Trinity & B. v. Ry. Co. v. Smith

155 S.W. 361
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 361 (Trinity & B. v. Ry. Co. v. Smith) 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
Trinity & B. v. Ry. Co. v. Smith, 155 S.W. 361 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

Appellee sued appellant in the trial court for damages for personal injuries and recovered verdict and judgment, from which appellant has appealed.

Appellee alleged that while in the negro compartment of appellant’s passenger station at Hillsboro, awaiting the arrival of one of appellant’s passenger trains, upon which he intended to become a passenger for Hubbard, and for which purpose he had purchased a ticket, he was injured by drinking foul and poisonous water. He claims that just before the train arrived he went to the water cooler in the station and drew some of the water and drank it, and was immediately nauseated and caused to vomit, and continued to do so for several days, and which subsequently caused him serious bodily and organic ailments and great suffering. It was also alleged that the liquid appellee drank *362 smelled badly, was discolored, foul, and poisonous, and that be drank same before discovering that fact.

Appellant pleaded tbe general denial, and specially that the -alleged condition of the water was not because of any negligence of appellant, but the result of the willful act of the appellee or some third persons, and that appellee contributed to his own negligence in failing to discover the foul condition of the water before drinking it.

[1] The first assignment of error asserts it was error for the trial court to submit to the jury whether the water in the cooler was poisonous, whether it poisoned appellee, and whether appellant was negligent in permitting the water to remain in the cooler, for the reason that there was no evidence adduced showing the water was poisonous, or that appellee was poisoned by drinking same, and that hence an issue was submitted to the jury not raised by the evidence.

The appellee testified that he was at appellant’s station with a companion, for the purpose of boarding appellant’s cars to Hubbard, when he heard the train whistle, whereupon he jumped up to get a drink of water, telling his companion to seture tickets; that he drew a cup of water from the cooler and being in a hurry swallowed nearly all of it before detecting its bad taste; that he turned to meet his companion and started to give him money for the tickets, when the water made him sick “that quick” that he was compelled to jerk his hand away to avoid vomiting upon it; that he was never so sick in his life; that he thought he would “throw up.” his “socks”; that he remained that sick until the train left, when he went to a colored doctor’s office, who treated him, and that while there he suffered intensely and vomited all over the office; that for two or three days subsequent his stomach “was as sore as it could be,” and he could retain nothing in his stomach and was subject to vomiting spells; that he had hurting in the back, and that now at times he awakes and cannot turn over on account of pains in his back; that his doctor has treated him for kidney trouble and washed out his bladder two or three times; that four or five days subsequent to drinking the water his bladder was so affected that he was unable to retain his urine, and he was compelled. to use a cloth about his person; this condition lasted possibly two or three weeks, during which time he had fever; that he has suffered every night since drinking the water, sometimes cannot turn over in his bed, and when he arises of mornings his ankles are swollen, and he is weak; that he looked into the cooler after drinking the water and found the cooler about two-thirds full, and of reddish color.

Dr. E. W. Bates, appellee’s physician, testified that when he arrived at his office ap-pellee was lying on a cot with his hands on his stomach gagging, with perspiration passing from his forehead, and claimed there was a burning sensation in his stomach; that from the history given him by appellee he concluded appellee has acute cystitis, or inflammation of the bladder, and from what he found under the microscope concluded ap-pellee had a disturbance of the functions of the kidneys, and that, in his opinion, such condition was caused by some irritant poison ; that appellee told him about drinking the water at the depot and how it affected him, and that from his examination of ap-pellee and from his analysis of appellee’s urine it is his opinion that appellee’s trouble was caused by irritant poison received in that water; that water can become poisoned by becoming stale and standing in a zinc or tin vessel; that from his examination and treatment of appellee he believes that his kidneys will always be affected from the attack and more susceptible to disease.

B. D. Hooks, city marshal for Hillsboro, testified that he examined the water at the time appellee drank it, and that it smelled like urine, and that the odor could be detected a foot from one’s nose.

J. Y. McDaniel, constable, testified that he examined the contents of the cooler at the same time that Hooks did; that he raised the top from the cooler and bent over and smelled it; that the contents were of a reddish color and smelled strongly like unne, and smelled very unpleasant.

W. T. I-Ioppess, local agent for the appellant, testified that he made an examination of the contents of the cooler from which ap-pellee drank, and that he could at that time detect the odor of urine; that it smelled pretty bad, but that later, when the contents were emptied, and while he stood about two feet distant from the cooler, he could detect no odor, nor observe any unusual color to the water; that the cooler was an ordinary tin or zinc cooler.

Wade Johnson, a clerk in appellant’s office, testified that he smelled the contents of the cooler, and odor was that of urine.

Robert Dooley, porter of appellant, testified, in substance, as to the condition of the water, that that in the cooler, when he emptied it, appeared clear and pure, but that the odor from the cup smelled like urine.

Dr. Makaffey, appellant’s medical witness, examined appellee three or four days after the occurrence and found the conditions about as described by appellee’s colored doctor, and made practically no change in the treatment, other than to direct that appellee’s bladder should be washed thoroughly, which was done by Dr. Bates, at the suggestion of Dr. Mahaffey. He also testified, in substance, that appellee’s condition could only be traceable to drinking the water by process of elimination and the having of nothing else •upon which to base the opinion; that the conditions could have been caused from several derangements.

As we have said, the claim is made that *363 there is no testimony irom which the jury could have determined that the water drank by appellee was poisonous. It is true that there appears to have been no chemical analysis of the water, resulting, no doubt, from the fact that it was emptied from the cooler shortly after the occurrence — a perfectly natural thing to do under the circumstances. It is in evidence, however, that water permitted to become stale in a tin or zinc vessel will in time become poisoned, and it is further in evidence that the cooler containing the water drank by appellee was an ordinary tin or zinc cooler.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinity-b-v-ry-co-v-smith-texapp-1913.