Blossom Oil & Cotton Co. v. Poteet
Blossom Oil & Cotton Co. v. Poteet
Opinion of the Court
Appellant operated a cotton seed oil mill. Its seed house was situated about fifty feet from its main building, and was sixty feet wide north and south by two hundred feet long east and west. Near the center of the seed house, along the floor thereof for a distance of about one hundred feet from its west end, appellant had constructed a box about twelve inches in height and about ten inches in width. In this box was a. spiral or screw-shaped piece of iron or steel about nine inches in diameter, which, revolving, conveyed seed placed in the box to the cleaning machine and then to the mill in the main building. The covering for the box was in sections—each five feet in length, it seems—and was so arranged that desired openings through which to feed the iron conveyer inside the box could be made, leaving other portions of the box covered. Besides the conveyer just referred to and others, there was in 'the seed room a sand screen and shaker and fan, three elevators, and shafting, belting and pulleys, located near the floor and unincased. There also was in the room a quantity of cotton seed. March 8, 1907, appellee Grade Poteet, then about four and one-half years old, stepped into the box described above, while the iron conveyer referred to was revolving therein, and as a result her left foot was cut pif and her left leg was so torn, crushed and injured as to make it necessary to amputate same about midway between her knee and hip. In her petition appellee, who sued by her next friend, after alleging that the seed room, because of the machinery and cotton seed therein, was an attractive place to children of her age, and that she had been invited- and permitted by appellant’s employe in charge of the room to go into same, further alleged that “she was a small child, about four and one-half years of age, too young and
From the uncontradicted- testimony it appeared that B. F. Poteet, appellee’s father, was an employe of appellant’s, charged with the duty to feed the conveyer in the seed room; that at about 12 o’clock on the day she was injured appellee accompanied her mother, who went to the seed room to carry to her husband his dinner, and while he was eating same, to take his place in feeding the conveyer; that while Poteet was engaged in eating his dinner and Mrs. Poteet was engaged in shoveling cotton seed from a mass of seed piled high on the floor, the seed began to slide down and to cover her and choke the conveyer she was feeding; that thereupon she called to her husband to come and assist her; that at that time Poteet and appellee were sitting down eating, about twenty feet from the conveyer, near or against the north wall of the building; that Poteet went hurriedly to his wife, crossing over the conveyer, and was followed by appellee; and that appellee in attempting to cross over the box containing the conveyer stepped into same through an opening therein and was injured as alleged. It further appeared that at once after appellee got into the seed room and until her father began to eat his dinner, she played around in the room on or with the cotton seed. As to the circumstances immediately surrounding the accident Poteet testified as " follows: “I took my dinner and went over next to the north wall and sat down, and Gracie got up and said, ‘Daddy, I believe I will eat dinner with you;’ and she set down, taken out some meat and bread and went to eating; and the seed where my wife was feeding was piled up as high as this ceiling (indicating ceiling in courtroom), and she had dug out through the seed, she had dug out until the seed slid down around her waist, and she hallowed to me, for me to help her; and when I started Gracie started and said, ‘Daddy, I am coming, too.’ I never thought about the child getting hurt, and run to my wife; I was thinking about my wife and the seed sliding in on her, and the next thing I knew I got on top of the conveyer, and the next thing I knew Gracie was at my heels, and the next thing hallowed, ‘Momma! Mamma!’ and I turned around and seen she was fastened, and it scared me until I didn’t know what to do, but all I thought of was running and throwing the belt, and run something like 100 feet, kicked the belt off and stopped the machinery.”
A portion of the trial court’s charge to the jury was as follows: “Therefore, if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff entered or was carried into the seed room of defendant at the special instance and request of any of the employes of defendant authorized
The appeal is from a judgment in appellee’s favor for the sum of $7000.
After stating the case as above.—Many of the questions made by the assignments were determined by this court when the case was before us on an appeal by appellee from a judgment sustaining a general demurrer to her petition. (Poteet v. Blossom Oil & Cotton Co., 115 S. W., 289.) The conclusions then announced were reached after careful consideration had been given to the contentions made by the oil and cotton company. As we still entertain the views then expressed, the assignments which again present questions determined on that appeal are overruled.
Appellant specially excepted to that part of appellee’s petition “which alleged that the place was attractive to children and that plaintiff and other children had been permitted to go in and loiter in said seed room,” and urges as erroneous the action of the court in overruling its exception. But an issue as to whether the seed room was attractive to children or not was not submitted to the jury.
