Melvin v. Kane

277 S.W. 374
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1925
DocketNo. 565-4312
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 374 (Melvin v. Kane) 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
Melvin v. Kane, 277 S.W. 374 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

POWELB, P. J.

Defendant in error, upon a trial before a jury, recovered judgment in the. district court of El Paso county, Tex., for $l,00t> against plaintiff in error because of personal' injuries she sustained in falling on a curb in front of property of Melvin. Upon appeal by the latter, the judgment of | the trial court was affirmed. See 265 S. W. I 1061. The case is stated fully by the Court of Civil Appeals, and it is unnecessary to repeat that statement here.

There are but two assignments of .error in the application. The first one reads as follows :

“The Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding the following:
“After giving a statement of the case, the court makes the following finding:
“ ‘After [appellant] became the owner, defendant, with the permission of the city, caused to be built a concrete driveway from, the street across the intervening parking space and sidewalk to the * * * filling station. The defect complained of is a small open space between the end of the curb 'and the driveway. It is apparent from the evidence as a whole that the curb was cut to put in the driveway, and in building the driveway this open space, was left. In other words, the driveway was not built so as to connect with the end of the cut curb.’ ”

There are three or four propositions in the application under aforesaid assignment, but all based upon the proposition that there is no evidence in the record to sustain the findings by the Court of Civil Appeals which we have just quoted. If we find that there is any evidence in the record to sustain these findings, then the propositions under aforesaid assignment, which do present some very interesting legal questions, will not be applicable here. So we proceed to a consideration of the record to ascertain whether or not there is any evidence to sustain the finding that this defect in the curb was caused by Melvin or his agents. The jury found it was. The district court approved that finding and entered judgment thereon accordingly. The Court of Civil Appeals sustained this finding. Under these circumstances, the Supreme Court cannot overrule the lower courts, unless it can be said that there is no evidence upon which such a finding could be based. Can this be said? We think not.-

Melvin purchased this land several years before this accident. At that time it had no business houses on it. It had an old residence on one part of the land. I-Ie then constructed a business building, large enough to be partitioned into a small tailor shop, a small grocery store, and a filling station. At the time he bought the land it had the usual sidewalk, grass plot, and curb alongside. There is no evidence that there was at that time any vacancy in the curb. When he decided to build a driveway into his filling station, he secured permission to cut the curb in two places and insert this driveway. It was cut by permission of the city and by the agents of Melvin. Those agents constructed the driveway. When it was completed, one F. K. Piggott, a civil engineer connected with the engineering department. [375]*375of the city of El Paso, inspected the work., He testified:

“There is a driveway there into the filling station. Those driveways are usually built by the property owners. The city requires a permit to cut the curb and build the driveway. The driveway is inspected by my department as to the quality of the work and if it fits the city standards. I have visited this place. This driveway is constructed and laid in there according to city requirements. I observed the joint here between tb,e curbing, as it stands, and the north edge of this driveway, and there is a small broken place there. The upper corner of the curb is broken out, probably three of , four Inches wide and a couple deep. I couldn’t say whether that occurred at the time of construction or later — whether it was knocked out since that.”

It will be observed that the inspector did approve the driveway; but he did not say that he approved the defect in the curb beyond the driveway, which he describes, and which is the basis of this suit. All the evidence in the case shows this defect was most unusual and not generally present in these filling station driveways. There is no assignment in the application to the effect that Piggott would have sworn he would have approved this broken curb if he had been asked that question.

Piggott, a witness for plaintiff in error, said he did not know whether the defect in the curb occurred in the construction of the driveway or later. But there are other witnesses on that point. The defendant in error and her son both testified in this connection. The former said her husband was a cement contractor, and that she was often with him on his work, and that she was familiar with such character, of work. She gave it as her opinion, judging from all appearances, that the defect was created when the curb was cut for the building of the driveway; that it was chopped off and never built up again. There was no objection to this testimony. It was in the record. Again, her son, who drove her car at the time of the accident, testified that he was familiar with the appearance of this defect and that it “looked like it was chopped out in order to build a driveway there.” There was no objection to this testimony. It was also before the jury.

Since Melvin had this work done, ho was in better position than any one else to shed some light upon this point. There is nothing in the record to show why the contractor who actually did the work was not placed on the stand. He, or his employees, above all •others, could have given direct and positive testimony as to whether or not this curb was in that condition because of what was done when it was cut to make way for the driveway. The plaintiff had made out a prima facie case. It was incumbent upon the defendant to rebut that testimony or abide by the verdict of the jury upon the evidence already before it; and, in the face of this situation, the defendant in the trial court offered absolutely no evidence throwing any light upon this all important question. Melvin himself admitted that he did not know when the defect occurred. We do know that .the breaking of the curb to make way for the driveway was one way in which this defect could very reasonably have arisen. No testimony was offered showing any other explanation for its presence in the curb.

We hol'd that there was some evidence in the record to sustain this finding by the Court of Civil Appeals. Upon such a finding we think that court correctly announces the law as follows:

“This evidence and the jury’s findings establish the liability of the defendant under the ruling by the Commission of Appeals in Houston, etc., v. Scheppelman, 235 S. W. 206, where it is said:
‘With reference to the contention that the city of Houston alone is liable, it is our view that no person, with or without the consent of the municipality, can actively render a highway or sidewalk, of’-a municipality unsafe for public use, without as a rule, being liable to a traveler who suffers injury thereby. The breach of its duty by- the municipality to restore the highway or sidewalk to a reasonably safe condition and maintain it in that condition — in other words, its passive neglect — furnishes no defense to an action for damages against the party whose active negligence rendered the highway or sidewalk dangerous.’

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melvin-v-kane-texcommnapp-1925.