Silver v. Navarette

350 S.W.2d 878, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2020
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 1961
Docket5477
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 350 S.W.2d 878 (Silver v. Navarette) 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
Silver v. Navarette, 350 S.W.2d 878, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2020 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

CLAYTON, Justice.

This is a personal injury suit in which the appellee recovered a judgment against the appellant for injuries received by the former through what he alleged was negligence on the part of the latter’s employee.

Appellant was engaged in the business of buying and selling scrap metal, and maintained a yard in El Paso, Texas in which the metal purchased was stacked up and stored. He employed a crane operator by the name of Reyner Leyva. This employee operated a traveling crane with about a fifty-foot boom, from the end of which an electro-magnet was suspended by means of a steel cable. This piece of machinery, operating on the principle of magnetic attraction, was used to unload metal from flat cars, trucks and other vehicles, and to stack up the metal in piles, and to move the metal from one pile to another as desired. On or about November 4, 1959, ap-pellee had gone to the yard of appellant in a pickup truck driven by one Leovardo Macias, a relative by marriage, to sell a small load of scrap metal to appellant. Ap-pellee claims that while in the yard, the *880 employee Leyva swung the electro-magnet over the pickup truck next to which appel-lee was standing, and that a piece of metal became dislodged from the magnet and struck the appellee in the face and head.

The case was submitted to the jury on special issues, in response to which the jury found appellant’s employee guilty of negligence in failing to keep a proper lookout, found this to be a proximate cause of appellee’s injuries, found that appellee had not failed to keep a proper lookout, and awarded damages to appellee. After the verdict was returned, appellant filed an original and supplemented motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, which were overruled, and judgment was rendered on appellee’s motion for judgment on the verdict. Appellant’s original and amended motions for new trial were also overruled, and he then perfected his appeal.

The first point upon which this appeal is predicated is that the trial court erred in overruling the motion for judgment non obstante veredicto for two reasons: First, that appellant owed no duty to keep a lookout for the safety of appellee because the crane was being “openly and obviously” operated when appellee approached it, and that appellee was aware of such operation and had come to learn, from prior visits to the scrap metal yard, that pieces of metal had become dislodged and fallen from the magnet on other occasions, and that danger of injury existed to anyone beneath the magnet when it was operating.

The second reason urged under appellant’s first point as to why the trial court erred in overruling the motion for judgment non obstante veredicto is that the ap-pellee was guilty of negligence which proximately caused and contributed to his injuries.

The first reason advanced under Point One requires an examination of the testimony. Appellee testified that on the date his injuries were received, he had gone to appellant’s place of business with a load of “junk” or scrap iron, in the pickup truck being driven by Macias; that the load was weighed in by the front office personnel, and that a lady in charge of the weighing-in told him where to unload the truck. The unloading place was apparently down a narrow lane between two piles of junk, and Macias backed into this lane in order to avoid having to try to turn around. Ap-pellee stated that he dismounted from the truck and was directing the backing up from the right hand side of the truck. He stated that when they first entered the lane, the magnetic crane was operating in a different area to the left of the truck, but as he and the truck were moving into the lane, the boom swung to the right, and directly overhead; that he saw some pipe falling at intervals and he crouched against the truck, and the next moment he was struck and knocked unconscious.

The above testimony of appellee was in all essentials corroborated by the testimony of Leovardo Macias, the driver of the pickup truck. Both of these witnesses stated that in addition to the crane operator who was operating in the yard, there was another man present at the time appellee was injured. This man was identified as one Ramon Quintana, a self-employed truck driver, who hauled materials for appellant. His truck was a two-ton G.M.C. Both the appellee and Macias testified that when ap-pellee was struck, Quintana was with his truck, which was unloaded and parked outside the yard. Macias stated that when appellee was knocked unconscious, and Macias found he could not pick up appel-lee by himself, he called to Quintana, who came over and put some tape on appellee’s head and assisted in getting appellee to the office.

On the other hand, Quintana testified that he was in appellant’s yard with his G.M.C. truck, which was fully loaded with scrap iron, and the crane was immediately in front of his truck. He further testified that while he was working in the yard he saw appellee between the G.M.C. truck and a pile of junk. He stated that when he next saw appellee, the latter threw his hand *881 up to hold the spot where he had been hit; that appellee was bleeding; that he did not see appellee fall; that he asked appellee what had happened and was told by appel-lee that a piece of iron had hit him; and that Quintana applied a piece of tape to the wound to stop the bleeding. Quintana testified that during this time the pickup truck and its driver were outside of the yard in the street.

Reyner Leyva, appellant’s crane operator, testified that on the morning that appellee received his injury, the crane was being operated to unload a two-ton G.M.C. truck in which a man was sitting (whom he later learned to be Quintana) ; that the G.M.C. truck was in the yard while the pickup was outside on the other side of a street, waiting to be unloaded; that the first time he noticed appellee was when he saw appellee standing by the edge of the street, holding his forehead; that Quintana got out of his truck and gave appellee a tape to put on his forehead; that appellee then walked up to his truck and got in it and was not seen again by the crane operator.

From the foregoing it may be observed that there is considerable conflict in the testimony. However, the record does not reveal any attempt to contradict the testimony of appellee and his driver that they were directed to the unloading place by an employee of appellant in the front office. If this be so, and if appellee was following instructions of appellant’s employee in attempting to reach this unloading place at the time of his injury, we consider him to have been an invitee on the premises, and that the doctrine of Jameyson v. Farmers Gin Co-Operative Association, Tex.Civ.App., 278 S.W.2d 169, cited by appellant in his brief, does not apply here.

True, the testimony of the witnesses Quintana and Leyva would indicate that appellee was not in the process of unloading the pickup truck when he was injured, and therefore was not following instructions regarding unloading at the time of such injury. No issue which would have resolved the conflict in testimony in this respect was submitted to the jury, nor was one requested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
350 S.W.2d 878, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-v-navarette-texapp-1961.