Scurlock Oil Co. v. Birchfield

630 S.W.2d 674, 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 4617
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 1981
Docket18012
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 630 S.W.2d 674 (Scurlock Oil Co. v. Birchfield) 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
Scurlock Oil Co. v. Birchfield, 630 S.W.2d 674, 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 4617 (Tex. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

BASS, Justice.

Appellee recovered judgment for $229,700 for personal injuries sustained while sanding an oil slick roadway.

In two points of error appellant urges that: (1) appellant owed no legal duty to appellee because appellee was not within the class of persons that the appellant had a duty to protect and, (2) appellant’s negligence in spilling the oil on the roadway had come to rest and appellee’s subsequent accident was an isolated, unforeseeable occurrence.

Appellee contends that appellant did owe a legal duty to him and that his injury was proximately caused by the appellant’s negligence.

Judgment is reversed and the cause is rendered.

The question for us is one of proximate cause.

Proximate cause embraces these two distinct concepts: (1) cause in fact and (2) foreseeability.

From the evidence and the inferences to be gained therefrom it was established that the appellant had caused an oil spill upon a public road; that the oil spill was a dangerous condition; that public policy required such dangerous condition to be cleaned up; that a public employee was required to cure such dangerous condition; that the public employee was injured shoveling sand in the process of cleaning up such dangerous condition; and that such dangerous condition was created by the negligent acts of the appellant.

The Texas Supreme Court has set out the test of foreseeability:

It is not required that the particular accident complained of should have been foreseen. All that is required is that the injury be of such a general character as might reasonably have been anticipated; and, that the injured party should be so situated with relation to the wrongful act that injury to him or to one similarly situated might reasonably have been foreseen.

Texas Cities Gas Co. v. Dickens, 140 Tex. 433, 168 S.W.2d 208 (Tex.1943).

The appellant cites The City of Bishop v. South Texas Electric Co-operative, Inc., 577 S.W.2d 331 (Tex.Civ.App.—Corpus Christi 1979, no writ), where a fire truck was destroyed while fighting a fire. The fire truck became disabled by reason of a mechanical problem, and the jury by its answers to special issues found the defendant, South Texas Electric Cooperative, Inc., negligent; but it failed to find that such negligence was a proximate cause. There the court went into the question of foreseeability, an element of proximate cause, and held that the jury had properly applied the element of foreseeability in determining proximate cause.

*676 The appellant has contended that the public servant here (the appellee) was doing the same type of work that he had done on previous occasions and that by reason thereof the appellant could safely conclude that the appellee would do his work in a safe and sane manner without injury to himself.

Appellant also cites Jenkins v. Fitzler Development Corporation, 580 S.W.2d 63 (Tex.Civ.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1979, writ ref’d n. r. e.) and Shell Chemical Company v. Lamb, 493 S.W.2d 742 (Tex.1973), both of which deal with the duty of an owner (occupier) of premises to a sub-contractor or licensee. Appellant cites Owens v. Simon, 245 Md. 404, 226 A.2d 548, (M.D.App.1967), and Johnson v. Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, 339 F.Supp. 1178 (M.D.Fla.1972) as authority.

In the Owens case a police officer was investigating an automobile collision. He directed one car to move from the scene and was struck by the car which was damaged in the collision. The court stated that the zone of danger was the intersection where the collision occurred. He was not at the zone of danger when the accident occurred but arrived later. After he arrived, all parties acted at his direction. The court in that case applied the rule set forth by Judge Offet in Holler v. Lowery, 175 Md. 149, 200 A. 353, (1938), wherein he said:

There is no mystery in the doctrine of proximate cause. It rests upon common sense rather than legal formula. Expressed in the simplest terms it means that negligence is not actionable unless it, without the intervention of any independent factor causes the harm complained of. It involves of course the idea of continuity, that the negligent act continuously extends through every event, fact, act and occurrence related to the tortious conduct of the defendant and is itself the logical and natural cause of the injury complained of.

The court held in the Owens case that a new cause had arisen and the appellant was denied recovery of damages.

In Johnson, supra, a fireman lost his life while fighting a fire at an A & P store. His family claimed that Aetna Casualty was liable to the decedent’s family for damages because Aetna Casualty owed a duty to the A & P store to discover and/or report violations of the State of Florida Public Safety laws. The court said, “The question in its simplest form is whether this inspection for and the reporting of all such hazards was intended to be for the protection and benefit of the decedent.” In applying this thought to the case the court said: “There can be found by this court, however, no duty or obligation to that class of persons to whom the decedent was a member, i.e., firemen, entering the empty and burning building, in the performance of their official duty.” In Johnson v. Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, supra, the court denied recovery, holding that a new cause had arisen upon the firemen entering the building in the performance of their normal obligations to suppress fires.

The appellant contends that to hold that if the appellee can recover from the appellant because of the appellant’s negligence in spilling oil on a public roadway; then, in that event every person who is a user of the public roadway would become an insurer of public employees, i.e., road workers, who are injured performing their usual work.

An act of negligence alone does not create an absolute right of recovery. There must also be a finding of proximate cause before there can be a recovery from the negligent person. In order for a finding of proximate cause to support a judgment, there must be a finding of foreseeability, an element of proximate cause.

In Texas Cities Gas Co. v. Dickens, supra, a fireman responded to a fire call and explosion in a building within the city of Waco. He was in the process of fighting the fire when another gas explosion occurred within the building, and the fireman was injured by the second explosion. The second explosion occurred because the gas company, whose superintendent and another employee, after being requested to turn off the supply of gas to the building, failed to do so within a reasonable time and by

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Bluebook (online)
630 S.W.2d 674, 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 4617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scurlock-oil-co-v-birchfield-texapp-1981.