Poteet v. Blossom Oil & Cotton Co.

115 S.W. 289, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 187, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 589
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 115 S.W. 289 (Poteet v. Blossom Oil & Cotton 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
Poteet v. Blossom Oil & Cotton Co., 115 S.W. 289, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 187, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 589 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

Appellant, a minor, brought this suit by next friend to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the appellee company.

The court sustained a general demurrer to the petition, and entered judgment in favor of the appellee; and to have the ruling revised the case is on appeal.

The petition states, substantially, that the plaintiff at the time of her injury was four and one-half years old, and too young to know and understand the danger of going in and about an oil mill and to understand and obey any caution or warning that may have been given her by others regarding such danger; that appellee, a private corporation, operates an oil mill and uses for the purpose a large building divided into rooms and apartments, in each of which is situated and operated dangerous machinery. One of the apartments is used for receiving and storing cotton seed to be ground, and situated therein are seed conveyors, pulleys, belts, elevators and divers other pieces of machinery attractive to children. That the seed conveyor is located on the floor of the room, "and was especially dangerous to children, and that the danger therefrom was hidden. That the plaintiff’s father, at and previous to the time of the injury to the plaintiff, was employed by the company, and was in charge and control of the seed room. On the day of the injury plaintiff wás carried by her mother—as had been done on many days prior thereto—to the oil mill and into the seed room, where her father was at work; the purpose of her visit being to carry the father’s dinner for him to eat. That "while in the seed room the plaintiff was permitted to wander about over the seed room and among the machinery. She had gone near and was approaching in the direction of the seed conveyor, and on *190 the opposite side from where her mother was. At the time the mother was assisting in the performance of the father’s labor and shoveling seed into the conveyor. That “said B. F. Poteet knew where she was and what she was doing.” Suddenly plaintiff heard her mother cry out as if in alarm; and thinking that the latter was in danger of being injured by the fall of a large pile of seed, and not appreciating the danger to herself in doing so, she, the plaintiff, attempted to pass over the seed conveyor and stepped-upon what appeared to be a solid foundation over the same made by a plank placed on the top of said seed conveyor, when suddenly her foot passed through an opening in the plank which had been obscured by the accumulation of cotton seed, and was caught by a large, spiral-shaped piece of machinery and was permanently injured. It was specifically alleged .that “on the day the plaintiff was injured, and on many occasions prior thereto, she visited said oil mill and the aforesaid seed room with the full.knowledge, acquiescence and consent' of the officers, agents and employes, and at the special instance and request of some of them.”

After stating the case.—In pleading negligence, arising from the wrongful conduct of another, it is essential that the petition shall contain an allegation of duty owing by the defendant to the plaintiff, or facts and circumstances from which such duty can be inferred, and a failure in the performance or an imperfect performance of such duty by the defendant, and that such failure or breach of e duty was a natural and proximate cause of the injury and damage to the plaintiff. Appellee’s counsel, with signal force and ability, contends that the petition in this respect is not sufficient in law to withstand the demurrer.

By the petition a child of four and one-lialf years old claims that she was in the seed room of the appellee, where dangerous machinery was located, among hidden dangers, by the invitation and permission of the officers, agents and employes of the company, and “at the special instance and request of some of them.” If, as alleged, the appellant visited the seed room on the occasion of her injury “at the special instance and request” of some of the employes of appellee, authorized to give consent by their agency, then clearly the appellant’s claim would be sustained that she was and remained in the seed room and place of injury at the time of the injury by .invitation of the appellee. But the ruling on the demurrer can not be here rested, as the controlling questions arise on the particular facts averred. The case is not a case in which the parent or guardian or protector of the infant injured is not present when the injury occurs. As shown by the facts alleged, the appellant was carried by her mother to the seed room of appellee, the purpose of the visit being to carry dinner to B. F. Poteet, who was an employe of appellee and at the time at work in the seed room and having full charge and control of the same, and who was by regulations of the company required to continue work at the noon hour. B. F. Poteet was the father of the child. She was permitted to enter and remain in the seed room, where it was dangerous at all events for persons óf her age and intelligence to be. While remaining in the- seed room she was abandoned by the mother, *191 and permitted to “wander around the seed room” and among the dangerous machinery and into hidden danger, and was injured; and B. F. Poteet, the person in charge of the seed room, knew and saw that the child was in and intruding into danger. Viewing the conduct of appellant in the light of her tender age, she was without free agency as to her presence in the seed room, and for that reason and on that account she would not, in her legal right, be regarded as a trespasser or intruder within the meaning of the law. Bather would the precise facts show consent on the part of the employe of appellee in charge of the seed room for appellant to remain there; and, further, by reason of her immature age, the court would not declare, as a matter of law, that she was guilty of contributory negligence in “wandering in the seed room among dangerous machinery” or remaining in the seed room. Thompson on Negligence, supplement, sec. 1430; Evansich v. Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry., 57 Texas, 126. That it was the duty of the company not to knowingly permit appellant to remain in the seed room if her being there at all and unattended was dangerous to her is not doubted as a well settled proposition of law. Poteet being intrusted by the appellee with the control and management of the seed room, it is a fundamental principle of agency that his act in inviting or permitting appellant to remain in the same, though wrongful as to and unauthorized by appellee, imposed upon appellee the legal duty towards her of exercising the proper care for her safety, and fastened upon it the responsibility of his failure or imperfect performance of that duty towards her. This rule of agency has been generally applied in the numerous cases. It is sufficient to quote from the case of Cook v. Houston Direct Navigation Co., 76 Texas, 353, an infancy case, “but we think it was the duty of the company not to permit them on board, if their presence there was dangerous. When the company left the management of the boat to its servants the duty devolved upon them, and it can not be permitted to say that their action in allowing the children on the boat was contrary to orders, and that it is not liable.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W. 289, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 187, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poteet-v-blossom-oil-cotton-co-texapp-1909.