Winnsboro Cotton Oil Co. v. Carson

185 S.W. 1002, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 1916
DocketNo. 7438.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 1002 (Winnsboro Cotton Oil Co. v. Carson) 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
Winnsboro Cotton Oil Co. v. Carson, 185 S.W. 1002, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 552 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

Appellee sued appellant, a private corporation, for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been negligently inflicted by appellant. Appellant conceded the injury, but alleged that it was due to ap-pellee’s contributory negligence, or was the result of the risk assumed by appellee as an employé of appellant; also that appellee was the representative of appellant in control and management at the time he was injured, or its vice principal, and for that reason not entitled to recover; and, finally, that an adjustment of the claim for injuries was had between the parties. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues of fact, and upon the answers of the jury thereto judgment was rendered by the court for appellee for ⅜3,000. From such judgment, this appeal is prosecuted.

From the evidence contained in the respective briefs of the parties we find that appellant operates at Winnsboro a combined cotton oil mill, cotton gin, and electric light plant. Appellee was its employé; the capacity in which he was employed being a disputed question at trial. Appellant contended that he was a vice principal; appellee that he was an ordinary employé. A part of appellant’s gin equipment consisted of a hull conveyor, which conveyed the hulls either to the hullhouse or to another point where they could be deposited in cars. The. conveyor was of simple construction, consisting of a spiral auger incased in a wooden box running horizontally from the outside west wall through a portion of the building to destination. The covering for the end of the box designated by the witnesses as the box head -was_ of iron, bolted onto the wooden portion of the box, and consisted, in addition to a piece of iron of the dimensions of the end of the wooden box, of bearings for a counter-shaft which operated or turned the auger by cogwheels attached to the countershaft. The entire box head, consisting of the bearings, shaft, and cogwheels, was exposed on the outside wall, and was about 12 feet from the ground. Immediately beneath the box head was a wooden lever, which- when pulled in one direction opened a valve and diverted the hulls to the hullhouse, and when pulled in the opposite direction- diverted the hulls to the cars, and which was operated by hand At the time appellee received his injuries he was directed by appellee’s superintendent to so adjust the lever that a car might be loaded with hulls. In order to reach the lever it was necessary to go upon a “runway,” which consisted of a plank 11 inches wide, 1 ⅛ inches thick, laid upon beams at each end, and reached from the ground by ladder. Appellee got upon the runway and walked thereon to the lever, feeling for same with his hands, it being dark, and that side of the building being unlighted. He finally got his hand upon it and gave it a pull. The lever failing to work or slide, he gave another pull, which started the runway or board upon which he stood to swaying, causing him to *1005 lose his balance and to throw out his hands involuntarily and clutch the cogwheels, which injured his left hand so seriously that it became necessary to amputate his thumb, first and second fingers, and nearly half of the body of the hand. Appellee claimed, and the evidence adduced in his behalf tended to show, that the wooden conveyor box onto which the iron box head had been bolted was deteriorated and rotted, and as a result the box head had worked loose and was rest-, ing upon the lever, preventing it from sliding in the usual and normal manner, and but for such condition the injuries would not have resulted, and the jury so found. The foregoing are the salient facts developed in the case and which support the verdict of the jury. There was, of course, another theory of the case supported by the evidence tendered by appellant, but, since the jury has properly solved the conflict, we will not relate the facts deducible from the evidence offered by appellant. We will, however, at another place in this opinion discuss the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding of a certain fact by the jury and put in issue by appellant.

[1] Prior to any consideration of the issues advanced under the assignments contained in appellant’s brief we are met in limine by a motion to dismiss the appeal, and in the alternative to strike out every assignment of error presented by the brief of appellant. The ground urged as basis for both issues is the failure of appellant to file its motion for new trial in the court below within the statutory 2 days after verdict. Appellant’s counter proposition is that the motion comes too late. Rule 8 promulgated by the Supreme Court for observance by the Courts of Civil Appeals (142 S. W. xi) provides, in substance, that all motions relating to informalities in appeals to said courts shall be waived unless filed and entered upon the motion docket within 30 days after the filing of the transcript. The transcript in the instant case was filed in this court March 30, 1915. The motion to dismiss is contained in appellee’s brief, which was filed November 4, 1915, and, if such presentation can he considered a motion entered upon the docket by the clerk, it nevertheless comes too late, since it is clear that the issues raised in the motion are informalities as distinguished from jurisdictional questions. Conn v. Houston Oil Co., 171 S. W. 520; Tyler v. Sowders, 172 S. W. 205; McLane v. Haydon, 178 S. W. 1197.

[2, 3] Appellee also in limine objects to any consideration of the first, second, and third assignments of error on the ground that there is in the record “no” motion attacking the verdict of the jury. This objection, we assume, is based upon the claim that, the motion having been filed after the expiration of the statutory 2-day i^eriod, the verdict would stand as unchallenged, because the motion, could not be considered in support of the assignments. We have said that the matter of when the motion for new trial was filed was an informality relating to the manner of appeal, and was waived in the absence of motion attacking same filed within 30 days after filing transcript in this court. Hence, having waived the time of filing motion for new trial, even if filed too late in the court below, which we do not determine, the same is in the record for consideration for all purposes. If, on the contrary, it is meant that the motion, if considered, does not attack the verdict of the jury, we conclude it is sufficient, since it, in substance, attacks both the verdict and the judgment on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence;- or, to put it more nearly in the language of the motion, on the ground that the undisputed evidence was at variance with the findings of the jury, which is substantially the same thing. The precise ruling in Scott v. Bank, 66 S. W. 485, cited in support of the motion, was that it was not only necessary to urge in the motion for new trial the insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the jury, but that, when such motion was overruled, it was necessary in order to review such action to assign as error the action of the court in overruling the motion for new trial. The motion for new trial now constitutes the assignments of error. Article 1612, Yernon’s Sayles’ Stats. Hence a complaint in the motion repeated in the assignment of error that the verdict should be set aside because without evidence to support it sufficiently raises the issue. Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Black, 176 S. W. 755. In the case cited writ of error was recently denied by our Supreme Court.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 1002, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winnsboro-cotton-oil-co-v-carson-texapp-1916.