Murphy v. City of Rotan

139 S.W.2d 134, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 208
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 1940
DocketNo. 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 139 S.W.2d 134 (Murphy v. City of Rotan) 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
Murphy v. City of Rotan, 139 S.W.2d 134, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 208 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

Artis Murphy, a minor by next friend, filed this suit against the City of Rotan, a municipal corporation, to recover damages for the loss of “his left hand, except a portion of two fingers.” He alleges the injuries to be the proximate result of defendant’s negligence in storing dynamite caps in the city hall. He alleges the city was guilty of “actual as well as passive negligence in permitting said dynamite caps to be left open and unguarded *, * * and that the appellee’s officers, agents and employees knew * * * or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care of the danger incident to leaving such dangerous explosive substance as dynamite caps exposed and unguarded in a public place and in the public city hall where ap-pellee, its officers, agents and employees knew * * * or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care that the school boys of the town had access to said city hall for the purpose of getting the daily newspapers each day to be delivered over the town, and that the appellee, its officers, agents and employees knew *• * * or could have anticipated the danger or harm that would result from leaving dangerous explosive substance as dynamite caps in said public hall which was daily visited by school boys who were going in and out of said public hall at the time said dangerous instruments were so exposed, etc.”

The appellee answered by general demurrer, general denial, and among other defenses specially alleged contributory negligence as well as an intervening independent cause, relieving the appellee from responsibility, in that the dynamite caps were taken from the city hall unlawfully or by theft, etc.

The trial was before the court and jury and at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony the court sustained the defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict. A judgment was entered accordingly, motion for new trial was overruled and the plaintiff appeals.

Said action of the trial court is assigned as error.

The facts in evidence necessary to reflect the reasons for our conclusions will be stated in substance:

Artis Murphy, the injured minor, was 17 years of age at the date of this unfortunate occurrence on January 28, 1938. He was a member of the senior 'class of the Rotan high school at the 1937-1938 term, and in daily attendance on its sessions. He uniformly made his grades and graduated at the end of that term. The accident occurred in the study hall on the third floor of the building about 11:15 or 11:18 a. m. Murphy testified that “in going from the English class that morning to the stairway that led up” he found a “brass cap”; that it “looked like a 22 special cartridge that had fired — bigger than a 22 cartridge.” That he had not seen one before and “did not know what it was.” That he “found it under a locker where Don [Knott] was; it was about 12 feet from the stairway * * * up to the third floor.” That Don (who had taken five dynamite caps at the city hall) was “at his locker at that time putting some books in or taking some out.” That Don’s locker was “about four feet [136]*136high.” That there was another locker “under his (Don’s) locker down nearer the floor than” Don’s; that “with reference to where Don was standing” the cap “was just off to one side, just a little bit.” "Q. Did you see it fall there or drop there ? A. No, I had to reach down under his feet to get it.”

The appellant further testified that on picking up the cap, he said nothing about it but took it to the study hall where he showed it to a cousin who wanted it, but from whom he (appellant) “took it * * * before it went off.” “Q. Now, how long after you got in the study hall before you began to fool with this brass cap ? A. Just as soon as I got seated I began fooling with it.” That he “was seeing what was in it; examining it” with a hair pin which he had gotten “from a girl in front”; that the cap was about one third full of something “like chalk.” • That he removed some of it from the cap; that he had no “idea there was any danger to it.” That no one told him what it was. That he “had been fooling with it” when it exploded “but a short while”; that it exploded with the injurious effects above stated.

On cross-examination the appellant testified further that when he picked the cap up he “did not hear it drop.” That when he “first saw it, it was on the floor.” That “it happened that Don Knott was there putting his books up or taking them out of the locker.” “Q. You don’t tell the jury that Don Knott dropped it do you? A. No, I don’t know for sure that Don dropped it.” Appellant also- stated to Mr. Little, a teacher, that he found the cap “under a locker.”

The following stipulation was entered into between the parties with respect to the witness, J. D. Corhn. “It is agreed by the parties that J. D. Corhn, if present and testifying, would testify that he sold the city of Rotan dynamite and dynamite caps during the time that they had the Works Progress going on and that he was paid by the Secretary Mr. [T. B.] Knott, and that he is the only dealer in Rotan that handles dynamite and dynamite caps so far as he knows and that he sold dynamite and dynamite caps to others in and around Rotan, desiring same at or about the same time."

T. B. Knott was the father of witness Don Knott, and also secretary of the Rotan city council with office in the city hall where the explosives are alleged to have been kept for the convenience of those engaged in the construction of a municipal swimming pool with the aid and supervision of the Works Progress Administration.

Don Knott, called as a witness by the appellant, testified that at the time of the accident he was 16 years old, a junior in the local high school, boy scout, etc. That he was in the study hall at the time of the accident;- that before that time he had a dynamite cap in his possession; that at first he did not know what the cap was, but found out what it was before the explosion ; that he saw them in a tin box “on a drawing table” at the- city hall about a month before the accident, or sometime from December 1 to December 15. That he got some dynamite caps “out of an office at the city hall”, taking them off a “drawing table” (engineer’s). That he got some of them out of a cabinet in a “back room.” That these were in a “tin box with lid on” and were not open to view as they were behind a-“wooden handle on each side of the cabinet.” “Q. Now, did you ever see a box with those little brass or copper colored caps in any other room in there, except the room where that drawing table was in? A. . No, sir.”

The witness testified that on the first occasion he took four caps from the desk— “the drawing table.” This was about December “before Christmas.” That no one saw him take the caps; that no one knew he had done so, and no one had given him permission to take them. That the caps and fuse had a monetary value at the time he took them.

Soon after taking the caps the witness told Otto Hull, another school boy, that he had taken them, and he gave Hull one of the four caps. Sometime before Christmas the witness talked to Royce Huckaby, another school boy who had clerked in Corhn’s hardware store, and Huckaby told him they were dynamite caps. The witness did not remember for certain that Huck-aby told him 'how to explode the caps, but' that he (the witness) soon found that out.

After this witness (Knott) learned that these objects were dynamite caps he got some regular dynamite fuse with which to explode “the remaining caps.” That he got this fuse from the back room at the city hall out of a shelf under a desk.

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139 S.W.2d 134, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-city-of-rotan-texapp-1940.