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

45 S.W.2d 771
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 1931
DocketNo. 7608
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 45 S.W.2d 771 (Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Houston) 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. Houston, 45 S.W.2d 771 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

McClendon, C. J.

Appeal from a judgment upon a special issue verdict in favor of appellee in a suit for compensatory damages for the alleged negli[773]*773gent death, of appellee’s husband, PMllip Houston, who was an employee of appellant.

The facts in broad outline follow:

September 11, 1928, Phillip Houston, while a member of a section gang engaged in repairing appellant’s railway line near the town of Lyons, in Burleson county, was struck on the right shoulder by a double coil spring, weighing about 29 pounds, which had been projected from a passing freight train for a distance of some fifteen feet from the track where Phillip Houston was standing waiting for the train to pass. Houston was knocked down by the blow, the immediate result of which was a slight abrasion of the skin and a severe contusion of adjacent parts of his-body. He was carried to his home in Lyons, put to bed, where appellant’s local surgeon treated the wound with mercurochrome solution, bandaged it, and gave him a hypodermic to relieve his pain. The local surgeon made no complete diagnosis, and advised sending Houston to the “Santa Fé” Hospital at Temple, of which Dr. Gobar was chief physician. This was done, Houston reaching the hospital early in the morning of September 12th. He remained in the hospital seven days (September 12-18), returned to his home, and later returned to the hospital for three days (September 26-28). On October Sd he executed a full release of all liability in consideration of .$50 then paid. On October 7th he returned to the hospital and was finally discharged. Ke-employment on his old section was denied him on the ground (so he was told) of his relationship (brother-in-law) to the section foreman. Later he was given employment on another section. In the meantime he worked for brief periods in a tie plant and on a fárm, pulling corn and driving a team. During the night of November 29th he was taken suddenly ill, and was treated by appellant’s local surgeon at Somerville, where he was then living, until December 5th, when he was again taken to the “Santa Fé Hospital” at Temple. He died there December 28,1928.

The defenses pleaded by appellant were: '(1) Assumption of risk under Federal Employer’s Liability Act; (2) unavoidable accident; (3) contributory negligence on Houston’s part; (4) the release as a full discharge from liability ; (5) that his death was the result of typhoid fever or some other disease, and not of the injury.

In avoidance of the release, appellee pleaded failure of consideration, in that the release was procured upon a promise after-wards breached, that Houston would be given back his old job; and fraud in the procurement of the release in two respects: (1) Misrepresentations regarding the extent of his injuries ; and (2) misrepresentation by appellant’s claim agent, Newcom, who procured the release, that it was merely a receipt for Houston’s lost time, and did not cover any claim for his injuries.

The special issues submitted and the jury’s answers follow:

“1. Was the deceased I’hilip Houston struck and injured by a spring flying from beneath one of defendant’s train of cars in Burleson-County, Texas, on or about the 12th day of September, 1928?” Answer: “Yes.”
“2. Did the deceased, Philip Houston, sign and deliver to the said Newcom, for the defendant, the release as it now appears in evidence before you?” Answer: “Yes.”
'“3. Were the injuries received by the deceased Philip Houston fully developed at the time he signed, if he did sign, said release?” Answer: “No.”
“4. Was said release, when signed, if signed intended by both parties to be a full and-complete settlement and discharge of all liabilities of the defendant, to the deceased?” Answer: “No.”
“5. Did Dr. Gobar at the Santa Fé Hospital at Temple, Texas, while deceased Philip Houston was in said hospital, or was being treated there, the first time, represent to said deceased that the injuries he had received by being struck by said spring, if he was so struck, were slight, and that he would soon recover from said injuries?” Answer: “Yes.”
“6. Did said deceased Philip Houston believe said representation of said Dr. Gobar, if he made such?” Answer: “Yes.”
"7. Do you find and believe from the evidence that at the time said deceased, Philip Houston, signed his name to said release, he had been misled by the statements of the agent, Newcom?” Answer: “Yes.”
“8. Was part of the consideration for the signing of said release a promise or obligation of the defendant to reinstate the deceased in his old position on the section at Lyons?” Answer: “Yes.”
“9. If you have answered the foregoing question in the affirmative, then state if said' promise was a material inducement to said deceased to sign said release?” Answer: “Yes.”
“10. At the time deceased Philip Houston was struck by said spring, if he was so struck, did he suffer great pain physically, before his death, as a result of such injuries received, if any?” Answer: ’“Yes.”
“11.. Was the defendant guilty of negligence, as that term has been hereinbefore defined to you, in using said car or transporting the same, from which said spring came at the time, and under the circumstances struck the deceased, if he was struck?” Answer: “Yes.”
“12. Was the death of Philip Houston the direct and proximate cause of the injuries received by him, if any, by being struck by said spring, if he was so struck?” Answer: “Yes.”
“13. Was the death of Philip Houston di[774]*774reetly and wholly occasioned as the result of typhoid fever?” Answer: “No.”
“14; Were the diseases which you may find said Philip Houston was afflicted with, while in said hospital, if any, reasonably and materially attributable to the weakened condition, if any, of the said Philip Houston, from having received the injury, if any, from said spring?” Answer: “Yes.”
“15. What would be a reasonable compensation to the deceased, Philip Houston, for the conscious pain and suffering occasioned to him, if any, before his death, as a direct and proximate result of said injuries, if any, —had he lived?” Answer: “$1,000.00.”
“16. What amount of money, if paid now all at one time, would be a reasonable compensation to his surviving wife and his two minor children, for the pecuniary loss sustained by them by reason of his death?” Answer: “$5,000.00.”
“If you answer special issue No. 15, in the affirmative, and if you answer Special Issue No. 16, in the affirmative, by assessing damages under each question, then you will add the amounts so found, if any, together and apportion the total amount in your answers, as follows:
“To Mrs. Nellie Houston, the sum of $2,-OOQ.OO if any.
“To Dorris Houston, the sum of $2,000.00 if any.
“To Omie Houston, the sum of $2,000.00 if any.
“In apportioning the amounts, if any, as above required, you will make such apportionment as you may think proper and appropriate, under the circumstances in evidence.”

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W.2d 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-c-s-f-ry-co-v-houston-texapp-1931.