Chicago, R. I. & E. P. Ry. Co. v. Easley

149 S.W. 785, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 149 S.W. 785 (Chicago, R. I. & E. P. Ry. Co. v. Easley) 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
Chicago, R. I. & E. P. Ry. Co. v. Easley, 149 S.W. 785, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 739 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

PRESLER, J.

This suit was brought in the district court of Dallam county, Tex., by E. A. Easley for himself and as next friend for his minor son, James W. Easley, against the Chicago, Bock Island & El Paso Railway Company, to recover damages on account of personal injuries alleged to have been received by the son, James W. Easley, in New Mexico, while in appellant’s employment in August, 1909. It was alleged that James W. Easley was at that time 17 years of age and was employed by the defendant in excavating gravel from a gravel pit. and that the pit caved in on him and injured him, and that appellant was negligent in not having warned him of the danger of the bank caving in and in failing to furnish a reasonably safe place for him to work. Appellant answered by a general denial, plea of contributory negligence (which last was on exception stricken out), and by plea of assumed risk. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff E. A. Easley for $250 and in favor of James W. Easley for $2,750, from which judgment appellant appeals to this court and here seeks revision of said judgment upon the errors assigned.

[1] It appears from the evidence that the gravel pit in which young Easley was working was about 12 feet high with some 4 inches of dirt on top and a stratum of limeroek about 16 inches thick next, and *786 then a layer of dirt some 4 or 5 feet thick, and then 4 or 5 feet of gravel underneath this; that there were several men engaged in getting out this gravel with pick and shovel; that they would dig and shovel out the gravel from the stratum near the bottom of the bank until there was some danger of the overhanging wall falling, and would then go on top of the hank, and by crowbars would prize oft this overhanging wall. All of said work being under the direction and supervision of appellant’s foreman, who had employed the boy to work in said pit, which was a dangerous place to work in unless proper caution and care was exercised to keep the overhanging wall prized off and broken- down as the work progressed so that the workers would not be endangered thereby. That the duty to direct and look after this protective work being done properly clearly devolved upon appellant, there can be no question. It further appears that, on the evening preceding the injury to appellee J. W. Easley, the workmen, under the direction of said foreman, had prized off a part of the overhanging bank, but had not prized it all off because of a sudden and unexpected demand for a new car of gravel; that the workmen, including the boy, Jim Easley, were by the overseer taken- from the work on the overhanging wall and put to work in the pit, loading said car; that they worked for some time in the evening getting out gravel, and in the morning went to work in the same place, and had worked a short time when appellee was injured by the bank falling in on him. It further appears that the boy, Jim Easley, had been working in and about the pit only 6 or 7 days prior to the accident and lacked a few days of being 17 years old; that the pit was from 200 to 300 feet long; and that the place where appel-lee was put to work loading the car was not where the overhanging wall had been prized off the evening before. Appellee Jim Eas-ley, in his testimony, claims that he was not warned by the overseer as to the danger connected with the work he was doing. The evidence, however, is conflicting upon the issue as to such warning, and the contention upon which appellees recovered in the court below is that the appellant was negligent in not having so warned him and in failing to keep the place where he was re-' quired to work in a reasonably safe condition, and we are of the opinion that, upon the whole evidence, this contention is well founded, and that the jury was warranted in sustaining the same.

[2] Appellant, however, complains of various errors on the part of the court during the trial of the case, and under its first assignment complains of the first paragraph of the court’s charge, which is as follows: “If you find and believe from the evidence that, at the time the plaintiff James W. Easley claims to have been injured, he was a youth of immature judgment and inexperience in the business in which he was employed, and that the perils, if any, of his undertaking, were not communicated or known to him, and that by reason of such immaturity, if any, of judgment, and inexperience, if any, and want, if any, of information as to the perils, if any, of his employment, he was incapable of understanding the nature and extent of the hazard, if any, to which he was subjected, and if you further find that defendant’s foreman, Johnson, knew, or could have known Dy the exercise of ordinary care, of the danger of said pit falling in, and if you further find that the failure, if any, of the defendant’s said foreman to communicate to the said James W. Easley such perils, if any, was negligence, and you further find that such negligence, if any, proximately caused the plaintiff James W. Easley to be injured, then you will find for plaintiffs, unless you find for the defendant as to one or both of the plaintiffs under some other paragraph of .this charge.” On the grounds: First, that the undisputed evidence showed that the danger of the bank caving in was called to Eas-ley’s attention by the foreman; and, second, that the charge was error (because the evidence shows that Easley was a young man of 17 years of age and of good intelligence, and that the situation was open to his observation, and that no other conclusion could be reached than that he was capable of understanding the danger of the bank caving in on him, and that this should not have been submitted to the jury as an issue. We are unable to concur with appellant in its contention that the danger of the bank caving was called to Easley’s attention by the undisputed testimony. The evidence of the appellee Easley is to the effect that no one called his attention to it. We are further of the opinion that it was a question of fact for the jury whether Easley was of sufficient intelligence so as to be capable of understanding the danger of the bank caving in on him, and that the court properly submitted this issue to the jury, and that there is no error in the portion of the charge complained of. Said assignment is therefore overruled. Texas & Pacific Railway Company v. Brick, 83 Tex. 598, 20 S. W. 511; Texarkana & Ft. Smith Ry. Co. v. Preacher, 59 S. W. 593; Waxahachie Oil Co. v. McLain, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 334, 66 S. W. 226; White v. S. A. Water Co., 9 Tex. Civ. App. 465, 29 S. W. 252.

[3] Nor do we think there is any merit shown under appellant’s second assignment, which is to the effect that the court erred in the fourth paragraph of his charge, because the same indicated to the jury that they were not to find in favor of the defendant unless they should find that Jim W. Easley was a person of mature judgment, or that he was experienced in the business in which he was employed, or that the dan *787 gers of that business were communicated and known to him, contending that Easley might have assumed such patent and ordinary risk as a bank caving in on him, even though his judgment was not mature, and even though he was not experienced in the business in which he was employed, and even though the dangers of the business were not communicated and known to him, and that this danger might have and ought to have been known to him, even though it had not been communicated.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 785, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-e-p-ry-co-v-easley-texapp-1912.