardware Company and McDaniel Brothers and the terms and provisions of indemnity bonds given.
“ * * * At the conclusion of the offering of testimony by all parties in the trial court, the trial judge gave to the jury a peremptory instruction to find' in favor of the defendant, Southern Surety Company, and in favor of defendant E. L. Wilson Hardware Company, which the jury accordingly did, and further answered certain special issues submitted. The Court refused the motion of plaintiffs and of McDaniel Brothers for peremptory instruction.
“The special issues submitted, together with the jury’s answers, are as follows:
“ ‘Special Issue No. 1: Was the making and maintaining of excavation referred to in the evidence the proximate cause of injury to the property of the plaintiffs? Answer, Yes.’
“By proximate cause is meant ‘that which in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by -any new independent cause produces the event and without which the event would not have occurred.’
“ ‘Special Issue No. 2: Were the defendants, McDaniel Brothers, guilty of negligence in connection with the making and manner of handling and maintaining said excavation? Answer, No.’

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W.2d 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-bros-v-wilson-texapp-1931.