City of El Paso v. Pan American Supply Co.
City of El Paso v. Pan American Supply Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment of the 41st District Court of El Paso County awarding damages to the appellee occasioned by the running of surface water into the basement of a store building owned and operated by the appellee which damaged goods stored therein.
The trial was to a jury on the facts and the case submitted on special issues the answers to which, in the opinion of the trial court, were favorable to the plaintiffs, ap-pellee here. Pan American Supply Compa
During the summer of 1949, there were sm.all leaks of water into plaintiff’s basement about which the plaintiff complained to the city suggesting the water was coming from a sanitary sewer of the city. The city received at least two such reports and as many times made an investigation. The early part of August 1949, the city cut a hole in the concrete pavement in the alley and close to a chute that opened from the alley into the basement of plaintiff, which chute had been used, and could be, to unload goods and materials from the alley into the basement. The purpose of the excavation was to uncover sewer pipes and determine if the water was from that source. It was determined water was leaking from a loose-jointed private service sewer line that connected with the city’s main line in the alley. The inference is some repairs were made and the dirt from the excavation returned to the hole made to fill it. The concrete removed to make the excavation was not immediately replaced and had not 'been for some 12 or 14 days when a rain came and water that accumulated in the alley found its way through the excavation and into plaintiff’s basement. That damage occurred seems, not to be disputed and no point is made thereon.
Plaintiff alleged the failure to replace the concrete was negligence and the proximate cause of the damage sustained. The city answered denying it was negligent, saying it was the usual and customary practice to leave a hole such as this one was in a. street or alley until the dirt replaced had had time to settle and pack, so when the concrete was replaced the dirt below would not recede therefrom and leave it without support. The city further pleaded affirmatively there was a large hole in the wall of the chute through which the water previously had percolated; that on each occasion it had inspected the basement the hole had been called to the attention of the plaintiff and suggestion made that it should be repaired to keep the water out and plaintiff was negligent in failing to repair the hole and but for such negligence the damage would not have occurred, and such was the cause or contributing cause of the damage.
In response to a special issue the jury found there was no hole in the wall of the chute and acquitted the plaintiff of contributory negligence. The answer thus made is the basis for the city’s first point and complaint, which is, the answer is against' the overwhelming weight of the evidence. The city has with great care and ability, briefed this point and has with great pains distinguished between the “no evidence” rule and the “weight of evidence” rule contended for. It would serve no purpose here to' review the authorities cited and discussed. There is testimony in the record by the city’s Superintendent of Water and Sewage; by its supervisor of the Sanitary Storm Sewer Division; by three crewmen who worked on this job that there was a hole there and it had 'been called to the attention of plaintiff, as was claimed by the city. There was positive testimony by Sanchez, Senior, nothing like that occurred, and that there was no hole in the wall of the chute prior to the rain. The son likewise testified positively there was no hole there, each saying they had run a new concrete floor in the basement a few years prior thereto and they had inspected for defects at that time and had had numerous opportunities to discover such a hole -had it been there and there was none there. Five employees and former employees of plaintiff and one janitor who had worked in the basement prior to the purchase and occupancy of plaintiff testified they had had many opportunities to be in the basement and'observe the'conditions therein and were
The jury found the city negligent in not replacing the concrete in the alley before the rain, and points 2, 3 and 4 have to do with that finding, predicated on the proposition the finding is without support in the evidence. It is argued in this connection there is no evidence the city was negligent in not replacing the concrete, and that it is affirmatively established by the city’s testimony it is the accepted practice to leave a hole in the pavement if a street open so the traffic will tamp the replaced dirt before the pavement is applied, otherwise the dirt will recede from the pavement and leave it unsupported by the earth .beneath. The city developed the fact the dirt was brought to about the level of the surface and that a man returned daily over a period of four or five days to add more dirt as it settled; that it settled about two inches each day. There is testimony the dirt carried into the basement was fine earth. This testimony supports an inference the dirt replaced was fine and soft. This was not an ordinary opening in a street, but one in an alley and close to a chute opening into a basement; one from which water had percolated from' the area of the opening into the basement. One of the city’s witnesses testified, while digging the hole, he discovered a “sinkhole” which he opened to some extent and poked a portion of his body into and looked through it right into the basement. Small amounts of iwater from a loose-jointed sewer line had found its way through the dirt from the location of the hole made to the basement. We think all the facts and circumstances support an inference the city could foresee and anticipate the thing that did occur and the failure to do whatever was reasonably necessary to replace the concrete promptly was negligence and the point not well taken.
