Ohler v. Trinity Portland Cement Co.

181 S.W.2d 120, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 765
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1944
DocketNo. 11559.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 120 (Ohler v. Trinity Portland Cement Co.) 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
Ohler v. Trinity Portland Cement Co., 181 S.W.2d 120, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 765 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

The appellants are the grandparents of, and in loco parentis to, Roy Hall. Roy Hall was severely shocked and injured on February 25. 1940, in an electric trans *121 'former rack or substation which is located upon the property of the. Trinity Portland Cement Company (hereafter called Cement Company) within the City of .Houston. He was then not yet nine years of age. Appellants brought this action as his next friend to recover damages for the injuries which he sustained against the Cement Company, the Houston Lighting and Powder Company (hereafter called Power Company) and the Houston Packing Company ■(hereafter called the Packing Company)." The action is based on the “attractive nuisance” doctrine, and upon the “playground theory”, and upon “discovered peril”.

At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ evidence the court granted the motion of the Packing Company for an instructed verdict. Appellants here make no complaint of this action of the court, and do not attack the judgment of the trial court to the effect that plaintiffs take nothing as against the Packing Company. The judgment insofar as it is in favor of the Packing Company is therefore affirmed without discussion.

At the conclusion of all the evidence the court granted the motions of the Cement Company and the Power Company for "instructed verdicts, and rendered judgment that appellants take nothing. Appellants here energetically contend that the evidence was ample to go to the jury as against the Power Company and the Cement Company. And this .contention they present in the form of fifteen points. These fifteen points assert that the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury under the attractive nuisance doctrine, the playground theory, and discovered peril. No purpose would be served to set them forth verbatim.

The case was well tried, and it becomes necessary to make a rather long statement of facts. It is elementary that a motion for an instructed verdict by a defendant at the end of all the "evidence is, in one respect, equivalent to the demurrer to evidence which is now obsolete in Texas Practice, namely, that it concedes as true (but only for the purpose of the motion for instructed verdict) all the evidence of the plaintiff, and all reasonable inferences therefrom in favor of the plaintiff. Consequently, all of the defendant’s evidence in conflict with that of the plaintiff must be disregarded. Following this rule we omit all evidence of the appellees in conflict with that of appellants.

. The Cement Company and the Packing Company each owns a plant which is set upon rather large" grounds, the grounds of each consisting of some four or five city blocks, and are adjacent to each other. These grounds front upon Navigation Boulevard, and the plants of each set well back on the grounds, away from the Boulevard. At the rear of the grounds are railroad tracks which serve the plants. The grounds of each company are now enclosed with high fences, but they were unenclosed at the time Roy Hall was injured. We infer these fences were constructed in consequence of the. accident by which he received his. injuries.

At the time of the accident .and for some years prior thereto, the grounds of the Cement Company and Packing Company were well kept. The grass was kept .well cut, and there were trees and well pruned shrubs thereon. In other words, the grounds were maintained in sightly manner and had an attractive appearance, at least on the ■ portion between the front of the buildings and the Boulevard. But the grounds were not kept up in so attractive manner beyond or across the railroad tracks from the Boulevard. The railroad tracks run in an east and west direction, and are located toward the rear of the grounds,, The Cement Company maintained a sort of golf course upon the park-like portion of its grounds for its employees. There was also located on its grounds a monument with writing on it,, and back of the monument about ten feet there is a flagpole.

The transformer rack or substation is located on the grounds of the Cement Company across the railroad tracks away from the Boulevard — i. e., not upon the park-like portion of the grounds. High tension electric wires are in the transformer rack. It is for the purpose of transforming the high voltage current into weaker current so that it can be used by the Cement Company, as a consumer. On three sides the transformer rack is enclosed by a heavy wire or iron mesh fence, which is surmounted by three strings or strands of barbed wire. This barbed wire is made to jut out from the fence at an angle of about forty-five degrees. The fence, inclusive of the surmounting barbed wires, is seven feet and two inches high. The fourth side of the enclosure consists of a wall of a building of the Cement Company’s plant. There is *122 a gate in the fence, next to the building. This gate is customarily kept locked, and was locked at the time Roy Hall was injured. Upon the gate is a sign, reading: “Danger. High Voltage.” The rack itself is in the form of a rectangle, and at each corner is equipped with a ladder in the form of iron pegs or spikes to enable employees of the Power Company to service it. It is kept bright looking with aluminum colored paint. Transformer racks are not uncommon and will not be further described. The Power Company itself maintains ninety-seven of them of substantially the same kind as here involved.

This particular transformer rack was installed in 1927. In 1938 the Cement Company erected a barbed wire fence consisting of twenty-two strings or strands. And one end of this fence was practically flush with one corner of the fence which enclosed the rack. There was evidence that a baseball was on some occasions knocked over into the enclosure where the rack is located and that a boy would retrieve it by climbing upon the twenty-two strand barbed wire fence, and, by aid of the twenty-two strand fence, get over the mesh fence, and thus into the enclosure. This was the means by which Roy Hall, on the Sunday afternoon in question, managed to get within the enclosure. Of this more will be said later.

Children were frequently seen by persons passing by playing upon the grounds of both the Cement Company and the Power Company. They played football, baseball and golf there; hunted Easter eggs there, and at night played hide and seek. They even played north of the railroad tracks, where the grounds were not kept up, but not as much as where the grounds were maintained. That is to say, not far from where the substation or transformer rack is located.

South and east of this industrial property was located residential property, and children lived in the vicinity. There was evidence that, when the employee who had the grounds of the Cement Company in charge ran the children off the golf grounds he told them they might play if they would keep off the golf grounds.

One of the boys who testified for appellants that he had climbed over into the enclosure where the rack was located in order to retrieve a baseball admitted that he had been quick about it to keep from being found out as he knew he would not be permitted to do it. There was no evidence that any employee ever saw a boy climb over into the enclosure where the rack was. There was evidence that the twenty-two strand fence, near the enclosure, sagged from which it could have been inferred that it had been climbed upon, and used as a means of getting over into the enclosure.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 120, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohler-v-trinity-portland-cement-co-texapp-1944.