Thompson Bros. Lumber Co. v. Bryant

144 S.W. 290, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 144 S.W. 290 (Thompson Bros. Lumber Co. v. Bryant) 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
Thompson Bros. Lumber Co. v. Bryant, 144 S.W. 290, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 71 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinions

E. C. Bryant, a minor, plaintiff, by J. L. Bostic as next friend, brought this suit against the appellant, Thompson Bros. Lumber Company, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while in appellant's employment.

Plaintiff alleged: "That defendant, in and about its manufacture of lumber at Doucette, owned, maintained, and operated two carriages, with shotgun feed, which carriages carried the logs back and forth into the saw, and they were propelled by steam with great force and power, and that one of said carriages was intended and constructed to carry short logs, and this side of the said sawmill was known as the `short side,' the other one constructed and intended to carry long logs, and that side of the said sawmill was known as the `long side,' and that said short side was intended and constructed to saw logs about 20 feet in length. That on said short side the carriage ran upon and over a track, and was propelled by steam by means of a piston, fastened, held, and secured by a bracket pin, all of which was owned, operated, controlled, and maintained by defendant company, as well as the direction of the use of said machinery and appliances. That on August 10, 1910, while the defendant sawmill was running and manufacturing lumber, defendant company negligently undertook to manufacture lumber and sawlogs 24 feet and more in length on said short side. That the said bracket pin broke, and the piston rod broke, the threads stripped off the piston rod, all of which machinery was defective and unsafe for the uses and purposes for which it was being used, and the piston knocked back, bursting the end of the gun or head out, and a piece thereof was broken off and thrown with great force across to the other side of and under the live rollers to the place where plaintiff was standing, and, there being no protection for plaintiff, it struck him on the right leg, * * *" inflicting the injuries for which he sues. "That said defendant company constructed and undertook to keep in repair, and maintained and undertook to keep in repair, the said carriage piston, piston head, and bracket pin, and at the time of said E. C. Bryant's said injuries had full control and management of said machinery and the work in manufacturing lumber, and that it was the duty of said defendant company to keep said machinery in repair, and it did so undertake to keep same in repair, but wholly failed to do so; and it was its duty to see that everything was kept in safety, and the work about the manufacture of lumber was carried on free from dangers, and not to place to use the machinery to other purposes than that intended for. That in all of this defendant failed and neglected, but acted negligently in the premises, and wholly failed to keep said machinery and appliances in repair and free from dangers. That defendant company negligently permitted a weak and worn-out bracket pin to remain in use, and failed to renew the said bracket pin, and defendant company negligently permitted to remain and maintained a weak and unsafe piston rod, and a piston with unsafe threads that were worn and weak and defective, which insecurely fastened and held said piston. That defendant company undertook, on the short side, as aforesaid, to manufacture into lumber logs more than 20 feet in length; it well knowing that it was unsafe to saw a log more than 20 feet on the aforesaid short side. That, by reason of said carelessness, negligence, and default of the defendant company aforesaid, on or about August 10, 1910, the plaintiff, E. C. Bryant, while performing the work of tripping the edger, as heretofore set out, the bracket pin broke, and the said piston broke, stripped the said threads, causing his said injuries, as before stated and described, which were caused and occasioned in direct consequence of the defendant's said carelessness and negligence in keeping said weak, worn-out, and unsafe bracket pin, piston, and threads, and in failing to amend said defects and renew the same, and in using and undertaking to use the short side in the manufacture of sawlogs over 20 feet into *Page 292 lumber, and in negligently striking with great force the bumpers, which the defendant company well knew or might have known would tear up the machinery. All of which defendant company knew or should have known by the use of ordinary care in the construction, maintenance, and repair of its said machinery and appliances thereto, and by the use of ordinary care in the work and manufacture of lumber and in the use of the said machinery and appliances. That plaintiff, E. C. Bryant, was injured, as aforesaid, without fault or negligence on his part, he being at the time ignorant of said defects and dangers, and had no control of the said machinery and work being done, and he was at work at another place, away from said defective machinery, and engaged in a different kind of work from sawing logs."

Defendant, appellant here, answered by general denial, and pleaded certain defenses which need not be here stated.

The case was tried by the court with a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff. From this judgment, defendant has appealed.

Appellant's first assignment of error, which is submitted as a proposition, is as follows: "The court erred in overruling the defendant's (special) exception No. 2. which was as follows: `Defendant specially excepts to said petition, and for grounds of such exception says that no authority or power is alleged or shown that would authorize J. L. Bostic to prosecute this suit for the said E. C. Bryant, and no matters or facts are alleged that would authorize this suit to be prosecuted for E. C. Bryant by J. L. Bostic, since it is alleged that E. C. Bryant is a minor. And of this special exception defendant prays judgment of the court.'" Under this assignment, appellant argues that, as the petition disclosed that plaintiff was a minor, and sued by next friend, and as, under the statute (article 3498u, Rev.St.), a minor could sue by next friend only when he has no legal guardian, and as there was no allegation that plaintiff did not have a legal guardian, he had not shown himself entitled to sue by next friend, and that therefore the petition was defective in this regard, and the exception should have been sustained. It may be readily conceded that the statute confers the right to sue by next friend only upon those minors who have no legal guardian, and that a petition by a minor, suing by a next friend, which does not aver that he has no legal guardian is defective, and a proper exception thereto should be sustained. But we cannot gather from the exception, the overruling of which is made the basis of the assignment, that it was directed at the failure of plaintiff to allege that he had no legal guardian. At most, it is barely inferable that this ground of exception was in the pleader's mind. There is nothing in the language of the exception to apprise the court that the pleader intended to except on the ground that the petition failed to allege that the minor had no legal guardian. And if it was the intention to except on this ground, then the pleader could have simply said so, and this would have been only fair to the court and opposing counsel. The language of an exception should plainly direct the mind of the court to the matter excepted to, and a party should not be heard to complain of the action of the court in overruling an exception which is so drawn as to obscure the point which the pleader intended to attack by the exception. The assignment is overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 290, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-bros-lumber-co-v-bryant-texapp-1912.