West Lumber Co. v. Morris & Barnes

257 S.W. 592
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1923
DocketNo. 1008.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 257 S.W. 592 (West Lumber Co. v. Morris & Barnes) 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
West Lumber Co. v. Morris & Barnes, 257 S.W. 592 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This suit was originally one by A. D. Kinard against the present appellant, West Lumber Company, in the district court of Polk county, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by Kinard as an employee of the West Lumber Company while performing his duty as what is termed a “log decker’’ in the woods out on appellant’s tramroad where logs were being piled or decked along the track, which were afterwards to be loaded on ears and hauled to appellant’s mill. Shortly after the suit was filed by Kinard, the West Lumber Company entered into a written contract of settlement with him, and took from him a receipt in full for all claim of damages because of such injuries. Kinard was represented in the suit by the law- firm of Morris & Barnes, the present appellees in this case, and they knew nothing about the negotiations for settlement between the West Lumber Company and Kinard until after it had been made. Upon learning of the settlement made with Kinard, Morris & Barnes filed a petition of intervention in the suit, alleging, in substance, that they were Kin-ard’s lawyers in conducting the litigation, and that they had a written assignment from him of a one-half interest in his cause of action against the West Lumber Company, and that the West Lumber Company had both constructive and actual notice of such assignment to them at the time it settled the. suit with Kinard, and they prayed to be permitted to prosecute their intervention to judgment, based upon their assignment as to one-half of Kinard’s cause of action to them.

Interveners alleged, substantially, that Kinard received his injuries on June 17, 1921, while in the discharge of his duties as log decker for the West Lumber Company, and that his employment in that capacity was attended by great danger and hazard, and that Kinard, at the time he was employed and at the time of his injuries, was a minor, under 21 -years of age, and had had no previous experience in decking logs, and was not aware of the danger attendant upon such work, and that the West Lumber Company, his employer, had negligently failed to warn him of such dangers and to instruct him how to avoid them, and. *594 that, in consequence of such negligent acts and conduct on the part of the West Lumber Company, Kinard sustained his injuries, and was damaged in the sum of $20,000. Interveners further alleged, as a ground of negligence on the part of thq West Lumber Company, in substance, that at the time Kinard received his injuries, West Lumber Company’s foreman in charge of the work Kinard was doing forced and compelled him to deck a log with his hands, instead of permitting him to use a hook and chain for that purpose, which, they alleged, was the usual and customary way of decking logs, and that, in consequence of such act on the part of the foreman, in compelling Kinard to deck the log with his hands, Kinard received his injuries, and that this was the result of negligence on the part of the foreman in compelling Kinard to deck the log with his hands. Intervener prayed for judgment against the West Lumber Company for $10,000, being one-half of the damages suffered by Kinard in consequence of his injuries.

The West Lumber Company answered by general demurrer, a number of special exceptions, the action on none of which is material here, by general denial, and by special denial of all the acts of negligence alleged against it, and further specially interposing the defense of assumed risk, and, further, that Kinard’s injuries were the result of a mere accident. West Lumber Company further pleaded specially its settlement with Kinard, and prayed to have that upheld as a defense to the suit of interveners.

In reply to the answer of the West Lumber Company, interveners filed a supplemental petition, containing, among other things, a special exception, attacking the plea of settlement interposed by defendant, and this special exception was sustained, and defendant’s answer, to that extent, was stricken out. Further on in the supplemental petition, interveners alleged, in substance, that the injury to Kinard was caused solely and only by negligence on the part of West Lumber Company’s foreman in or-' dering and compelling Kinard to deck the log with his hands.

The ease proceeded to trial with a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of interveners, against the West Lumber Company, for $5,000, from which the West Lumber Company has -appealed, assigning a number of errors, some of which we are compelled to sustain, and others will be overruled.

The first eight propositions advanced, by appellant in its brief do not show, of themselves, that they relate to any particular assignment of error in the brief, and for this reason appellees have filed a motion in this court to strike'these propositions from appellant’s brief. Appellees contend, in this connection, that under the present rules for briefing, the propositions in appellant’s brief must' refer to, and show that they refer and are related to, some particular assignment of error in the brief, before they will be entitled to consideration by this court. In support of this - contention, ap-pellees have cited several opinions of some of the Courts of Civil Appeals in this state which sustain this contention, especially the case of Blakeney v. Johnson County, 253 S. W. 333, an opinion by the San Antonio Court, speaking through Chief Justice Fly. It is very clear from the opinion in that case that the court there held .that unless a proposition in appellant’s brief referred to some particular assignment of error upon which it is based, it is not entitled to consideration by the appellate court. We were already aware of this holding by the San Antonio court; but as- we construe the present rules promulgated by the Supreme Court, they do not require that any proposition in a brief shall show that it relates or refers to any particular assignment of error, and we have been unable to agree with the holding of the San Antonio court in the case above mentioned. Rule 30, as promulgated by the Supreme Court, only requires that propositions found in the brief be germane to one or more of the assignments of error, or relate to fundamental error. True, it would be much more convenient and tend to the dispatch of business by the appellate courts if counsel would let their propositions show to what assignments of error they relate; but the Supreme Court, in making the rule, has not required that that be done. This court has heretofore held, in Adams v. Adams, 253 S. W. 605, that rule 30 does not require that a proposition in appellant’s brief shall show to what assignment or assignments of error it relates, and we have seen no reason to change our views on that point. The motion is, therefore, overruled.

Before we proceed to a disposition of any of the points insisted upon by appellant in this case, we shall first state the substance of what we consider the undisputed evidence in this case, and this will serve as a statement for such evidence in connection with any of the assignments discussed by us.

Kinard received his injuries, made the basis of this suit, on June 17, 1921, while in the employ of appellant out on its tramroad in the woods in Polk county,. decking saw-logs. He had been working in that particular business about 1% days at the time he was hurt, and he had never worked as a log decker prior to that time.

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Bluebook (online)
257 S.W. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-lumber-co-v-morris-barnes-texapp-1923.