The suit was for damages for personal injuries. The claim was that while on a platform maintained by defendants for unloading cattle from cattle cars, plaintiff was injured by stepping into a hole in the platform negligently allowed by defendants to be there. The defense was that plaintiff was not. on the platform where he was hurt, in the interest or for the advantage as well of defendant as of himself and therefore an invitee, but was a mere licensee, there for his own interest, convenience or gratification. There was a trial to a jury, and evidence establishing the material facts without contradiction.
The invoked statute, 28 U.S. C.A. § 72 does not prescribe any definite time for the giving of notice, and the record shows that though the petition was filed on the 13th, it was not heard until the 16th, and plaintiffs’ counsel were present when the order oí removal was signed by the State judg'e. Compare Miller v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 4 Cir.,
Whether the ruling as to the question asked and rejected did or did not present abstract error, compare Cameron Compress Co. v. Whittington, Tex. Com. App.,
On his main point that the evidence as a matter of law showed that plaintiff was an invitee, or, in the alternative, it at least makes an issue of fact as to whether he was, we think plaintiff stands no better. The general rule applicable in all jurisdictions is that approved in Bennett v. Louisville & N. R. Co.,
The difficulties in cases involving the point arise not out of the statement but of the application of the rule. Appellant concedes that the Texas rule, in its statement, is not different from that generally prevailing elsewhere, but he insists that here an invitation will be more readily implied than in some of the states, and where the facts show an invitation to enter upon the premises in connection with the business of its owner, a limitation of the invitation to particular portions of the premises will not be easily implied. Citing in support, Kalium v. Wheeler, supra, and Texaco Country Club v, Wade, Tex. Civ. App.,
It is not claimed that appellant was wrongfully upon the premises in the sense of being a willful and wholly unwanted intruder, it is conceded that he was permitted to be there but that concession does not save appellant’s case. It merely makes him a licensee, the duty toward whom is to abstain from willful injury. He was, as to the platform, exactly the kind of person dealt with in the language of the Carlisle case, “a stranger having no business thereon of interest to the owner and no right to demand that such owner keep his premises in such a condition that he may enter in safety at his will”. The judgment was right. It is affirmed.
Notes
These were the facts; that defendants, as owners of a stockyard, maintained an unloading platform at the south end of their yards adjacent to the Southern Pacific Railway tracks and about 300 feet from the scale house where cattle unloaded on the platform were weighed and cut according to their weight; that while on the platform to watch the unloading of cattle he had contracted to buy and was to take delivery of at the scale house, plaintiff, in attempting to step back out of the way of one of the cows being unloaded onto the platform and into the cattle chute on its way to the scale house, stepped into a hole in the platform; that it was the duty of the stockyard to unload the cattle and bring them down the chute to the scale house to be weighed and there delivered to those entitled to receive them, and plaintiff had no function or duty in connection with the unloading or the delivery to the scale house; the platform on which plaintiff was hurt was fenced off from public access, there was no gate or other entrance provided by which the public could come onto the
