Rick Furniture Co. v. Smith

202 S.W. 99, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 237
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1918
DocketNo. 7903.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 99 (Rick Furniture Co. v. Smith) 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
Rick Furniture Co. v. Smith, 202 S.W. 99, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 237 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

The appellee sued the appellant to recover damages for personal injuries received through the negligence of appellant. The appellant is a private corpo-. ration engaged in the sale of furniture and porch swings. In due course of business it sold to appellee such a swing, and hung the same on the porch of appellee’s residence in his absence. Th'e swing was rather heavy, about 4% feet long, with arms and high back, and made to hang from a ceiling by chains and hooks. The porch where the swing, was hung was ceiled, and the ceiling joists were 1x4 timbers. There is no proof that these timbers were defective. On the contrary, it appears that they were sound and suitable for the purpose intended, and were such as are often used in small cotí tages, such as appellee’s was, and ample to support the swing. Shortly after the swing was hung, and while being used in the ordinary way by appellee it fell, resulting in the breaking of appellee’s leg. The fall of the swing did not result from the breaking or giving way of the joist. It resulted from the pulling out of one of the supporting hooks that had ‘been screwed through the ceiling of the porch and into the joists. This hook had not been put straight in the center of the joist and solid wood, hut was put in by appellant’s agent crooked, and too near the edge of the joist, and evidently by guess. The other hook, which was put in the same joist, went practically straight into the solid wood, and did not pull out, but remained firm.

Appellee alleged that he bought the swing in response to the offer of appellant to deliver and hang same safely at his residence for the purchase price, namely, $4.50; that said offer was made in express terms at appellant’s place of business, and likewise in implied terms by appellant by advertisements widely circulated; that appellant expressly and also impliedly, by said advertisement and by said sale at its regular place of business, warranted to appellee that it would hang said swing safely at appellee’s residence; that by and through its authorized agent, acting within the scope of his employment, appellant did hang the swing, alone selecting the place on the front porch of appellee’s residence. The appellee in a separate count of his petition further alleged that appellant was guilty of negligence, in that it did not employ careful and competent employes to put up the swing, that its employés who put up the swing did not use that degree of care that ordinarily prudent, cautious, and competent persons would use under the same or similar circumstances in hanging the swing, but did hang said swing in . a careless, negligent, and unsafe manner, and that said negligence directly and proximately caused and contributed to cause the fall of the swing and appellee’s injuries; that said swing as so erected by appellant did not constitute a safe appliance *100 such as appellee contracted for, but did constitute an unsafe and dangerous appliance that was a real and veritable trap for appellee, when he endeavored to use it in a proper and careful manner, which he was doing at the time it fell.

Appellant answered by general denial, and specially that it advertised the swings for sale, and advertised to hang them free of charge to the purchaser, but said advertisement formed no part of any contract of sale with purchasers of such swings, and that the free hooks and) free hanging of swings for each purchaser when desired, as advertised, was but a gratuity or contribution to purchaser, and wholly without consideration, and that the hanging of the swing and furnishing of the hooks therefor was a gratuity by the appellant to the ap-pellee'in his said purchase of the swing; that the swing was hung by it with ordinary care on appellee’s porch; that the rafters in the porch were concealed by the ceiling timbers, and that the rafters of the porch were defective and insufficient to sustain the swing, and which defects were concealed from it by the porch ceiling; that the appellee was charged with notice of all of such defects, and assumed all risks under the gratuity aforesaid. It denied liability, and alleged that the negligent use of the swing by the appellee contributed to the accident..

[1, 2] Twenty-one assignments of error are found in the brief, but many of them present in different form the same question. They will not, therefore, be taken up and discussed in .detail. Appellant first complains of the court’s action in refusing to give a special charge directing ■ the jury to return a verdict in its favor.- The proposition is:

That “the petition basing the right of recovery upon breach of warranty to safely hang the swing as a part of the consideration of the sale of the swing and the evidence showing the hanging of the swing to be free of charge and a gratuity'by the appellant, the petition does not support the judgment; that the averment of the cause of action based upon breach of contract and warranty is not supported by a liability arising upon a gratuitous service.”

The peremptory instruction requested was correctly refused. The appellee did not rest his case alone upon the allegation that appellant had breached its warranty to safely hang the swing. He alleged, independently of that claim, that appellant, having agreed to hang and having hung the swing, was guilty of negligence in hanging it; that such negligence proximately caused his injury, and for that reason he was entitled to recover. The case was submitted to the jury, upon ample testimony to authorize it, upon this issue of negligence; the claim based on the alleged warranty not being submitted in any form whatever. This had the effect to withdraw from the consideration of the jury any question of the appellant’s liability by reason of the alleged warranty. The jury found that the appellant failed to use ordinary care in hanging the swing, that the appellee did use ordinary care to ascertain whether or not the swing had been safely hung, that appellee’s leg was broken as a result of the falling of the swing, that ap-pellee was not guilty of contributory negligence, and that he suffered damages in.the sum of $950. These were material issues raised by the pleadings and the evidence, and the jury’s findings upon them clearly authorized the judgment rendered. This is true, even though’it should be conceded that the hanging of the swing was a pure gratuity. Having undertaken to hang the swing, appellant thereby bound itself to exercise ordinary care to make it reasonably safe for the use to which appellee intended to put it. This view is supported by authorities cited by appellee. The rule is , thus stated in 9 Oye. 310:

“The promise of a gratuitous service, although not enforceable as a promise, involves liability to, use oz-dznaz-y caz-e and skill in pez-foi-mance.”

In Bailey v. Walker, 29 Mo. 407, the court, after announcing the well-established rule that a promise, to suppoi't an action, must be founded on a sufficient consideration, said:-

“If a man without any consideration promises to do a thing, and fails to do it, he cannot be sued for such failure; but if he does undertake it, and by negligence does it in a manner to cause loss to him for whom he is acting, he will be bound to make good that loss.”

likewise the Supreme Court of New York in Thorne v. Deas, 4 Johns. (N. Y.) 84, held that an action will not lie for nonfeasance of a gratuitous act, hut stated the principle we think applicable here thus:

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 99, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rick-furniture-co-v-smith-texapp-1918.