United Chemical Co. v. Leathers

285 S.W. 918, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 985
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1926
DocketNo. 7599. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 918 (United Chemical Co. v. Leathers) 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
United Chemical Co. v. Leathers, 285 S.W. 918, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 985 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This appeal is from interlocutory orders overruling pleas of privilege. The action was 'brought in Hidalgo county for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by appellee Leathers in the explosion of a carboy, or bottle, of sul-phuric acid, which had been the property, successively, of the Sugarland Industries, a trust estate, the United Chemical Company, and the Peden Iron & Steel Company, and shipped by the latter over the line of the St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Railway Company to the city of Mission, the consignee and purchaser from the Peden Company. Appel-lee, as a member of the volunteer fire department of the city of Mission, was handling the bottle of acid after it was delivered to and stored by the city in its fire station, and while being so handled by appellee the acid exploded and injured appellee, who brought this action against all the parties named, except the city of Mission, together with individual members of the Sugarland Industries. Neither of the parties sued was a resident of Hidalgo county, within the contemplation of the venue statutes. The Sugar-land Industries and United Chemical Company each filed a plea of privilege to be sued in the county of its residence. The Sugar-land Industries and its constituent members reside in Et. Bend county, and the United Chemical Company is domiciled in Dallas county.

The sulphuric acid appears to have been bottled by the Little Rock Picron Industrial *919 Company at its plant in Little Rock, Ark. The products of that concern were purchased in carload lots by the Sugarland Industries, which distributed them in like quantities to the wholesale trade in Texas, on consignment, to be paid for by the wholesaler when he resold it to his customers. The Sugarland Industries never had physical custody or control of the product, which was always shipped from the Little Rock plant direct to the wholesaler, who stored it in his own warehouse until he resold and shipped it to his customers. The bottle of acid in question was contained in a carload lot sold by the Sugarland concern on consignment to the Peden Company, and, as usual, shipped by the Little Rock Manufac-tory direct to the Peden Company at San Antonio, which stored the product in its warehouse there. This was in January, 1922. Three months later, in April, 1922, the Sugar-land Industries sold all of its product of this nature, including the particular acid here in question, to the United Chemical Company, which left the product on consignment with the Peden Company at San Antonio. The transaction remained in this status for nearly three years, until February, 1925, when the Peden Company sold the acid in question to the city of Mission for the use of its Are department, shipping it over the lines of the San Antonio & Aransas Pass and St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Railway Companies; the latter delivering it at the destination to the city of Mission, which accepted delivery of it and placed it in the city’s fire hall. Subsequently appellee undertook, with the aid of a fellow fireman, to move the hottle of acid from one position in the fire hall to another, and while he was so engaged the acid exploded and injured him.

It appears that the bottom of the.crate inclosing the glass container of the acid was loose when delivered .by the railway company to the drayman at Mission; that the drayman “lifted the top part of the crate off, and then handled the giass carboy, loaded it into the dray wagon, then placed the old crate over it, and that it was unloaded (into the fire station) in a similar manner.” The carboy of acid was delivered to the Peden Company at San Antonio in “good condition,” the “wooden containers were in good and sound condition when they left the warehouse of Peden Iron & Steel Company for shipment to Mission,” and “the carboy and crate were in the same condition when they left the warehouse of the Peden Iron & Steel Company that they were received in.” Neither the Sugarland Industries nor the United Chemical Company had anything to do with bottling or crating the acid, never had the latter in their control or possession, and had no contractual relation with the city of Mission, and neither of the parties defendant had any contractual relation with appellee, Leathers, who was an einployé of the city of Mission.

The foregoing statement is made from the agreed facts disclosed in the hearing upon the pleas of privilege. In his petition appel-lee based his right to recover upon allegations that the several defendants were guilty of negligence in -improperly packing and crating the acid, and selling and delivering it in that condition, in failing to safeguard the acid against explosion, in marking the acid so as to indicate it had been properly packed, crated, tested, and inspected, when in fact it was not so, and in delivering it without warning of its inherently dangerous qualities, of which appellee was ignorant.

The term of court to which this suit was returnable convened on November 2, 1925, but the United Chemical Company did not file its plea of privilege until November 28. In the meantime the ease had been regularly called for announcement, and judgment by default had been rendered against that company, and writ of inquiry awarded. By this procedure that defendant waived its right to plead its privilege, which could not be revived by a plea subsequently filed.

After filing its plea of privilege, which had come too late, the Chemical Company filed a motion to set aside the judgment by default previously rendered against it and to grant it a new trial, which motion the court overruled, whereupon the court also heard and overruled the plea of privilege, which had been duly'controverted. The Chemical Company did not undertake to appeal from the interlocutory judgment by default, as, of course, it could not do; but it has prosecuted an appeal from the interlocutory order .overruling its plea of privilege. Notwithstanding this condition of the record, six of the eight propositions of law propounded by the Chemical Company are directed at the action of the court in rendering judgment by default against that company, which judgment it vigorously assails and seeks to revise. There being no appeal from that, judgment, however, there is nothing for this court to review on that branch of the case.

No assignments of error have been brought forward into the Chemical Company’s brief, and therefore the assignments filed below are not properly before this court, and, under familiar statutes, rules, and decisions, cannot be considered.'

By reference to the transcript it appears that the Chemical Company’s two assignments of error relating to its .plea of privilege are identical in language with its propositions of law thereon: First, that “the court erred in failing to sustain” appellant’s plea of privilege; and, second, that “the court erred in overruling” said plea. The assignments in that form would be sufficient, if copied in appellant’s brief, but the propositions are obviously too general for consideration. They are rendered doubly so by the failure of appellant to present any statement under them, except to quote a part of its mo *920 tion to set' aside the default judgment and for new trial on the merits, which is not before this court for review, and bears no relation to the plea of privilege.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 918, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-chemical-co-v-leathers-texapp-1926.