Rose v. Buchanan

140 S.W.2d 203, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1940
DocketNo. 10952
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 S.W.2d 203 (Rose v. Buchanan) 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
Rose v. Buchanan, 140 S.W.2d 203, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 308 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

CODY, Justice.

Appellees, Buchanan and wife, brought this suit to recover damages for injuries sustained by the wife in Victoria County about dusk on November 24, 1934. Appellees claimed that a loaded motor truck owned by appellant and operated by his employees broke down a bridge on November 18, 1934; which was on a public road in Victoria County, thereby creating a dangerous and hazardous condition; that appellant and his employees neglected to place any warning sign to warn the traveling public of the dangerous condition and failed to notify the proper legal authorities that the bridge had been broken that appellees were driving th'eir automobile along the road and crashed through the bridge, striking the opposite side of the depression which the bridge had spanned, with resulting injuries to Mrs. Buchanan.

Appellant answered by a general demurrer and general denial.

The suit was removed to Harris County on appellant’s plea of privilege and tried before a jury. Appellant introduced no evidence, but depended, in effect, upon a demurrer to the evidence. In response to special issues the jury found that the truck broke the bridge down; that this created a dangerous condition to the traveling public; that Mrs. Buchanan received her injuries as a direct result of the bridge being broken in; that appellant’s employees were negligent in failing to put out any warning sign of the broken culvert and such failure was the proximate cause of the injuries, and assessed damages at $12,-500.

We have concluded that the evidence failed to show, as a matter of law, that appellant violated any duty to appellees, and therefore his motion for an instructed verdict should have been granted.. It is not pretended that appellant, through his employees, made other than a lawful use of the road and bridge in question. We quote the following excerpt from appellees’ brief, as the presentation of appellee’s position:

“It is a fallacious premise for a person to assume that he may, while doing a lawful act in a lawful manner create a condition in which another may be injured, and yet the first party be excused merely because the condition which caused the injuries was done in a lawful manner. There are many incidents * * * in which a person may be doing a lawful act in a lawful manner and yet be responsible for injuries caused as a result of said acts.

“It would be contrary to all rules of fairness to spurn with impunity the rights of others because a person is doing a lawful act in a lawful manner.

“In the present case there is in the ap-pellees’ opinion, and should be, a duty to. warn future travelers or users of a public highway of a dangerous condition created through the acts of the appellant. The act of breaking was not negligence, and is not sought to be proved (negligent), but the omission of appellant in not warning future travel in some manner was negligence.”

Appellees also rely on Simonsen v. Thorin, 120 Neb. 684, 234 N.W. 628, 629, 81 A.[204]*204L.R. 1000. In that case the defendants accidentally knocked a trolley pole down and did not remove it, and were held liable for injuries to subsequent travelers. The court said in part: “It appears that the defendants, in the operation of their automobile on the public street, accidentally hit a trolley pole without negligence on their part. * * * However, the operation of their automobile was their voluntary act and in the course of such operation they did cause the obstruction to be placed in the street.' They cannot be said to be in the position of a bystander who is under no legal obligation to remove or guard said pole. * * * But when one engaged in the lawful use of the highway causes an obstruction to be placed upon it in such a manner as to be dangerous to traffic, he must use ordinary care to prevent injury to others where he knows that said obstruction is calculated to do injury to travelers upon said highway. The negligence in such a case consists of having placed an obstruction upon the street, and leaving it in such a manner as will be dangerous to others using the street. It is unlawful, reads our statute, to ‘cause to be left upon any public road (or) street * * * any * * * broken substance whatever, liable to injure any person * * * or vehicle.’ * * * The situation in such a case is not unlike that of a private contractor who opens up an excavation in the street, which is a lawful act and done without negligence, but he is required to use ordinary care in preventing injury to others.” The writer of the note, following the report of the case in 81 A.L.R., at page 1004, says: “No other case has been found that goes quite so far as does tire Nebraska Court in Simonsen v. Thorin * * * in holding that the owner of a truck which accidentally knocked a trolley pole into the street owed to travelers gsnerally the duty to warn them of the obstruction thus created. * * * A statute making it unlawful to cause any broken substance to be left upon the highway is relied upon as making a violation thereof evidence of negligence.”

It would seem clear that the holding of the Nebraska court is not applicable here. There the defendants not only had the right, but by statute owed the duty to remove the obstructing pole from the highway. Here we can think of no principle upon which it can be said that appellant (defendant below) had either the duty or right to repair the bridge, and it is not even contended that defendant had either such right or duty. Lucas v. Ry. Co., 174 Mo. 270, 73 S.W. 589, 591, 61 L.R.A. 452, referred- to in the Simonsen case in support of the principle that the law imposes no obligation on a mere bystander to repair a dangerous condition (and, of course, none to give warning thereof), which was recog--nized by the Nebraska court, holds: “all of the adjudicated cases wherein a citizen has been held liable for an obstruction or nuisance in a highway have been cases where the person held liable placed the obstruct tion or nuisance on the highway, or was under some duty to remove it.” (Citing authorities.) If the appellant had neither the duty nor the right to repair the culvert, i. e., to remove the dangerous condition, and did not wrongfully cause the dangerous condition, on what principle can the duty be imputed to continue to give warning of such condition until it has been removed by those charged with the duty of maintaining public roads? Above all, if appellant’s employees were operating the truck, at the time the bridge was broken, in a .manner that fulfilled the requirements of the law, how can it be said in legal contemplation that they caused the bridge to break —in such case they were the victims of the breaking of the bridge, and are fortunate to have suffered no injuries. If appellant’s employees were operating the truck on the occasion in question in a manner that fulfilled the requirements of the law, the breaking down of the culvert by such lawful operation was not the fault of appellant, and the excerpt quoted from appellees’ brief above frankly recognizes this, and-does not seek to base appellant’s liability; on the dangerous condition of the road after the culvert was broken down, but upon! appellant’s superior knowledge of that condition, and the alleged duty which such superior knowledge imposed to give warning, of such dangerous condition, and the failure to give warning of such condition. It would scarcely b,e argued that those who used the road during the interval of some four to six days, between the time the culvert war broken down and the injuries of Mrs.

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Related

Courville v. Home Transportation Co.
497 S.W.2d 788 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1973)
Buchanan v. Rose
159 S.W.2d 109 (Texas Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.W.2d 203, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-buchanan-texapp-1940.