Westheimer Transfer & Storage Co. v. Houston Bldg. Co.

198 S.W.2d 465, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 1946
DocketNo. 11818.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 465 (Westheimer Transfer & Storage Co. v. Houston Bldg. Co.) 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
Westheimer Transfer & Storage Co. v. Houston Bldg. Co., 198 S.W.2d 465, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 588 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This statement of the nature and result of this suit, as well as of its background, considered to be correct as such, is thus quoted in substantial part from one appearing in the appellee’s brief herein:

“Mrs. Mamie Ruiz was injured by tripping and falling over the door of a street elevator, in front of the Second National Bank Building, in Houston. At the time, the door was being opened to permit West-heimer Transfer & Storage Co., Inc., to deliver supplies through such street elevator to a tenant in the building. Mrs. Ruiz brought a $48,000.00 damage suit (not the case at bar) against Houston Building Company, Inc., (owner of the Second National Bank Building); and Westheimer Transfer & Storage Co., Inc., (the company desiring to deliver goods on to the freight elevator at the time of Mrs. Ruiz’s injuries) was made a cross-defendant in such suit. The principal ground of negligence alleged by Mrs. Ruiz in her suit was the failure of the defendant to properly guard the door, or opening, of the street elevator. The chief question in that case and in the instant case centered around the duty to guard the street elevator door. The Ruiz suit went to trial, but before the conclusion of the evidence, Mrs. Ruiz agreed to settle her claim for $1,750.00 plus $87.00 court costs. Westheimer Transfer & Storage Co., Inc., declined to pay all, or any part of this amount, to Mrs. Ruiz.
“Houston Building Company, Inc., paid Mrs. Ruiz the $1,750.00, plus $87.00 costs; and counsel for Westheimer Transfer & Storage Co., Inc., appellant in this cause, executed to Houston Building Company, Inc., a letter agreement as follows:
“ ‘We understand that, if you make this settlement with Mr. and Mrs. Ruiz, you intend thereafter, on behalf of your client, to assert against Westheimer Transfer & Storage Company, Inc., an action for indemnity and/or contribution, and the purpose of the agreement evidenced by this letter is to relieve you, in such event, from the necessity of establishing that your client was liable to Mr. and Mrs. Ruiz, and that its liability equalled or exceeded the amount paid in settlement.’
“Thereafter, appellee brought the instant suit against appellant for indemnity (or, in the alternative, for contribution). Appellee pleaded that it was liable to Mrs. Ruiz and other members of the public, no matter what agreements, understandings, or arrangements may have existed between appellee and appellant; and appellee then pleaded that at the time in question, one Warren (the agent, servant, and employee of appellant), gave assurances to Wm. Rucksdashel (appellee’s employee), that one Melton (another agent, servant, and employee of appellant), was guarding the street elevator door, over which Mrs. Ruiz tripped and was injured. Appellee sought judgment against appellant for the entire amount appellee had paid Mrs. Ruiz, if the jury found that the only negligence (as between appellant and appellee) was that of appellant; and it further sought contribution for one-half of the amount paid Mrs. Ruiz, if the jury found that — as between appellant and appellee — both parties were negligent. The jury found: (1) That appellant’s employees were negligent; (2) that such negligence was the sole proximate cause of the injury to Mrs. Ruiz; (3) that appellant’s employee, Warren, was acting within the course of his employment; and (4) that appellee was not negligent. The court accordingly rendered judgment for the appellee for $1,837.00 (the entire amount which had been paid by it to Mrs. Ruiz, plus court costs in the Ruiz suit).”

In this court, appellant presents some twenty-three points of error for a reversal of the recovery so allowed against it, of which the first two are these:

“First. Error of court in overruling appellant’s motion for instructed verdict, filed and presented at the close of the evidence.
“Second. Error of court in overruling defendant’s motion for judgment non ob-stante veredicto”.

As applied to the facts here, these two somewhat differing modes of procedure— depending upon what stage of the trial they were invoked at — really raise but on« *467 underlying question of law, which is this: Whether the appellant, as between it and the appellee, owed the latter the duty to guard the street elevator door, and whether the former’s employee, Warren, was acting in the scope of his employment, as the jury found in its answer to special issue No. 6; as against appellant’s contention that it had prohibited both its employees Warren and Melton from ever assuming for it the responsibility of guarding any street elevators, and if they undertook that here, they were mere volunteers, for which act appellant was not responsible.

Appellant vefy ably argues that, in view of the appellee’s admission that it owed a non-delegable duty to the general public to guard the elevator doors here involved, the appellee could not, therefore, be free of negligence as between it and the appellant, when the appellee, concededly in this instance, took no care to see that the elevator doors were guarded, although it had “by reason of the dangerous nature of the operation of the elevator, and the fact that the law imposed upon them a duty of more than ordinary care, reserved the operation of and the incidental guarding of the elevator solely unto itself.”

In sum, appellant assails the appealed-from judgment for indemnity against it as having been based upon the theory that it and appellee were joint tort-feasors, hence that the indemnity had so been allowed between them as tort-feasors; it protests, (1) that such an indemnity could in law be only allowed in favor of a passive tort-feasor as against an active one; (2) that appellee having pled that it did in fact owe a non-delegable duty to Mrs. Ruiz, appellant accordingly could not have been a joint tort-feasor with the appellee; (3) the finding of the jury that appellant’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of the injury perforce acquitted the appellee of having been a joint tort-feasor with it.

The appellee, in turn, defending the judgment, presents that the vice in appellant’s whole position is that the indemnity it sought, and the trial court so allowed, was not based at all upon the theory that — as between two joint-feasors — the one guilty of passive negligence was entitled to indemnity from the one guilty of active neg-ligente.

In a word, the appellee thus gives what it conceives to have been the legal basis for the recovery awarded it:

"The true rule of law, upon which this judgment is based, can be stated thus: where one party (appellant) commits a tort, and another party (appellee) is liable to the person injured by virtue of a rule of law, indemnity is allowed. In this case, under the findings of the jury, the tort was committed by Westheimer’s, whose negligence was the sole proximate cause of Mrs. Ruiz’ injury. Houston Building Company had a non-delegable duty to the public to make the sidewalk elevator in question safe, so far as the public was concerned. It was, therefore, liable to Mrs. Ruiz, but, since Westheimer’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of her injury, the actual tort was committed by Westheimer’s, and Houston Building Company was liable to her only by virtue of a rule of law, to-wit, that its duty was non-delegable. It was, therefore, entitled to indemnity against Westheimer’s.”

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.2d 465, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westheimer-transfer-storage-co-v-houston-bldg-co-texapp-1946.