Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Chojnacky

180 S.W. 141, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1030
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 3, 1915
DocketNo. 5514. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 141 (Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Chojnacky) 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
Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Chojnacky, 180 S.W. 141, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1030 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

* Application for writ of error pending in Supreme Court. This is the second time this case has been before this court. The former opinion will be found in 163 S.W. 1011.

Appellee, John Chojnacky, sued the Galveston, Harrisburg San Antonio Railway Company for damages on account of injuries received by him while burning trash, paper, etc., in a stove in the basement of the depot of appellant, in San Antonio, during September, 1912. Appellee was an assistant gardener, working under Harry Adams, and his duties were to assist in the garden work on the grounds, look after the flowers, and to keep the park, or garden, clean of papers, peanut hulls, banana peels, etc. At the time of the accident he was putting an armful of papers in the stove, when a flame came out at the door and struck him in the face, injuring his eyes.

In substance, the cause of action was predicated upon two alleged acts of negligence, viz.: (1) That fusees or signals used by trainmen had been negligently scattered or left in the refuse on the premises, and that they were dangerous, and probably caused an alleged explosion in the stove, which threw the flame out into appellee's face as he was putting the papers in the stove. This ground, however, was eliminated by the trial court by failing to submit it to the jury, and no objection was preserved thereto by appellee. (2) That the defendant's employés, agents, and servants had negligently scattered and left railroad torpedoes in the refuse swept by its porters from defendant's closets, baggage rooms, and offices into the basement of the depot, and which was burned by appellee in the stove, or furnace. In other words, that the master had not used ordinary care to furnish the servant a reasonably safe place in which to perform his duties. It is alleged that these torpedoes and other compositions were explosive and dangerous when subjected to heat, and would explode "with violence, force, and flame," and that this was known to the defendant, or should have been known. And, further, that the defendant knew, or should have known, that such dangerous explosives and combustibles were being negligently scattered and left in the refuse, and if ordinary care had been exercised in this respect, the plaintiff would not have been injured. Any further statement of the case which may be necessary will appear in the discussion which follows.

The first assignment of error attacks that verdict and judgment as being unsupported by the pleadings, the evidence, and the court's charge to the jury, the particulars of that assignment being as follows:

"The plaintiff based his cause of action upon, and the court's charge authorized a verdict for plaintiff only in the event of an affirmative finding of, the following facts: (a) That defendant's employés scattered and left railroad torpedoes in the refuse swept by its porters and sweepers from defendant's closets, baggage *Page 142 rooms, and offices, and burned by plaintiff in defendant's furnace; (b) that such torpedoes were explosive and dangerous; (c) that in so scattering and leaving such torpedoes in such refuse the defendant failed to exercise ordinary and reasonable care for the safety of plaintiff in the discharge of his duties; (d) that while plaintiff was burning such refuse in said furnace there was an explosion of torpedoes, which had been so scattered and left in such refuse and placed in said furnace; and, (e) that such explosion of such torpedoes directly caused the alleged injury to plaintiff's eyes. Upon the trial of the case there was no testimony showing, or from which the jury could legally infer, all or any of such facts, while the uncontroverted testimony of all witnesses testifying upon this issue showed that neither of such facts, as alleged and submitted in the court's charge, existed."

This makes it necessary for us to state in detail the substance of the evidence, in its most favorable light, in behalf of appellee.

Appellee, Chojnacky, testified that he was an assistant gardener; that Harry Adams was his superior; that before the accident occurred he had found there in the trash some kind of candle sticks. He says that about three months after that he found some torpedoes in there, and threw them in the trash can outside of the building, and that when he found this second batch he told Harry Adams about it. This was several months before the accident happened. On the morning of the accident he saw no torpedoes, and says that he does not know what it was that made the noise in the furnace when he was injured. "I saw nothing in the stuff I was burning to make such a noise as that." The noise which he testified he heard was a kind of "chooh," or "tschoog." During all the time that he had been working there at the station and burning stuff in the furnace he says that he had discovered some of these things three times. The first time, something he speaks of as candle sticks, or something like that, and twice that he says he found torpedoes in the trash that was burning in the furnace. One time, he says, he found three, and then again some more, but he does not remember how many. Those three times are the only times that he ever found anything of this kind. In the first lot he says he found three torpedoes, and several months after, he found the second lot. He does not remember how long before the accident it was that he found the last lot, but says it was several months before, some three or four months, may be more, or less. He says that he was shoveling up the trash and putting it in the stove, where he had an "awfully hot fire"; that the furnace was nearly full, there being only a small place at the right-hand side of the door which was not filled with the burning papers, etc. But, he says that Harry Adams, his foreman came in and saw him using the shovel, and told him that was not the way to do, to use his hands, to which he demurred. Adams, however, he says, jerked the shovel out of his hands, threw it in the corner of the room, and grabbed up some of the trash to show him how to do it, and told him to do it that way, using some language towards him not suitable here to repeat. Adams then went away, and a plumber, who had come in to cut off the water in order to do some plumbing up stairs, was the only person in the room at the time of the accident, other than the plaintiff below. Chojnacky says that when he put this armful of trash in the stove he had his face very close to the door. At first, he says within six inches, and then again he says within about a foot, and while so placing the stuff in the stove he heard the noise above described, and the flames shot out, striking him in the face and injuring his eyes. He says that the noise he heard was not loud, about like a man talking, and not so loud as a firecracker, but that it could be heard 12 or 15 feet away. He does not undertake to say what it was that made the noise, nor does he know that it was a torpedo.

Fritz Dethlefsen, the plumber who was cutting off the water at the time of the injury, says that he was standing on a box where he had to reach up to cut off the water near the ceiling, when it occurred, and was somewhere about 8 or 10 feet from Chojnacky.

"I had finished my work and just turned around, and just as I turned around I seen him fall — time I seen the flame hit him and he fell back; just as I turned around to step off of the box, I saw a small flame come out of the door of the furnace into his face, yes, and he just fell back, and held his hands over his eyes.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 141, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-h-s-a-ry-co-v-chojnacky-texapp-1915.