WR Grimshaw Company v. Zoller

396 S.W.2d 477, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2338
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 3, 1965
Docket14414
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 396 S.W.2d 477 (WR Grimshaw Company v. Zoller) 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
WR Grimshaw Company v. Zoller, 396 S.W.2d 477, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2338 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

BARROW, Justice.

Mrs. Pauline C. Zoller brought this suit on behalf of the legal beneficiaries of El-more C. Zoller, deceased, against W. R. Grimshaw Company, an Oklahoma Corporation, and Elliot G. Keeling, a resident of Harris County, Texas, seeking to recover damages for fatal injuries sustained by her husband, Elmore C. Zoller, on a construction site known as the Wonderland Shopping Center in San Antonio. Grimshaw Company was the general contractor on this job, Keeling was the iron worker foreman and Zoller was an employee of a subcontractor, Martin Wright Electric Company. Texas Employers’ Insurance Association, the compensation carrier for Martin Wright Co., intervened asserting its right to subrogation to the extent of compensation, medical and funeral benefits paid by it.

Keeling filed a plea of privilege seeking to remove the cause of action against him to Harris County. This plea was overruled and he perfected his appeal to this Court where the order was reversed and the cause remanded for retrial. See Keeling v. Zoller, 388 S.W.2d 274. Before the plea of privilege appeal was determined, the suit was tried on the merits and judgment was rendered on the jury verdict, whereby Mrs. Zoller, her two sons and Texas Employers’ recovered joint and several judgment against Grimshaw Co. and Keeling for the damages sustained by reason of the death of Zoller. 1

On a retrial of Keeling’s plea of privilege a jury failed to find any acts of negligence against him and judgment was entered transferring the cause as to him to Harris County, Texas. Appellees concede on this *479 appeal that the judgment must therefore be reversed and the cause remanded as to Keeling.

Grimshaw Co. urges by this appeal that plaintiffs (appellees here) failed to establish that it breached any duty owed to Zol-ler; that the evidence shows as a matter of law that the condition of the premises where Zoller was injured was open and obvious; the injuries sustained by Zoller were, as a matter of law, solely caused by his own negligence; plaintiffs failed to establish that Zoller was a business invitee at the time and place of his injury; the verdict of the jury will not support a judgment for damages; there was no duty upon Grimshaw Co. to furnish temporary lighting in the area where Zoller was injured; and the trial court abused its discretion in overruling Grimshaw Co.’s motion for continuance pending determination of the appeal of Keeling’s plea of privilege.

Grimshaw Co. was the general contractor for the construction of the Wonderland Shopping Center which was to be one unit of about seven acres, consisting of two levels, in which would be located many different stores. The construction site was located on a seventy-acre tract. Martin Wright Co. had an electrical subcontract on part of the project and its employees, including Zoller, had worked on the job for several months. Zoller was injured about 9:00 p. m. on July 24, 1961, in the lower level, when he fell, striking his head on an upright steel reinforcement rod which pierced his right eye and produced injuries resulting in his death.

For about two weeks prior thereto, Wright Co.’s employees were working overtime on the project because the electrical work was running behind the other work. On this night about thirty to forty electrical employees worked on the Woolworth store job, which was located on the second level. Their tools were stored in a tool shed on the first, or basement, level which was reached from the Woolworth job by a stairwell located, according to the various witnesses, from seventy to two hundred feet north of the tool shed entrance. The basement area was still in rough construction stage. Immediately in front of the tool shed doors was a U-shaped truck well opening to the south and facing the tool shed doors. This truck well was surrounded by a concrete beam, described as being from U/2' to 3' high. On the west and north sides of the truck well a concrete floor had been poured, but the area was still unfinished and numerous boards and other construction materials were lying on the floor. On the east side of this truck well was an area extending about two hundred feet to the outside of the building, which was called a fill area. Concrete had not been poured on this area and it consisted of a dirt and caliche base.

For sometime prior to the accident in question, Wright Co.’s employees, with the permission of Grimshaw Co., had used the tool shed in the basement for storing their tools and materials. In going to and from the tool shed to the second level, three routes were indiscriminately used by these employees to the stairwell. They walked directly north across the truck well and up a ramp made of boards; went to the west across the cement floor, or went to the east across the fill area. Wright Co.’s employees testified that the truck well was many times littered with trash and could not be used. It was called a truck well because there was a ramp leading to the outside whereby trucks could drive down, presumably to bring in materials, haul off trash, etc. There was no testimony that any route was prohibited. Grimshaw Co. urged that the proper route was through the truck well, however, in response to a defensive issue, the jury found that there was no designated pathway. There is considerable testimony concerning the lighting in this area. In addition to such natural light as would come in through the open end of the basement to the east of the truck well, there was a light located over the stairwell and fluorescent lights were located in the tool shed. The latter furnished light through the shed doors. When these doors were *480 closed, however, the lighting in the basement was poor. This would be particularly so on a rainy night, as it was on July 24, 1961.

On this night the Wright Co. employees were working overtime until 9:00 p. m. Shortly before this time, they left the second floor work site and proceeded down the stairwell to lock up their tools and materials in the tool shed. Two routes were available for leaving the basement area to go to their cars. They could walk out the truck ramp to the east or they could return up the stairwell and go out the building. It had rained a great deal during this evening and the truck ramp was muddy and difficult to negotiate. As a result, under the undisputed evidence, all of Wright Co.’s employees on this night were leaving by the stairwell. There was evidence that the truck well was littered with trash and debris at this time. In any event, most of Wright Co.’s employees used the route west of the truck well, although several went to the east across the fill area.

There is no direct evidence concerning the route of Zoller. One co-employee testified that Zoller and another employee, Dockins, turned to the east towards the truck ramp. Dockins did not testify. While some of the other employees were proceeding to the stairwell, they heard the noise of Zoller’s fall and went to his aid. He was found in the fill area with his feet entangled in part of a roll of wire mesh of a type which had been used by the iron workers employed by Grimshaw Co. a few days earlier in reinforcing the concrete floor. In falling, Zoller’s head struck a reinforcing rod which was sticking upright a foot or so out of the concrete beam supporting the east wall of the truck well.

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396 S.W.2d 477, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wr-grimshaw-company-v-zoller-texapp-1965.