San Antonio Foundry Co. v. Drish

85 S.W. 440, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 214, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 438
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 85 S.W. 440 (San Antonio Foundry Co. v. Drish) 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
San Antonio Foundry Co. v. Drish, 85 S.W. 440, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 214, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 438 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This is an action for damages alleged to have accrued to appellee from personal injuries inflicted through the negligence of appellant in digging a certain hole in a pathway in its foundry, and not warning appellee of its existence. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars.

The facts show that appellee was an employe of appellant’s foundry, and, while engaged with a moulder in carrying a ladle of molten metal, he stepped into a hole which appellant had excavated a few minutes before, in an unusual place, in a pathway used by employes in performing their labor. Appellee had no knowledge that the hole had been dug in the pathway, and in moving about in the discharge of his duties stepped into the same, tilted the ladle and poured the molten metal on his leg, and received painful, serious and permanent injuries. Appellee was not warned of the presence of the hole in the pathway. We conclude that appellee was injured through the negligence of appellant.

It was not error, as presented in the first assignment, for the court to permit evidence as to what appellee had earned as wages at other times and places than at or about the time and place of the injury. The earning capacity of appellee was in issue, and testimony as to what he received for his labor at different times and places, and from different employers, was legitimate and proper, as tending to show his earning capacity. Few personal injury suits are tried in which such inquiries are not made, and in a few instances they have been objected to, but the objections have not been sustained by trial or Appellate Courts. In the case of Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. St. Clair (51 S. W. Rep., 666), the same objection was interposed to such testimony, and this court said: “There was testimony showing plaintiff to have been an experienced railroad man in many capacities, and fitted, when injured, for employment in any of them, in good health, and nothing to disqualify him. He was entitled to have these matters and the compensation of these various positions placed before the jury, to aid in determining the probable extent of his loss.” In the case of Chicago, R. I. & T. Ry. Co. v. Long (26 Texas Civ. App., 601, 65 S. W. Rep., 882), the foregoing decision was cited and approved by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Second District, and the court said: “Merely because appellee was engaged as a section hand, and earning but $1.25 per day, when he was injured, did not prevent his pleadin'g and proving that he was then a blacksmith by trade, and, as such, capable of earning more than $1.25 per day.”

The second assignment of error complains that a question propounded to appellee, as to his back being towards the hole, was leading. Appellee *218 had testified that, while he was watching-to find out when to pull the ladle out, he had his back to the hole into which he afterwards fell. He was then asked the following questions, and gave the following answers: “Q. From the time you entered the door and placed the ladle in there, what was the necessary position of your face to do the duty as demanded of you ? Ans. Facing the moulder. Q. That is, as I understand you, to keep your hack to the hole? Ans. Yes.” The last question was the only one objected to as leading. It can be readily seen that, however leading it may have been, it brought forth nothing but what had already been sworn to, and consequently could not have hurt appellant.

Among other things appellant applied for a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered testimony, and the refusal of the court to entertain it constitutes the error propounded through the fourth assignment. It appears that, during the trial, two witnesses, who had served as jurors on a former trial of this cause, testified that Koscielski, a witness for appellant, had sworn differently on that trial from what he testified on this, and appellant sought a new trial on the ground that evidence had been newly discovered. What the evidence was does not clearly appear, but it may be reasonably inferred that it was the stenographic notes of Mrs. Johnson, taken on the former trial, as -it is stated in the motion for new trial: “That, at the time said witnesses, Sprague and Hunter, testified as above stated, counsel for defendant was taken by surprise, and endeavored to reach Mrs. Johnson by telephone, and get her notes of the testimony, but were unable to do so before the trial was closed,” etc. It is stated in an affidavit of one of the attorneys for appellant, attached to the motion for new trial, that appellant was taken by surprise at the impeaching testimony, and that affiant immediately tried to get in communication with Mrs. Johnson so as to have her to bring her stenographic notes to the court, but she could not find her notes, and appellant was compelled to close without having the same. What the notes would have shown as to the former testimony of the discredited witness does not appear. It is clear that the facts alleged did not bring the motion for new trial within touch with the rules prescribed in cases of newly-discovered testimony. That the matters alleged were not newly discovered affirmatively appears from the affidavit of the attorney, that he knew them while the trial was in progress. , He made no application for a postponement or continuance in order to obtain the presence of Mrs. J ohnson, although she was in the City of San Antonio, in easy reach of the process of the court. There is no merit in the assignment.

The court charged the jury as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that on or about the 13th day of October, 1903, plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant as a laborer, and that on said day plaintiff,, in th.e discharge of his duty, was engaged in assisting to carry a ladle filled with molten metal from the'furnace to the moulding room of the defendant, and that, while so engaged, plaintiff walked over and along a certain path in the moulding room, which was established by the defendant for the use of its employes to walk over and along,” etc., and it is insisted that the court therein assumed that appellant had established a path for the use of the employes. We do not think the charge can properly be so construed, but the evident meaning of the charge was that the jury must believe, from the evidence, not only that appellee walked along a certain *219 path, but that the path had been established by appellant for-the use of its employes.

The sixth, seventh and ninth assignments are grouped, in appellant’s brief, although the first is in regard to assumed risk and the last two in regard to contributory negligence. Under the three assignments of error are two general propositions of law: the first, that it is error to refuse to give a charge which is correct in point of law and applicable to pleadings and evidence; and second, that, in lieu of charge presenting rules of law, a party has the right to prepare and demand charges applicable to specific matters of complaint as defense. The propositions are perhaps abstractly correct, but are not shown to have any particular application in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W. 440, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 214, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-foundry-co-v-drish-texapp-1905.