Consolidated Kansas City Smelting & Refining Co. v. Taylor

107 S.W. 889, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 503
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 S.W. 889 (Consolidated Kansas City Smelting & Refining Co. v. Taylor) 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
Consolidated Kansas City Smelting & Refining Co. v. Taylor, 107 S.W. 889, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 503 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

JAMES, Chiee Justice.

Plaintiff Taylor alleged that he was the operator of appellant’s drill press and with it was engaged in boring holes in a semi-circular piece of iron to be used, as a wheel guard. That the press was a large and dangerous machine and required as a helper to plaintiff an alert, careful and competent man; that the helper furnished on this occasion, one Flores, was incompetent and lacking in the qualifications essential to such position; that he was sickly, weak, slow and habitually reckless and careless and was lacking in the strength, skill, competency, care and ordinary qualifications necessary to said position. That while engaged as aforesaid boring holes he stationed this man Flores to hold a hammer handle between one end of the wheel guard which he was drilling and an upright beam of the press in order to prevent the wheel guard from slipping or turning with the drill, and had commenced to bore holes in' the same, when Flores carelessly and negligently withdrew said hammer handle and thereby caused the wheel guard to turn and revolve with the drill; that plaintiff, in endeavoring to prevent .the consequences of such act on the part of Flores, attempted to stop the drill press, and while reaching forward in an effort to throw off the power that was running the press, was struck by said wheel guard and was seriously and permanently injured. That said injury was caused by the incompetency of Flores; that plaintiff did not know of such incompetency, but that defendant, through its officers and agents, did not use ordinary care in employing and in assigning Flores to plaintiff as helper, and that by the habitual carelessness and general reputation of said Flores for incompetency for the position of helper at the - drill press, defendant knew or ought to have known of his incompetency. The prayer was for damages in the sum of $12,000. The verdict was for $2,500.

The answer embraced general demurrer and denial, and especially assumed risk; that plaintiff knew, or should have necessarily known by the exercise of ordinary care in the performance of his work, of the risks and dangers involved in working with Flores as his helper; contributory negligence of plaintiff in not avoiding contact with the revolving piece of iron; that Flores was competent; that defendant had exercised due care in employing him; and if it should appear that plaintiff’s injuries were caused by the negligence of Flores, it was the negligence of a fellow servant, and finally that plaintiff’s injuries, if any, were the result of unavoidable accident against which defendant could not guard by care or foresight.

Under appellant’s first assignment are two propositions. They are, substantially, that as the witness Darr testified he had never seen Flores at work around a drill press and had no opportunity to know his character for competency, and had no knowledge of his competency as helper on such a machine, he was not qualified to testify to his unfitness as a helper in such work, and his testimony was the mere expression of opinion.

Darr’s testimony was that he had run a drill press at the G-. U. *609 over a year and handled this particular drill press before Taylor took it, about a month and a half. That he had had about three years experience working around machines and machine shops. That he knew Flores and had known him about three months, and he worked for witness as helper in other things, but not in connection with a drill press. He testified that it took a reliable man as helper in that work and a strong man. He testified that Flores was careless; that he turned things loose when told to hold them; you could not depend on him because he would turn things loose; that he was kind of sickly; that he was habitually careless; that witness considered himself able from his experience and knowledge of Flores to tell whether or not Flores was a competent person for the position of helper on a drill press, and that in his opinion he was incompetent for the place.

The witness qualified himself to speak as an expert in connection with labor on drill presses, and his knowledge of this and of Flores was sufficient to enable him to testify as he did. It was not essential that he should have had experience with him, or had seen him, at work about drill presses. The witness knew the habits and qualifications of Flores, and stated what they were; he knew what was necessary to constitute a competent helper, about drill presses, and his testimony, if opinion, would be admissible, but it looks to us more in the nature of testimony of a fact.

The second assignment raises a question as follows: The witness Boss Darr in answer to an interrogatory stated: “Ho; Flores was not a competent person to fill the position of helper to an operator of said machine; he was unable physically to perform the duties of helper on said machine; he was weak and slow; the work required a quick, able-bodied man.” The objection to this was that it was not the proper manner to prove incompetency, and because it calls for the mere opinion of the witness, and because evidence of physical defects is not evidence of incompetency. The objection was overruled, and appellant now makes the proposition here that that testimony ought to have been ruled out, for the reason that the act of incompetency alleged by plaintiff was the careless and negligent withdrawing of the hammer handle and the question of physical defect or inability in the helper Flores was wholly irrelevant. This specific reason why the testimony should have been excluded was not presented in the objection as made in the District Court, and can not be indulged here.

The third raises a question upon the following answer of said witness Boss Darr: “I know him (Flores) to be a careless and ignorant fellow, slow; he helped me in my work in the shop, and I found his help to be unsatisfactory and found him to be-unreliable.” There were other things embraced in this answer of the witness, but the court struck them out, leaving what is above quoted. Then appellant objected to what was left, upon the grounds that it was not the proper way to prove incompetency; that it expresses an opinion of the witness, and does not show what the party’s general reputation was for competency or carelessness. The matter is brought here *610 upon a single proposition, to which of course appellant is confined. It is this: “That the statement of the witness that he had found Mores’ help unsatisfactory and found him to be unreliable was manifestly a mere conclusion of the witness upon, a simple fact to be proved and should not have been admitted.” It is plain to us that the statement was not an opinion at all, but the statement of a fact, and there is no force in the proposition made.

The fourth assignment raises a question upon the following answers of same witness, Boss Darr: “I know his (Mores’) reputation among the persons working in the shop where the said Taylor is said to have received said injuries; it was that of a careless person.” “I do. Mores’ reputation in said shop, among the persons who worked there, ■ was that of an incompetent worker and careless person.” The objection was, this did not show what his general reputation was. This witness and others showed that Flores had been working in the shops some months. The answers evidenced a general reputation among the persons with whom such a reputation would naturally grow up in the time Flores was among them, and was admissible to prove such fact.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W. 889, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-kansas-city-smelting-refining-co-v-taylor-texapp-1908.