Texas Public Service Co. v. Laughead

73 S.W.2d 925, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 748
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 12, 1934
DocketNo. 2992.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 925 (Texas Public Service Co. v. Laughead) 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
Texas Public Service Co. v. Laughead, 73 S.W.2d 925, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 748 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is a suit by C. C. Laughead and wife against the Texas Public Service Company and-the McCamey Sewer Company to recover damages for the death of the plaintiff’s son, Clarence Laughead, a child nine years old at the time of his death on March 13, 1933.

Defendants owned a 10-acre tract of land adjacent to the city of McCamey upon which they maintained a sewerage disposal plant. The deceased fell into a cesspool on said tract, called an Imhoff tank, and was •drowned. McCamey is a city of about 4,000 inhabitants.

The tract is in the form' of a parallelogram, 700 feet by 622.9 feet. Its north boundary line is approximately 300 feet south ■of the city limits of McCamey, approximately 1,500 feet southwest of the nearest residence, and approximately 2,200 feet south of the residence of the deceased Clarence Laughead. Its northeast comer is approximately 1,900 feet southwest of the high school, and 2,200 feet southwest of the grade school. Its east boundary line is approximately 1,000 feet west of the Iraan public highway. The McCamey airport adjoins the tract on the northwest. While no regularly graded roads approached the tract, the old Bakersfield abandoned road cut across its southeast comer, a roadway worn by automobiles came from Johns street in McCamey southward to the tract, and two or three other similar trails made by automobiles approached the tract from town. Several other trails and footpaths probably ran onto the land and to the pool.

The tract was unfenced. It was covered with brush except for a distance of approximately 20 yards immediately adjoining the cesspool.

Upon the 10-acre tract was located, among other things, the cesspool in which Clarence Laughead met his death. The pool, or Im-hoff tank, was a structure consisting of a concrete pit 10 feet wide, 22 feet long, and 26 feet deep. The curb surrounding the pool extended approximately 6 or 8 inches above the level of the ground. It was Ibcated 270 feet south of the north boundary line of the tract, and 100 feet west of its east boundary line. The pool was surrounded by a fence, the comer posts being 6 by 8 timbers, the south and west sides consisting of a net wire 3 feet high, above which were two strands of barbed wire; on the north and east sides there was only one or two strands of barbed wire about 4 feet above the ground.

The pool was equipped with a steel ladder in the southeast comer leading down into the interior of the pool. There were several partitions in the pool; a concrete partition running lengthwise about 18 inches from the east side and about 3 feet below the level of the top, and two wooden partitions, built of two by fours, with the edges up, as well as a concrete partition running across the west end of the pool at surface level. The pool was filled to within four or five feet of its top with liquid, sewage disposal matter, into which a continuous stream flowed from about the surface of the liquid, through a 12-inch pipe.

The deceased went upon the tract in company with Billy Garrett, a boy nine years old.

Garrett testified that he and deceased left deceased’s house and went first to the airport to see an airplane and then on to appellant’s premises. They entered the premises from the northwest. They evidently entered upon appellant’s property at a point about 450 or 500 feet from the pool. The' purpose for which the boys went upon appellant’s tract was to see if they could find a place to dig a cave. They first played in the filter bed (called by the witness “a rock outfit”), which was located about 180' feet southwest of the pool. After they had played there a little while the deceased told the witness, Billy Garrett, he knew where the- “real cesspool part was.” They were about ten yards from the pool before they saw it. The two boys played around the pool about thirty minutes before the accident They both threw rocks *927 into the pool, which sank below the surface. The exact manner in which the death of Clarence Laughead occurred can best be described by reproducing the following excerpts from the testimony of the witness, Billy Garrett:

“And there was a big old thick board— about that thick (indicating with hands), down on the bottom, and he got on that, and I was playing around there on top, kind of running around, and he .reached down to see if it was hard and started to put his foot on it and his foot kind of slipped and he fell off, kind of on his back and kind of stirred around a little bit and put his hand up, while he was in there, for me to get his hand to try to pull him out and I kind of got down on the outfit and tried to reach his hand, but I couldn’t reach his hand, and after that I stayed around a little bit until he went under, and then I went to Laughead’s house and told him, and I went out there again.

“Q. This steel ladder that he went down there on — did you go down on that steel ladder also? A. No, sir.

“Q. Did he walk that cross-piece there? A. Over on that board, you mean?

“Q. Yes? A. Yes, sir, he walked on it a few times before he fell in — quite a few times before he fell, and then he got out once, -and then he got back down in there.

“Q. You mean that he got out of the cesspool once and stayed for a while on the outside and that he then went back down in there? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. The second time that he went down in there, you say that he reached down and kicked the top — kicked down with his foot— what do you mean? A. Yes, sir, put his foot down there, reached down there with his foot.

“Q. Did you hear him kick out as soon as he put his foot down? A.' No, sir, he brought his foot out, like this (indicating with foot).

“Q. And the foot that he put down there— he was trying to work his foot back — working to bring his foot up — bring it back up to the level with the other foot? A. No, sir, just brought it kind of up there, but he didn’t quite get it all the way up on top, and he slipped.

“Q. Then he slipped and fell in, did he? A. Yes, sir.”

In response to special issues submitted to it the jury found that the cesspool was especially and unusually attractive to children; that defendants should have known it; that this especial and unusual attractiveness of the cesspool caused Clarence Laughead to climb into it; that defendants were guilty of negligence proximately causing his death; (1) In failing to fence the entire tract; (2) in failing to place warning signs; (3) in failing to obstruct the roads leading toward the cesspool; (4) in failing to have a fence immediately around the cesspool of such character as to prevent the child from entering it; and (5) in failing to have a cover thereon. The jury further found that Clarence Laughead was. not guilty of negligence in climbing down into the pool; that his death was not the result of an unavoidable accident ; and that his parents were damaged to the extent of $3,000 prior to the child’s reaching 21, and $7,000 thereafter.

Judgment for plaintiffs was rendered in accordance with such findings.

Opinion.

The deceased must be considered to have been a trespasser upon the premises of appellant unless the facts bring the case within the doctrine of the so-called turntable-cases or the “attractive nuisance” doctrine.

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73 S.W.2d 925, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-public-service-co-v-laughead-texapp-1934.