Crystal Palace Co. v. Nelson

300 S.W. 183 | Tex. App. | 1927

On the theory that the evidence did not warrant a finding that negligence charged against it was the proximate cause of the injury to appellee, appellant requested the trial court to instruct the jury to return a verdict in its favor, and in its first assignment of error complains here because the court refused its request. The argument in support of the assignment is based on appellee's testimony as a witness as to how the accident happened. She said:

"I was swinging on the rings right above the pool, and I slipped, and in my fall I struck the broken tile in the coping. * * * I had just started to swing. I was swinging, and my hand slipped."

Appellant says the accident would not have happened if appellee had not fallen as she did, and that she would not have fallen if her hand had not slipped from the ring, and argues that the proximate cause of the injury she suffered, therefore, was "undisputably (quoting) her inability to hold onto the rings." But we think the jury had a right to say appellee would not have been injured by falling as she did if the tiling had not been broken, and to say, further, that appellant ought to have contemplated injury might result to its patrons, if it permitted the tiling to be broken as it was, and to conclude that the proximate cause of the injury to appellee, therefore, was the failure of appellant to discharge duty it owed her to discover and repair the defect in the coping. 38 Cyc. 268 et seq.; 26 Rawle C. L. 713 et seq.; Adams v. Schneider, 71 Ind. App. 249, 124 N.E. 718: Lusk v. Peek, 132 A.D. 426,116 N.Y.S. 1051; Redmond v. National Horse Show Ass'n, 78 Misc.Rep. 383,138 N.Y.S. 364: Glynne v. Exhibition Co., 204 A.D. 757, 198 N.Y.S. 751; Theatre Co. v. Lutz, 210 Ky. 92, 275 S.W. 16. The case is not like T. P. Ry. Co. v. Kelly (Tex.Civ.App.) 78 S.W. 372, and others cited by appellant. In the Kelly Case the railroad company had obstructed a public street, and the plaintiff was injured in going around the obstruction and onto the company's property. In holding the negligence of the company in obstructing the crossing was not the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff, the court said the railroad company owed him no duty "to keep its tracks so they could drive over them safely except on highways and crossings, and they undertook to cross where they did at their own peril."

There is no merit in the contention that the finding of the jury that appellant knew, or should have known, the condition of the tiling was without support in the testimony. Appellee as a witness testified with reference to the broken tiling:

"It was an old break, because it was very dark; it looked as if it had been very old."

Appellant insists the judgment is excessive, and we agree it is. The injury to appellee was a cut three or four inches long, and about half an inch deep just above her right ankle. She testified the healing of the *185 wound was completed in about five weeks, and that during three or four of the five weeks she suffered pain, and "was not able to attend to household duties." The only permanent effect of the injury was a scar, which, appellee testified, was visible through her stocking.

The judgment will be reversed, unless appellee, within ten days from this date (to wit, November 17, 1927), files a remittitur of $450 of the amount adjudged to her by the court below, in which event the judgment will be so reformed as to allow appellee a recovery of $500 only, and, as so reformed, will be affirmed.

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