Cagle v. McQueen Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Gulf Oil Corp. McQueen v. Cagle. Gulf Oil Corp. v. Cagle

200 F.2d 186
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 19, 1953
Docket13955_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 200 F.2d 186 (Cagle v. McQueen Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Gulf Oil Corp. McQueen v. Cagle. Gulf Oil Corp. v. Cagle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cagle v. McQueen Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Gulf Oil Corp. McQueen v. Cagle. Gulf Oil Corp. v. Cagle, 200 F.2d 186 (5th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

This action was for the alleged wrongful death of Ray E. Cagle brought by appellant, his widow, Mrs. Marilyn Cagle, for herself and as guardian for their minor son, Danny Ray Cagle.

Mr. Cagle, a long time employee of McQueen and Stout, was a member of a drilling crew working in the drilling of a well for oil and gas for Gulf Oil Corporation. On June 11, 1949, an accident occurred which resulted in his death. While the drill bit and drill stem were being lowered into the hole, they suddenly stopped causing slack to come in the wire lines on the drilling rig. One of the lines *188 jumped the sheave or pulley on the drilling rig. Thereafter, the drill went through the obstruction and when the weight of the drill pipe and stem struck the slack line, the line broke. The broken end of the line struck Mr. Cagle causing injuries which resulted in his death.

The plaintiff alleged that McQueen and Stout negligently failed to furnish Cagle a reasonably safe place to .work, that they were operating a drilling rig without a guard on the sheave or' pulley to keep the drilling line from jumping the sheave, and that such failure was gross negligence within the Texas law making an employer liable in exemplary damages over and above the compensation provided by the Workmen’s Compensation Act. 1

As against Gulf Oil Corporation, the plaintiff clairried that it furnished the pipe used by McQueen and Stout on the occasion in question, that said pipe was not safe in that it contained burps or defects, that Gulf failed to make a “manifold or rabbit test” to discover any defects or burps in the pipe, and that such failure was the proximate cause of the accident and the resulting death of Mr. Cagle.

Originally there were other defendants, Lee C. Moore Corporation, as to which the District Court directed a verdict and no appeal has been taken therefrom, and Gulf Production Co., as to which the plaintiff dismissed her case. Texas Employers Insurance Association filed its plea of intervention seeking to recover against Gulf Oil Corporation any sums paid out by it under its Workmen’s Compensátion policy on McQueen and Stout.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the defendants, ■ McQueen and Stout and Gulf Oil Corporation, each made a motion for directed verdict which motions were denied. The jury verdict, however, was in all things in favor of each defendant. Mrs. Cagle, individually and as guardian, prosecutes her appeal against the judgment in favor of McQueen and Stout. Texas Employers Insurance Association joins her ini prosecuting appeal against Gulf Oil Corporation. McQueen and Stout and Gulf Oil' Corporation each cross appeal to present: the question of whether the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for such defendant.

The main appeal presents nine points for decision :

Point No. 1: A prospective juror, Don-. Payte, testified upon voir dire examination-that due to his business relationships with-McQueen and Stout, it would be embarrassing to him to have to render a verdict against McQueen and 'Stout. He testified,, however, “that he could and would return a verdict based solely upon the law and' evidence and that in the return of such verdict, he would not be influenced by his. knowledge of or his relationship with the defendants McQueen and 'Stout.” The-Trial Court overruled the plaintiff’s challenge for cause as against such venireman-, and the plaintiff had to exercise a peremptory challenge on him. The plaintiff exhausted her peremptory challenges and insists that there were other jurors whom, she desired to challenge.

28 U.S.C.A. § 1861(4), provides-that no one “is competent to serve as a. grand or petit juror unless” he is competent so to serve “by the law of the State-in which the district court is held.” Article-2134 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas 1925, provides that a person shall be disqualified to serve, as a juror who has a bias, or prejudice in favor of or against either of the parties. Appellant insists that as a matter of law Don- Payte was not a qualified juror under the Texas statute. That statute merely emphasizes the universal rule that a, biased or prejudiced juror is-not competent to serve. Whether, despite his denial, Don Payte was biased or prejudiced was a question of fact to be determined by the district court, 2 and we can *189 not say that its determination was clearly erroneous. 3

Point No. 2: The District Court denied the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial based in part on the alleged prejudice of the juror, Verner E. Danielson. The plaintiff supported this ground of the motion with an affidavit from Danielson himself to the effect that a few days before the trial he had stated in substance to a lawyer friend in connection with the litigation “that I had heard something about a lawyer who had most of the damage suit cases in that Court, and from what I had heard I had concluded that he was using the Court for a sort of racket which I did not approve of, and that for that reason I probably would not be accepted as a juror in any case that this lawyer was trying”; that at the time he made the statement, he may not have known the lawyer’s name to whom he referred but at the time of the making of the affidavit, he knew that it was John Watts; that “I listened carefully to all of the evidence and to the Court’s charge. I sincerely believe that I followed the Court’s charge and gave my decision as fairly as if I had never heard anything which prejudiced me against Mr. Watts. I do not believe that anything I had previously heard or any opinions I had about Air. Watts, personally, in any way affected * * * my decision.”

Assuming the admissibility of the affidavit 4 it does not show that Mr. Danielson was not competent to serve as a juror, nor does it disclose anything improper on his part in determining the fact issues which were submitted for jury determination.

Point No. 3: The court in charging the jury on gioss negligence-necessary to be established as against the defendant, McQueen and Stout, defined gross ncgli-gence as follows : “ ‘Gross negligence’ to be ground for exemplary damages, should and must be that entire want of care which would raise the belief that the act or omission complained of was result of a conscious indifference to Lhe rights or welfare of the person to be affected by it. The purpose or intention of defendants. McQueen and Stout is determinative of their liability.” The plaintiff excepted particularly to the last sentence of the foregoing-definition insisting that the court thereby instructed the jury in effect not to find for the plaintiff unless the plaintiff proved a case of wilfulness. The plaintiff insists that the criticised expression is taken from 13 Texas Jurisprudence, p. 241, Sec. 133, which authority cites for the proposition Jacobs v. Crum, 62 Tex. 401, and that that case was a malicious prosecution suit in which malice was an essential ingredient in the claim for exemplary damages. The appellees cite the case of Bennett v. Howard, 141 Tex. 101, 170 S.W.2d 709, and the case from this Court of McAlester v.

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Bluebook (online)
200 F.2d 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cagle-v-mcqueen-texas-employers-ins-assn-v-gulf-oil-corp-mcqueen-v-ca5-1953.