Points 5 and 6 complain of the form in which Special Issue No. 1 was submitted. The issue reads:
“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the failure of the defendant City of El Paso to replace the concrete or hard surface over the hole which had been dug by them prior to the rain on or about August 12, 1949, was negligence?”
The specific complaint is the use of the word “failure” in the issue is a comment on the evidence and carries with it an implication of fault on the part of the city. Objection was urged to the issue and a special issue submitted using the words “action of the City in waiting to replace the concrete”. We are unable to believe the use of the word failure in anywise prejudiced the city. It is a well-established practice to inquire of the jury if they believe there was a failure to keep a lookout, to properly apply ■brakes, to furnish a safe and proper place to work,- etc., and then ask if such were negligence. The failure to replace the concrete is an admitted fact here. We think the jury well understood the Court was inquiring about an omission rather than a fault.
'The city finally complains of the action of the Court in permitting the plaintiff to file a trial amendment setting up a claim for the cost of the extra expense incurred to clean up after the flooded condition and the submission of such item on the ground the claim was never formally presented to the city as is required by a charter provision. One effective answer to this contention is the law never requires the doing of a useless thing. Plaintiff filed a claim for damages occasioned by the water that entered the basement. It is true the damage was described as damage to goods and not for cost of labor incurred in cleaning up. The claim was rejected, and we take it on the theory the suit was defended on, because it denied liability therefor. The city may waive the presentation of a claim, City of Waco v. Thralls, Tex.Civ.App., 172 S.W.2d 142 (e. r.), and denial of liability has consistently been held to constitute waiver, generally, e. g. in insurance cases. T.J. Vol. 24, p. 1111, Sec. 292; and Ten. Year Sup. Vol. 6, p. 267, Sec. 292 and the
We conclude there is no error in the judgment and actions of the trial court and the judgment is affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring on motion for rehearing).
When this case was submitted and for several weeks thereafter the writer was seriously ill and therefore did not hear the oral argument or participate in the original decision. Because one of the chief points presented on appellant’s motion for rehearing involves a question of fact as to which the jurisdiction of this court is final, I have given very careful consideration to the motion, have read the entire statement of facts, the briefs of both parties, and the motion for rehearing and reply thereto. There can be no question but that this court not only has the power but that it is its duty to set aside a jury finding and to remand the cause for another trial when such finding is so against the great weight or preponderance of the testimony as to carry conviction that to uphold the verdict would be clearly wrong and manifestly unjust; that in deciding this question this court considers all of the evidence and not merely the evidence favorable to the finding. Appellant has cited the authorities at great length which enmiciate this rule but I think the rule is so elementary that no citation of authorities is required to support it.
In deciding whether or not a verdict should be set aside under the rule this court-does not consider the credibility of witnesses. It can not do so, since the witnesses are not before it and it is not qualified to judge their credibility. Its function is limited to a consideration of the quantity and quality of the evidence and it can and frequently does give more weight to quality than .to quantity. Passing on the quality of the testimony is always a difficult and troublesome function. There can be no compromise between the testimony of one of the plaintiffs, A. V. Sanchez, and the witnesses Umbenhauer, Price, Lozano, Holguin and Bracero. Each'of these witnesses' without equivocation testified as to the presence of a hole at the base of the recess or chute in the rear wall of the basement of plaintiffs’ building prior to the rain which did the damage to plaintiffs’ goods in their basement, of which they complain, and the digging of the hole in the alley. The witnesses Umbenhauer, Price and Holguin also testified that they had pointed out the hole to this plaintiff and suggested that he have it fixed, that this would prevent the seepage which had occurred in the basement prior to the time of the rain which caused the damage complained of. This plaintiff categorically denied that there was such hole, and that any of the witnesses had pointed any such hole out to him. As between this plaintiff and these witnesses it is largely a question of credibility. The jury necessarily must have believed that the testimony of A. V. Sanchez was true and that of these five witnesses false, or they could not have answered question No. 6 as they did. They have passed on the credibility of this plaintiff and these witnesses, and as stated, it is no part of the function of this court to pass on such credibility. As to the quality of the evidence of course the plaintiff A. V. Sanchez was an interested party, since he
Although I entertain grave doubt whether in the light of all the evidence the jury’s answer to question No. 6 should be permitted to stand, I resolve that doubt in favor of the trial court’s judgment and in accord with the views of my brethren and concur in overruling appellant’s motion for a rehearing.
070rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing
The full Court has given careful consideration to the motion for rehearing filed herein and concluded the same should be overruled.
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