De La Vergne Refrigerating MacHine Co. v. Stahl

60 S.W. 319, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 471, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 60 S.W. 319 (De La Vergne Refrigerating MacHine Co. v. Stahl) 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
De La Vergne Refrigerating MacHine Co. v. Stahl, 60 S.W. 319, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 471, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 219 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

*472 JAMES, Chief Justice".

It appears from testimony before the jury that appellant was engaged in building an ice tank for a brewery, and while its employes were engaged in inserting rivets through the tank, and while defendant was sitting on the floor under the tank and bearing down on the sledge hammer, while the riveters were bradding them down on top with rivet hammers, a chip of steel flew off the rivet hammer and went into his eye, putting it out. His part of the work was to hold the sledge hammer against the rivets, while the riveters were bradding them down on top. He had been at this work for defendant about five or six days. He and others testified that he knew nothing about the hammers, had never looked at them, because his business was to hold the sledge hammer for the others to brad the rivets down. That he did not know their condition, and did not use these hammers in the work he did. That he had nothing to do with the hammers used in riveting. It was admitted at the trial that the Atha Tool Company, by whom the hammer in question was made, was a tool manufacturing house of first class reputation; that the tools manufactured by it were of high standing and reputation, and were considered by those familiar with such matters as among the best tools manufactured, and were in general use and of high standing with machinists and workmen; and that the riveting hammers manufactured by said company were of high standing among those familiar with such tools, and were in general use; that such hammers must be highly tempered to serve the purpose for which they are made, and that from being highly tempered they are necessarily, to' some degree, brittle, and are liable to chip and crack when in use.

There was testimony that the rivet hammer from which the chip flew that entered plaintiff’s eye was the one used by Porter, one of the riveters; that all the hammers in use were at that time in very bad condition, and most of them were cracked and pieces shivered out of them, that Porter’s hammer was in bad condition, round edges, and. chipped off, cracked, and shivered. There were places indicating where other pieces had chipped off Porter’s hammer, and that Porter’s hammer and Eeagan’s hammer had been in that condition five or six days, maybe longer. The reason they continued to use the hammers was because there were no others there to be used. Defendant had a man there named Weston as superintendent or foreman of the job. Witnesses also testified that Porter’s hammer was chipped off around the bottom part of the hammer; that you could see on the edges where it was chipped and shivered; that there were cracks in it near the edges filled with red paint from contact with paint on the brads. The witness Porter testified that the edges of the hammer were chipped off in small pieces, and that there were several cracks near the edges.

It was also testified to by witness Porter that, if the hammers and all material being used are sound and of proper kind and quality, there is not much likelihood of danger from pieces of hammer flying off. From this it was inferable that such hammers, in the condition these were shown to have been at the time of the accident, were more susceptible to cast off chips while being used. Another witness gave testimony as *473 follows: “It is a fact, in my opinion, that a riveting hammer that has become cracked, chipped, and shivered all around the edge is not a safe or proper hammer to use for riveting, for the reason that such hammer is li'able to chip still further. It is a fact, in my opinion, that after a rivet hammer has become cracked, chipped and shivered all around the edges, it is more likely to chip and break than a sound hammer. My reason therefor is that the fact that a rivet hammer has become cracked, chipped, and shivered all around the edges is an indication that it has either been improperly used, or was originally very improperly tempered, or made of poor or defective material, and such a hammer should not be used, of course, after its defects have been discovered. Furthermore, if the hammer has become cracked and chipped all around the edges, there is a greater liability of some pieces chipping off.” There was ample testimony that the cracked condition of the hammer was apparent upon a casual examination.

The fifth assignment of error is the refusal to give the following charge: “The undisputed evidence herein showing that the hammer by which plaintiff was injured was made by the Átha Tool Company, and the plaintiff having agreed that the riveting hammers made by said company were of high standing to those familiar with such tools, and were in general use, and considered by those familiar with such matters as among the best tools manufactured, and' the plaintiff having further agreed that such hammers must be highly tempered, and that from being highly tempered they are necessarily to some degree brittle and are liable to chip and crack when in use; you are therefore instructed that plaintiff assumed the risk of being injured by such chipping or cracking, and you will therefore find for defendant.” This charge was not applicable to the testimony. If the hammers had been new in use, the facts that were admitted and referred to in the above charge would probably have acquitted defendant of negligence in using same. But such facts do not relate to hammers of that make which had already become cracked by use, and more liable than when newly put to use to east off chips, as the testimony indicates.

We think the court did not err in refusing to give the peremptory instruction ; and for the same reasons we think there was no error in sub'mitting the question as to whether or not defendant had used ordinary care in furnishing plaintiff’s coemployes with reasonably safe riveting hammers for the purpose for which they were being used, and therefore we overrule the eleventh assignment of error.

The complaint made of the charge, in that the form in which it was given made it unfair to defendant, and indicated the court’s views upon the issues of fact, can not be sustained upon either ground.

The one proposition under the twelfth assignment is that, since by reas’on of the facts agreed on as above stated, riveting hammers are necessarily to some degree brittle and liable to chip and crack while in use, plaintiff could not recover on account of such a condition being dangerous if he knew same, or could have known it by the use of ordinary intelligence. The assignment complains of a charge which required as a *474 condition to his recovery that he did not know of the condition of the hammer, and by the use of ordinary care could not have known thereof. It seems to us that the charge is in strict accord with the proposition.

Under the third assignment of error, which complains of the refusal of a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant, the following proposition is advanced: “If the proof showed that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence that contributed to or caused his injury, or that he had entered said employment knowing the risks incident thereto, or if he could have known such risks by the use of ordinary intelligence, such as is common to the ordinary man, the jury should have been instructed to find for the defendant.” We shall not criticise this proposition.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W. 319, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 471, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-la-vergne-refrigerating-machine-co-v-stahl-texapp-1900.