Casualty Reciprocal Exchange v. Parker

300 S.W. 230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1927
DocketNo. 3463. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 300 S.W. 230 (Casualty Reciprocal Exchange v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casualty Reciprocal Exchange v. Parker, 300 S.W. 230 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

In March, 1925, W. O. Parker was shot and killed' by N. A. Crawford. At the time of the killing Patker was an engineer employed by the Zero Ice Factory, located in Houston, Tex. Crawford was the superintendent of the factory. The Zero lee Factory was a corporation and a subscriber for an insurance policy issued by the Casualty Reciprocal Exchange under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. After the death of Parker, his widow, Mrs. Bessie Parker, and his children by a former marriage, filed with the Industrial Accident Board a claim for compensation. The board refused to allow the claim, holding that Parker was killed while attempting to unlawfully injure another, and for that reason did not sustain an injury compensable under the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. This suit was filed in the court below by Mrs. Parker, for herself and Parker’s children to set aside the order of the board and to recover compensation. The defense is that Parker was shot while he was unlawfully attempting to injure Crawford, and for that reason his injury is not one included in the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act.

In the trial belw, the court submitted only the following issue to the jury:

“Was the shooting of W. O. Parker by N. A. Crawford caused by a willful intention and attempt by W. O. Parker to unlawfully injure the said N. A. Crawford?”

In that connection the court instructed • the jury that the burden of proof was on the plaintiffs to establish the negative of that issue. The jury answered the question in the negative. The principal question in this appeal is, Does the evidence support the finding of the jury?

The testimony shows that Crawford shot and killed Parker about 10 o’clock on the morning of March 6, 1925. It was a day when both men were engaged in the performance of their usual duties at the ice plant. Crawford was the only -eyewitness to the tragedy who testified on the trial. While he testified at considerable length, the following excerpt contains the material details. He said:

“On the morning of this difficulty I was engaged' in raising the density of the brine by adding calcium chloride. * * * The plant had not started that morning, and I had put enough calcium in one tank, .1 had weighed it out, and I had completed that, and I went to the other tank, and I was down on my knees to read the temperature of the thermometer in the brine tank, because in putting in the calcium it will heat, throw out heat energy, and this particular tank had ice in it, and I had thawed the ice loose in the cans; I was reading this thermometer. * * * Well, I was down on my knees, and Mr. Parker came by directly behind me and commenced cursing and told me to stay out of there, that if he ever caught me in there again he was going to kill me. I got up off my knees, and he went on to the ice vault; I did not open my mouth to Mr. Parker at that time; I was down on my knees and couldn’t say anything. He went on to the ice vault, and I went to the platform office. I thought I would jus-t go on and not have any trouble. I had a little place of business of my own, and I was going to it. I had a little feed store, and had a manager out there at that time-, and the way it was going it looked like it was our last week. There were a lot of hold-ups going on, and the man that was *231 working there was continually telling me he was going to get held up. I went out there after 8 o’clock at night and checked up, and I brought a gum from my home this morning; I brought it to my office, and I went in there and went to put on my coat, and it was heavy and I put it in my hip pocket. The evening before I had put 'in a flange joint from the well, and 1 noticed it was leaking a little bit, and I thought I better tighten that up; it was only a two or three minute job, and Mr. Parker always ridiculed whatever I did and would try to make it appear t.o Mr. Irvin that it was a five or six day job. I thought I would go back to the engine room. I thought Mr. Parker was in the ice vault; that is where he was headed when I saw him on the tank. When I got down to the tool board to get two wrenches to tighten that flange, I met Mr. Parker there, and when I met him he commenced swinging at me, and I backed up about 80 feet. There was a Diessel engine running there, and I backed up and had to go through the platform where the belt pit was. He was swinging at me all the time; and I had my arm up like this, and my arm was black and blue where he beat me. All I could see was his feet, and he was running forwards. He missed me and knocked a three-quarter inch pipe off of a compressor before he hit me. I had my arm up like this, and my head down, and I was trying to hold him oil with this gun. I had the gun drawn; when he commenced swinging I drew the gun. tie hit me on the arms. I was a little taller than he was, and he hit that gun and burst this thumb, and when he did that it made the gun go off. The gun, as you can see, is all battered up where it has been hit. He burst the thumb on the hand in which I had that gun. As to the extent to which that thumb was injured, it was just burst open and bleeding. *• * * was wjjen iie hit my hand that the gun went off; that made the gun go off. I was holding it on him all of the time, and he must have hit the gun several times. Mr. Parker hit me on the head, and there is still a little bit of a knot there; one of his blows made a knot on my head. My arm was bruised where he hit me trying to reach over and hit me on the head and the wrench did not reach me. I did not know at that time exactly what Mr. Parker had in his hand; it was so quick, but it was something that he picked up there. Prom the time Mr. Parker began to advance on me up to the time he was shot, I think I must have retreated something like 20 or 25 feet in the attitude 1 have described.”

A. F. Schade, a witness for the plaintiffs below, testified that at the time of the killing he was employed at the Zero Ice Pactory. He had known both Crawford and Parker for some time. The last time he saw Parker was a little before 9 o’clock the day of the billing. He went to the engine room where Parker was, and talked with him while there. Parker did not appear to be angry; he was busy fixing something about the machinery. The next time he saw Parker was a few minutes after the shooting; he was lying dead on the floor of the engine room. Crawford was in the same room, sitting on a crate near by. Witness testified;

“I said to Mr, Crawford, ‘What have you done?’ He says, T have killed him;’ and he' told me, T would have rather have done anything else in the world than that.’ ”

On cross-examination, witness testified that he had never heard Parker make any threats against Crawford, and had never heard Crawford make any threats against Parker. Witness asked Crawford why he carried a gun, and Crawford gave his reason. He knew that Crawford owned a business and carried money occasionally. Crawford said he carried the gun as a protection against high-jackers. Witness further stated:

“I noticed at that time that Mr. Crawford was hurt. On one of his thumbs, I don’t remember which, it was bleeding. I noticed the gun there; it was something like 3 or 4 feet from the body of Mr. Parker. I also saw a monkey-wrench lying there near the body. I testified at the inquest that the gun was lying about 5 feet from the body. * * * There was nd question about that being Mr. Crawford’s gun.”

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Bluebook (online)
300 S.W. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casualty-reciprocal-exchange-v-parker-texapp-1927.