Texas State Fair v. Brittain

118 F. 713, 56 C.C.A. 499, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4562
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1902
DocketNo. 1,176
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 F. 713 (Texas State Fair v. Brittain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas State Fair v. Brittain, 118 F. 713, 56 C.C.A. 499, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4562 (5th Cir. 1902).

Opinion

BOARMAN, District Judge.

This action was instituted on behalf of plaintiff, Edward H. Brittain, in .the circuit court for the Northern district of Texas, against the Texas State Fair, to recover damages for injuries to himself. His allegations show substantially that the Texas State Fair is a corporation organized under the laws of Texas, with its principal place of business in Dallas; that said fair is the owner of ioo acres or more of land, which, being inclosed within a high board fence, is, together with the buildings and structures thereon, used by said corporation for carrying on the business of an annual fair or exposition, to which the public are, by advertisements in newspapers and otherwise, invited; that said Texas State Fair carried on and controlled separately, as a part of its business enterprise, a number of side-show attractions, all of which were within the said fence inclosure; that an admission fee was charged at the entrance of each of the several side shows; that, in accordance with such said newspaper and other advertisements, said fair was on October 3, 1900, carrying on at nighttime a side show called the “Burning of Chicago”; that said side show, though ostensibly under the direction of a firm known as Smith & Lucas, was in fact under the management and control of the Texas State Fair, the said side show being advertised as one of its attractions; that said Texas State Fair was largely interested in the expense and profits of said side show, and, if said Smith & Lucas had any connection or interest therein, such interest was not known to plaintiff or to the public; that plaintiff was led to believe and understand from said advertisements that said side show was a part of the attractions managed by the Texas State Fair, and to which it invited the public; that on October 3, 1900, plaintiff, having paid admission fee, entered said side show, and took a seat on the seats furnished by Texas State [714]*714Fair for its patrons; that said seats were very frail, and so weak and dangerously constructed that they were a menace to human life and limb, all of which was known to the Texas State Fair, or by the use of reasonable diligence would have been known by it, but which was not known to plaintiff, and could not have been known by the use of reasonable diligence; that while plaintiff was on said seats they fell to the ground, and he was thrown to the ground, thereby receiving bruises and injuries which have caused him, and will continue to cause him, great pain, suffering, and damage, great loss of time, and expense, said injuries being permanent in their nature; that such said injuries resulted in partial paralysis of his leg, and have greatly diminished his capacity to labor and attend to his business. He further alleged that the proximate cause of said damage to him was the gross negligence of the Texas State Fair, in not properly and safely constructing said seats, and by not exercising proper care and caution to erect and maintain a safe place for the public who were invited to witness said exhibition; that plaintiff is not guilty of any contributory negligence. Defendant, resisting this action, presented 17 exceptions or demurrers to plaintiff’s petition, all of which the circuit court, as we think, properly overruled. In answering, the defendant corporation denied all the allegations, and, for special defense, alleged that it was not in any manner liable for the alleged injuries to plaintiff, because the Texas State Fair was not at the time mentioned in the possession of or control, or had any supervision or management of, the inclosure or premises in which was given the side show called the “Burning of Chicago”; that it was not in any manner responsible for the condition of said grounds, or the seats which were alleged to have fallen; that prior to the injuries of which plaintiff complains the defendant corporation had leased the same to Smith & Lucas, and they, then being in exclusive possession, direction, and control of said premises, were solely responsible for any person injured thereon. Defendant corporation further alleged that, at the time Smith & Lucas entered upon the premises leased to them, the same were in safe condition, free from defects of every character, and, if the premises became dangerous thereafter, the same was due exclusively to the acts of some person or persons other than defendant. The corporation contends further that, if plaintiff was injured as he claims, the seats, if they were faulty, were constructed by a person or persons other than the defendant, without its knowledge or consent; that defendant corporation, never having had knowledge of the condition complained of, is not responsible for plaintiff’s injuries. On the issues stated substantially above, the trial resulted in a judgment for defendant in error.

The record shows that counsel for plaintiff in error sought a new trial, charging the trial court, in his motion therefor, with 24 separate erroneous rulings, besides the 17 errors made in overruling the same number of demurrers or exceptions to the petition of defendant in error. Those several assignments charging the trial court with erroneous rulings on the pleadings and during the trial proceedings are more or less emphasized again in the 25 assignments of error disclosed in the briefs of plaintiff in error. The formidable array of assignments of error found in the record has not forbidden a careful consideration [715]*715of them, together with the argument of the learned counsel in. their behalf. It does not appear to xis that reversible error is disclosed in any of the assignments. It may be that error urged in assignment No. 19 deserves special consideration. It is contended in that assignment that plaintiff in error should have had the benefit of Sessums’ answer to the question, “State whether or not these seats were properly and carefully erected.” The trial court forbade an answer to that question on objection of defendant in error, substantially on the ground that it was incompetent and irrelevant, and called for an opinion of the witness, who was not an expert. We think the objection, if it was limited to the grounds stated, was not well taken, and that there would be reversible error in its exclusion from the jury, but for the fact that the same witness had, before this question was asked him, answered other questions which brought out substantially the same facts which plaintiff in error was then endeavoring to have him state to the jury. Sessums, before this question was asked, had said, in response to questions presumably similar to the excluded question, that he erected the seats, and told of the sort of material that he, as the builder of the seats, had used in their construction. Then, answering further, he said “that after I erected the seats their condition was first-class,” and were made of first-class material. The witness, as any other carpenter who worked on the construction of the seats, though he might not, under the court’s test of his qualification as an expert, have been permitted to testify in such capacity, was competent to answer said question, and the question was not irrelevant. It appears that his answer to the objectionable question would have added to the force of his previous testimony as to the matter of the construction of the seats only in a cumulative way. The jury had already heard substantially the same testimony which Sessums was expected to give if he had been allowed to answer that question. His answer, at best, would have added emphasis to his testimony on substantially the same issues.

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Bluebook (online)
118 F. 713, 56 C.C.A. 499, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-state-fair-v-brittain-ca5-1902.