Patton v. Dallas Gas Co.

192 S.W. 1060, 108 Tex. 321, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 80
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1917
DocketNo. 2459.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 1060 (Patton v. Dallas Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patton v. Dallas Gas Co., 192 S.W. 1060, 108 Tex. 321, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 80 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

Me. Justice YAHTIS.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff in error, Will D. Patton, in falling through an opening in the floor of the Dallas-Gas Company’s main building into the basement thereof. The opening through which he fell had no guard rail around it, but was entirely unguarded and unprotected against accidents such as the one which happened in this case. The opening in the floor was in the room of the gas company’s building known as the “stoking room.” At its side a stairway went from the stoking room to the basement. This stairway was customarily used by the employees of the defendant in error, the. Dallas Gas Company, in going from the ground floor of the building to the basement. The plaintiff in error, Patton, had been in the employ of the defendant in error for several years prior to the accident, and in the discharge of his duties as such, he had often used this stairway and worked around this opening in the floor. He was entirely familiar with the opening and the danger of being injured should he fall in. Just prior to the accident the plaintiff in error had for several weeks taken a vacation from his work on account of illness. Prior to his vacation it had been the custom for employees in the basement to throw cinders therefrom through said hole and on the floor in *324 front of said opening, but it had not been customary to leave them there, but the rule had been to remove them. But for a few days prior to the accident the superintendent, M. H. Dial, had directed that they be not removed, he wishing to use them in doing certain cement work. On the afternoon of June 28, 1909, which was the day previous to the accident, the plaintiff in error went to the basement, in obedience to the directions of Superintendent Dial, following the superintendent down said stairway at the side of the opening. The pile of cinders in front of the opening in the floor had accumulated until it was four or five feet deep, and covered a space of perhaps ten feet in diameter. The pile of cinders was in a cone shape, slanting down towards the opening of the hole. On the afternoon of the day prior to the injury, when the plaintiff in error followed the superintendent, Dial, to the basement, he passed between said pile of cinders and said unguarded hole in the floor. There was at that time a plain pathway between the cinders and the hole, fifteen or eighteen inches wide, in which there were no cinders. The purpose of their going to the basement on the afternoon before the injury was for the plaintiff in error, at the request "of Superintendent Dial, to do some gad fittings in the basement of the building. Patton did not complete the work assigned to him in the basement on the day he was directed to do the work, and the next morning, after doing some of his regular work with the engine and pump, he secured some tools and a pipe on the outside of the main building for the purpose of returning to the unfinished work which had been the day before assigned to him in connection with the gas fittings in the basement. With his tools, weighing twelve or fourteen pounds, in his hands he entered the stoking room, and at the place where he entered the heap of cinders was between him and the opening in the floor through which he afterwards fell, so that he could not see said opening when he entered the building with his tools, but he was perfectly familiar with its existence, and knew it was there. He started to the basement and in going he passed around the pile of cinders, starting to the stairway which led to the basement. During the night the pathway which was between the opening in the floor and the cinders, and which had been unobstructed, had been obliterated by some of the servants filling it with cinders during the night until the pile of cinders sloped down to a thin edge of said opening, completely destroying the pathway. This changed condition was unknown to Patton when he started on the morning of the accident to return to his work in the basement. It left no clear or safe way to cross in fipnt of the hole and to reach the stairway, which was on the opposite side of the opening from the place where said Patton reached the opening. As Patton approached the opening at the side opposite the stairway he stepped on the cinders near the opening, and, according to his statement, he could not stop, so he attempted to step over the recess in the opening which projected into the floor from the opening two feet, and was four feet wide, to the *325 opposite side, and in doing so fell in, from which fall the injuries resulted for which the recovery in this case is sought.

The petition of the plaintiff in error alleged that his injuries were caused by the negligence of the defendant in error in leaving the cinders in the passway in front of the, opening, which rendered it unsafe and dangerous to the plaintiff in error. The trial was by jury. A verdict w'as rendered by it in favor of the plaintiff in error. Appeal was taken by the defendant in error, the Dallas Gas Company, to the honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth District, where the judgment of the District Court was reversed and rendered in favor of the defendant in error, the Court of Civil Appeals holding that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct a verdict for the defendant in error, as was requested by it in writing. 147 S. W., 313. The special charge requested was as follows:

“In this case you will render a verdict for the defendant.” -

The finding of fact by the Court of Civil Appeals was to the effect that the testimony conclusively showed that the plaintiff in error was perfectly familiar with the construction of the stoking room and the recess or opening in the floor, having worked around it and used the stair steps which led down into the basement frequently; that the stoking room was sufficiently lighted for the pile of cinders to be seen; that the plaintiff in error, when he received his injuries, was paying no attention, and that had he looked he could have seen the cinders and ashes on which he slipped; that he knew he was close to the hole, or ought to have known it, and that he pursued his way without using any care whatever, and in doing so he assumed the risk of falling into the hole, for which reason the defendant in error was not liable in damages. This finding of fact, in our opinion, is abundantly sustained by the undisputed testimony of the plaintiff in error himself. He testified that he came into the stoking room and went due west until he struck the edge of the cinders, and then he followed the cinders in a circle, around the edge of them to a point north of the recess hole, and there he turned straight to the south, -and taking one step, after he turned, he “lit on the ashes,” which were an inch or two deep near the opening in the floor, and that the ashes slipped under him, and that to keep from falling he undertook to step across the recess hole or opening, and not succeeding he fell in and was injured.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 1060, 108 Tex. 321, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-dallas-gas-co-tex-1917.