Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Ramp

70 S.W. 568, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 483, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 558
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 S.W. 568 (Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Ramp) 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
Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Ramp, 70 S.W. 568, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 483, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 558 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

Appellee was awarded $5000 by the verdict and judgment below as damages for injury to his eyes, caused by a particle of steel flying from a chisel with which he was working in cutting a steel rail required in the repair of one of appellant’s turntables at Clarendon, Texas. Appellee alleged that he was a member of one of appellant’s bridge gangs, and while so employed was, with others, directed to make the repairs indicated which was, as to him, extra hazardous, and of which he had no knowledge and was unwarned, and that the chisel in'question was defective in that it was “cracked and shivered,” by reason of which one eye was destroyed and the other injured.

The defense, among other things, was that if the chisel was defective, which was denied, that the defect was obvious and the danger known to appellee, and that the risk involved was one of those assumed by him in his employment. This we find to be the only material question necessary for our determination, appellant’s contention being that the undisputed evidence established such defense, and that the court should therefore have given its requested peremptory instruction to the jury to find for appellant.

There seems but little, if any, substantial conflict in the evidence, but four witnesses testifying,' whose rendition of the circumstances appear before us in an agreed statement of facts. Appellee testified in his own behalf: “My name is A. M. Ramp; * * * . was employed in the bridge building department of the Fort Worth & Denver. I remember the occasion of their roundhouse burning at Clarendon, which occurred July 5, 1901. * * * The morning after the fire I was put to work cleaning up the debris. The first thing we did was to remove the old deck from the turntable. Mr. Bell was supervising the work. Mr. Morris was foreman under Mr. Bell and acting "in his ab *484 sence. After removing the deck from the turntable we went to work to put a new foundation under the stationary engine. We laid wooden stringers 8x16 on each, and then had to cut rails a certain length for the engine to sit on. These rails had to be cut and we went out to the main track so we could put the rails to be cut across the track. Mr. Morris sent to Mr. Freeman, who had another gang working there, to see if I could secure a track chisel to cut rails with. Mr. Freeman sent a man with me to his car and I got a chisel. I handed the chisel to Mr. Morris and he held it to cut the first rail, and I think I struck for him. We then changed about holding the chisel and striking. The first time I held the chisel nothing occurred. When it came to me again I noticed that it had begun, to look a little battered. I held myself away from the chisel as far as I could, but before the rail was half in two a piece flew off and hit me in the eye. In about a half a minute my eye went out.

“I belonged to the bridge gang, but was inexperienced in this work and had never held a chisel before. When I got hold of the chisel the last time I noticed that it was pretty badly battered, and I kept as far away from it as I could reach with the handle in the hammer or chisel. A man by the name of Nichols was striking when I got hurt. I was not familiar with this kind of work and no one warned me to be careful, or that the work was dangerous. I handled the chisel as carefully as I knew how. So far as I know none of the employes of the company came around to inspect the hammers and chisels while the work was going on. I Imow from experience that a chisel in a battered, shattered, and shivered condition is not as safe as one that is not so battered. Nor is it as liable to throw off particles of steel. * * * The accident happened July 8, 1901, between 5 and 6 o’clock. * * * I became a member of the bridge gang in March, 1901. The first railroading I ever did was with the Fort Scott & Kansas for about a month and a half. I was working as a section hand. I did not cut any rails for this road. I saw some cut. Little pieces always fly when they are cut. I do not know where the chip came from that hit me. I do not know "what became of the piece that hit me. I never saw it. I made out a written report of the accident, and stated that it was an accident and that no one was to blame for it.

“There were about six men in my gang and Mr. Morris was a member of the gang and did the character of work that we did. Mr. Bell superintended the work in the yards and gave us our orders. When I got the chisel from Mr. Freeman I did not notice it at all. I did not hold it up and look at it, but just carried it to Mr. Morris. It was just an ordinary chisel, about eight inches long and a little swelled at the end where the handle went in. I do not remember my exact position when the steel hit me in the eye, but I think I was squatting down. I had on a white Stetson hat. While I was holding the chisel on this same rail there was a man named McCrady who had a piece of steel hit him in the eye, just a little before I was hurt. I knew a few minutes *485 before I was hurt that pieces were flying. The chisel was battered some the first time I held it to the rail. The first time I noticed that the one I was holding was badly battered was when the other man got hit. The chisel was in plain view of me all the time I was holding it; I just had not noticed that it was battered. When the other man got hit was the first time I knew that a battered chisel was more dangerous than a new. one. He was standing opposite where they were cutting, not doing anything, but standing there. All I know about the condition of the chisel I learned between the time the other man got hurt and when I got hurt, just a minute or two. We had been cutting rails with the chisel from the time I got it until I was hurt. I suppose we had cut five or six rails with it. After the other men got hurt I knew that there was danger of getting hurt from flying steel. I kept on working with the chisel. I would have got my time if I had refused to go on with the work. I do not know that chips are always flying when rails are being cut. If the chisel wabbled to on"e side or the other, I think it would be likely to cause chips to fly. I do not know where the chip came from that struck the other man. He was standing eight or nine feet from where they were cutting the rail. When he got the sliver in his eye we stopped and removed it.”

N. H. Nichols testified: “I was present on the occasion of Mr. Ramp getting his eye put out. I was striking at the time. I can not tell when a chisel is battered. I do not know whether the chisel Mr. Ramp was using was battered or not. * * * It would have taken an experienced hand to tell whether the chisel was dangerous or not. An ordinary hand could not do so.”

W. A. Morris testified: “I am a bridge hand in the employ of the Fort Worth & Denver, and have been working for said company three years. I have also worked in bridge gangs before I came to work for the Denver. My experience is that bridge men have a little of everything to do, fix bridges, cut rails, etc. Under different circumstances a bridge man may have to cut rails every day for a month or so. In fact it is one of the ordinary duties of a bridge man to cut rails. In repairing the damage done by the fire at Clarendon an occasion arose requiring some rails to be cut. I sent Mr. Ramp to Mr. Freeman’s ear for the chisel, which he got. I examined the chisel and found that it was battered very little, having had but slight use. The chisel was above the average condition. After this accident we continued to use the same chisel.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Drummond v. Lewis
157 S.W. 266 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 S.W. 568, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 483, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-denver-city-railway-co-v-ramp-texapp-1902.