Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Clement

220 S.W. 407, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 347
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 7, 1920
DocketNo. 9216.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 407 (Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Clement) 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
Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Clement, 220 S.W. 407, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 347 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

There was an explosion of gasoline in a tank car in the yards of the Gulf, Colorado Santa Fé Railroad Company in the town of Gainesville. W. J. Clement was seriously burned as a result of that explosion, and the railway company has prosecuted this appeal from a judgment rendered in his favor for damages for the injuries so sustained.

R. G. Porter was the defendant's yardmaster at Gainesville, and, upon discovering that gas was spewing from the car, called upon W. J. Clement to remedy that leaky condition. Clement was then working for the Producers' Refinery Company in Gainesville, and frequently had been called upon by Porter to look after leaky oil cars coming into defendant's yards inasmuch as he had the necessary tools and equipment for that work, with which he was familiar. Clement had formerly been employed by the railway company in its train service as a switchman and brakeman, but was not so engaged at the time of the accident. The railway company always paid him for his services in relieving the leaky condition of cars.

When Porter applied to Clement to stop the leak in the car on the occasion of the accident, he told Clement that the contents of the car was "unrefined naphtha," and that was the designation of its contents in the waybill which came with the car and was the source of the information given by Porter to Clement. The car contained casing head gasoline or casing head gasoline blend instead of unrefined naphtha, and was an interstate shipment originating in Drumright, Okla., and moving to Port Arthur, Tex. The place of the origin of the shipment was not on the defendant's line, but upon the line of a connecting carrier; the waybill designating the contents of the car as unrefined naphtha being furnished to the defendant by the connecting carrier. In the top of the car there was a manhole which was closed by what is called a dome cap screwed into the opening of the hole. Near this dome cap there was also a three-quarter inch plug, and the leak mentioned was around this plug and the dome cap. Porter went with Clement to the car, and, after examining it and discovering the source of the leak, they took the plug out and replaced it with another. Gus Vineyard, one of Clement's employés in his work for the Producers' Refinery Company, went with him as an assistant to remedy the leaky condition of the car.

The gas pressure from within the car was so strong that it seriously interfered with the work of replacing the old plug with the new. After the new plug was put in, and after plaintiff and Porter had loosened the dome cap, the dome cap was blown out by the gas pressure in the car, and the escaping gas and gasoline mixed therewith, which was thrown high in the air, caught fire, and before they could escape Porter and Clement were both severely burned; the injuries to Porter proving fatal.

The trial was before a jury, whose verdict was upon special issues submitted by the court. Thirty-six questions were propounded to the jury, and we shall not undertake to set them out in full, but shall give the substance only of some of them and copy the remainder. Properly speaking, there were not 36 controlling issues in the case, and necessarily many of the questions submitted to the jury related to evidence bearing upon the issues and were not the issues themselves. The following are findings of the jury, stated in narrative form, in answer to some of the questions propounded to them:

The car contained casing head gasoline or a casing head gasoline blend, and Porter, the yardmaster, represented to the plaintiff that it contained unrefined naphtha, and upon such representation plaintiff was induced to go and inspect the car.

R. G. Porter, the yardmaster, requested the plaintiff to inspect the car and to offer such suggestions as to what, if anything, should be done with it. The making of such request, under the conditions as they existed at the time, was negligence, which was one of the proximate causes of plaintiff's injuries.

There was a placard upon the dome cap of the car containing a caution against the removal of the dome cap while there was gas pressure inside the car, and plaintiff saw the same, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have seen it.

Plaintiff, acting either by himself or in conjunction with another, loosened the dome cap, and such loosening of the dome cap caused the subsequent explosion. The explosion would not have occurred if the dome cap had not been loosened, and the loosening of the dome cap was the proximate or one of the proximate causes of plaintiff's injury.

At the time Porter and Clement went upon the tank car there was no liquid escaping around the dome cap or the safety valves, but gas and vapor were escaping from the plug and dome cap. Before plaintiff went upon the tank car he had five or six years' experience in handling the contents of tank cars when such contents consisted of gasoline. There *Page 409 were switch lights burning in defendant's yards day and night, and knowledge of that custom had already been acquired by the plaintiff while he was previously in the service of defendant as a switchman or brakeman. After going upon said tank car and prior to the explosion, plaintiff, from his experience in handling gasoline, knew that the contents of the tank car was casing head gasoline.

The finding last referred to was in answer to question 29, and following are additional questions and answers:

"Question 30. If you answer issue No. 29 `Yes,' then state whether or not said Clement remained upon said tank car after knowing or believing that its contents were casing head gasoline. Answer: Yes; just a short time they were making arrangements to get down when the explosion came.

"Question 31. Would a reasonably prudent and careful man, in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, and possessing the knowledge and experience you may find plaintiff possessed at the time, have remained and worked on said car under the circumstances and conditions which you may find from the evidence existed at the time? Answer: No.

"Question 32. In requesting said Clement to come to said car, state whether R. G. Porter requested his presence as an expert in dealing with gasoline and other inflammable liquids. Answer: Yes.

"Question 33. At the time plaintiff went upon the car was he in the employment of the defendant? Answer: Yes.

"Question 34. If your answer to question No. 33 is `No,' you need not answer this question, but if your answer is `Yes,' did the plaintiff have knowledge of the risks and danger incident to the employment in which he was at that time engaged? Answer: No; not at the time he went on the car.

"Question 35. Does the evidence in this case show that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence which was the proximate cause or one of the proximate causes of such injuries as he sustained? Answer: Yes."

In answer to question 9 the jury found that prior to the time the car exploded plaintiff learned that it contained casing head gasoline. The following were additional questions and answers:

"Question 10. If your answer to question 9 is `No,' you need not answer this question, but if in the affirmative, then what did the plaintiff do next after learning its real contents? Answer: He finished putting in the plug and started making arrangements to get down.

"Question 11. Was the plaintiff guilty of negligence as that term is herein defined to you in doing what you have stated he did do after learning the contents of the car? Answer: No.

"Question 12.

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 407, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-c-s-f-ry-co-v-clement-texapp-1920.