The paragraph copied in the statement from the charge of the court to the jury is attacked as erroneous on several grounds: (1) It is insisted that there was no evidence that appellee “entered or was carried into the seed room at the special instance and request of any of the employes of defendant authorized" to give consent by their agency.” If it should be -conceded that there was no such evidence, and that the portion of the charge quoted therefore was erroneous, we do not think it would furnish a reason for reversing the judgment. The jury were not authorized by the charge to find appellant to have been guilty of negligence, if they believed appellee entered or was carried into the seed room at the “special instance and request” of any of appellant’s employes. They were required to believe, before finding appellant to have been guilty of negligence, that its employes permitted appellee to “enter said seed room and wander around and play among such machinery and near to said conveyer.” Therefore, we are unable to see how appellant’s rights could have been prejudiced by the portion of the charge complained of. Ft. Worth & D. C. Ry. Co. v. Peters, 7 Texas Civ. App., 78, 25 S. W., 1078; Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Greenlee, 70 Texas, 560; Price v. St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co., 38 Texas Civ. App., 309, 85 S. W., 858; Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Udallo, 91 S. W., 333. (2) It is further insisted that there was no evidence that appellee was “permitted to wander around in the seed room unattended or to play among the machinery in operation in the seed room.” The evidence was that during a period of five or ten minutes after she got into the seed room, before her father began to eat his dinner and while he was talking to her mother, appellee was “playing on the cotton seed and playing around.” It seems to us that the testimony specified sufficiently refutes appellant’s contention. (3) It is still further insisted that the paragraph referred to of the court’s charge was erroneous in that it imposed on appellant a duty to watch over and guard appellee against injury while in the seed room, and declared it to be liable if it negligently failed to perform that duty. Under the circumstances stated in other portions of said paragraph of the charge, such a duty, we think, rested upon appellant. Poteet v. Blossom Oil & Cotton Co., 115 S. W., 289.
Before the jury had concluded their deliberations they returned into open court and presented to the court a writing signed by their foreman, as follows: “We, the jury, can not agree in part on the meaning implied in regard to a part of the first paragraph, ‘ordinary care is that degree of care that an ordinarily careful and prudent person would exercise under the same or similar circumstances.’ Apply to and at the time of the injury to her.” After the court had read the communication so presented to him the following colloquy occurred: The 'Court: “Gentlemen, I don’t believe I understand the question. Do you mean to ask whether or not it applied to that time?” Jury: “Directly.” Court: “The direct time—as to whether it applied to the direct time she fell.” Jury: “At the time she was injured and all the time she was in the seed room.” . . .
By its twentieth assignment appellant questions the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment. It appeared without dispute in the testimony (1) that appellee was a child only four and one-half years of age, without greater intelligence and discretion than ordinarily is possessed by children of that age; (2) that the seed room was a dangerous place for a child of her age and discretion to be, if left therein unattended and uncared for; (3) that she was left 'by her mother in the seed room with appellant’s employe, but otherwise unattended and uncared for, while she (the mother) engaged in doing work assigned by appellant to said employe; (4) that said employe knew appellee’s age and of her lack of intelligence and discretion, and knew of the dangers to be incurred by her if left in the room unattended and uncared for; (5) that said employe was the only other person then in the seed room; (6) that said employe in response to a call from the mother for assistance left appellee and walked hurriedly towards the mother, stepping over the open box containing the conveyer covered and concealed from view by cotton seed; (7) that he knew appellee was following close behind him and would endeavor to cross over the conveyer; and (8) that said employe by neither word nor act warned her of the danger she was about to incur, nor made any effort whatever to prevent her from following Mm. We think the testimony was amply sufficient to
The judgment is affirmed.
Hodges, Justice, not sitting.
ON MOTION BOB EEHEAEING.
The correctness of the disposition made of the appeal, so far as the merits of the case are concerned, may be tested by the answer which should be given to the following question propounded by appellant in its motion for a rehearing: “Under the evidence exhibited by the record, is it possible that the court can hold that the mother over the protest of the mill management can bring her child into the mill where the father is employed as a day laborer and who also has been told not to allow the child to enter, and thereby impose the duty on the mill to watch over and care for her to see that she does not voluntarily injure herself? In North Texas Construction Co. v. Bostick, 92 Texas, 242, after declaring that the defendant company “did not owe the duty of guarding its premises and machinery against trespassers, even though they may have been children of very immature discretion,” the Supreme Court said: “We think, however, in analogy, at least, to the doctrine of° discovered peril, when an employe in charge of the gins saw a child of tender years intruding into a place of danger, or in such close proximity to the machinery that he was likely to so intrude, it became his duty to take steps for its protection.” If the law is as that court in the statement quoted declared it to be, we think the question propounded must be answered as we have answered it—in the affirmative. The most unfavorable view which can be taken of appellee’s presence in the seed house is that she was there as a trespasser. If, nevertheless, under the circumstances suggested by the Supreme Court, appellant owed to her the duty to take steps for her protection, that her mother carried her to the seed room certainly would not be a reason why appellant should be held to be relieved of the duty. Eor should the fact that both her mother and her father also were in the seed room be held to relieve appellant of such a duty, if it knew that they, abandoning all care of her, had left her free to act upon her own childish impulses. Such knowledge on the part of appellant, or on the part of its employe in charge of the seed room, it seems to us, would charge it with as great a duty to appellee as it would have owed to her had neither her father nor her mother been in the seed room. The fact that appellee’s mother was in the seed room has never been regarded by us as a reason for doubting the existence of a duty on the part of appellant to appellee. For she had abandoned to appellant’s employe the care of the child, while she engaged in the discharge in his stead of the duty he owed appellant to feed the conveyer. The greatest difficulty experienced by us in reaching the conclusion that a liability on the part of appellant to appellee had been shown, grew out of the dual relationship borne by Poteet to appellee. So long as Poteet, the father, was discharging the duty he owed to appellee to protect her from the dangers surrounding her
Appellant requests us, in the event its motion for a rehearing should be refused, “to overrule in terms each and every assignment of error presented” by it. This we now do.
The motion for a rehearing is overruled.
Affirmed.
Writ of error granted. Reversed and rendered for defendant, 104 Texas, -.
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