Dallas Oil & Refining Co. v. Carter

134 S.W. 418, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 594
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 S.W. 418 (Dallas Oil & Refining Co. v. Carter) 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
Dallas Oil & Refining Co. v. Carter, 134 S.W. 418, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 594 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

Appellee, Carter, brought this suit against the appellant, Dallas Oil & Refining Company, to recover damages impersonal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him through the negligence of appellant. The plaintiff alleges that he was serving defendant in the capacity of engineer in charge of certain stationary engines; that through the negligence of defendant lubricating oil, placed upon engines in a part of the establishment other than that under the care of plaintiff, was permitted to run down on the floor of the room where plaintiff was at work, causing the floor to be slippery and dangerous; that plaintiff complained to the vice principal of defendant, and a promise to repair was given him; that the promised repairs were not made, yet, notwithstanding this, defendant negligently failed to warn plaintiff of the failure to make repairs, and that thereafter, while working about the engines under his charge, plaintiff slipped in a pool of oil that had been allowed to collect on the floor, and in falling against one of the machines in motion sustained the injuries of which he complains. The defendant pleaded a general denial, assumed risk, contributory negligence, and that the injury resulted from plaintiff’s permitting his sleeve to come in contact with the machinery in such a manner as to cause his hand to be caught and injured. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $8,000, and the defendant appealed.

The first assignment of error complains that the court erred in refusing to give appellant’s special requested instruction No. 2, which is as follows: “Unless you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff slipped and fell, and the accident resulted therefrom as alleged by him, you should not consider any other issue submitted to you, but return a verdict for the defendant.” “The proposition under this assignment is that, where the evidence offered b.y the defendant in a suit for personal injuries negatives the theory of the case alleged by plaintiff and testified to by him and his witnesses, the defendant is entitled to have given a requested charge, affirmatively *419 submitting to the jury the negative of the sole theory urged by plaintiff, where such negative is not submitted in any other charges given by the court to the jury.” That this proposition embodies a correct statement of the law is affirmed by many decisions of the appellate courts of this state, and that it should have been given in this case admits of no doubt in our opinion. As is insisted by appellant, “one of the most serious controversies in the ease concerned the circumstances of the accident; the plaintiff contending that he slipped and fell, as a result of oil on the floor, the defendant contending that he did not slip and fall, as alleged by him, but was hurt while standing on the foundation block of one of the engines trying to oil same. In the second paragraph of the general charge, the court instructed the jury to the effect that, if the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant as its engineer, and that, while so employed, oil was placed on a pulley overhead in an adjoining room to where plaintiff was working and was allowed to run down a post extending from the said room to the place where the plaintiff was required to work, that plaintiff called the attention of the defendant to the danger and unsafety of said place, and that defendant promised to remedy said dangerous conditions, and would prevent the oil from running down on the floor; * * * and if they further found that on the next workday after making said promise oil was permitted to run down from said pulley on the post' onto the floor where the plaintiff worked, ^causing plaintiff to fall and receive the injuries complained of, etc., * * * to find for the plaintiff.” This was the only charge given by the court on the issue as to the manner in which the accident and injury to plaintiff occurred. Neither in the general charge, nor by a special charge, did the court submit to the jury affirmatively the negative side of the issue as to whether the plaintiff was injured in the manner alleged by him, nor did the court submit in any way the plaintiff’s theory as to how the accident happened, or tell them that, if the plaintiff was hurt while standing on the foundation block of the engine, trying to oil the engine as charged by the defendant, he could not recover.

The plaintiff, among other things, testified: “I had to go between that pulley block and oil the engine. The oil ran down that post on the floor, right between the wall and the pulley block. I slipped and fell, and, to keep from going into that big wheel that turns across that little idler in there, in front of me, I grabbed the pulley block to prevent from falling over in that wheel, and it swung me around and swung my arm over the eccentric and on top of that other. There was a plain oil cup, and I had on a heavy sateen shirt, and that shirt caught in that oil cup, and just allowed my hands and fingers to get over in there. If I had not caught there, it would have crushed my whole body. I would have fallen right in sideways, and it would have caught my arm and shoulders, but it just caught my hand and fingers, and I snatched my hand back, and I did not know what was the cause of the fall, but looked around to see, and this oil had run down that post and was on the floor, and I had slipped in it. The oil on the floor made the floor slippery. It covered a space about the size of your hat, or a little larger. It was not very thick. I could not say just how thick it was; but it was in a sort of pool. It just ran down around there and spread out like a pool. The thing the engine rested on was a pedestal, and behind that there was a place where the floor was [speaking of the pedestal foundation of the engines]. This foundation was there at the time. In getting up to the oil cups, f would step up to where I could reach them better. I did not tell him [Mr. Kimbrough, the vice principal] that I was attempting to regulate that feeder and the top of the cup caught my sleeve and jerked my hand into that eccentric.”

On the other hand, the witness Harrison testified: “About a year or so ago Mr. Garter got hurt out there, and at that time I was standing at that window, the one next to the engine room, leaning over in the window. Mr. Carter came around by me as I was standing there, and said something — I don’t know what it was — but he went on to oil the engine there, and I turned my head and was looking at the pressroom, and Carter passed back by me — I know where that engine is situated, and the window that I speak of is right at that engine. The base of the engine is a cement foundation, and he passed right by it and came back b.y it, and he passed right along to oil the engine and the eccentric and bearings; but as he went he did not slip or fall. I never asked him to make any statement at that time, but heard him make an expression. He said, T caught my sleeve on the eccentric,’ but I don’t remember who it was he was talking to or who asked him about it. When he told whoever it was about the accident he did not say anything about slipping or falling. When I was in the window, Carter came around there, and before I had looked away he had passed the point where the oil came through, and after he had stepped up on the base of the engine, I turned my head and looked into the press-room.” Kimbrough, superintendent and vice principal of the defendant, testified: “I asked him [plaintiff] how he got hurt, and he said his sleeve got caught In the eccentric cup and jerked his hand into the eccentric. He did not say anythng to me at that time about either falling or slipping.

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.W. 418, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-oil-refining-co-v-carter-texapp-1911.