Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Clayton

150 S.W. 268, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 796
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 150 S.W. 268 (Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Clayton) 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 Pipe Line Co. v. Clayton, 150 S.W. 268, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 796 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REESE, J.

In this suit B. C. Clayton sues the Gulf Pipe Line Company to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him while engaged as an employe of the defendant in laying a pipe line, and which injury is alleged to have been proximately caused by the negligence of one Murphy, foreman of the work, and alleged to be a vice principal of defendant. On trial with a jury plaintiff recovered a judgment for $5,000, from which defendant prosecutes this appeal.

In substance, briefly stated, it was alleged in the petition: That while engaged in laying pipe for a pipe line for appellant one end of two lengths of pipe, screwed together and *269 weighing 750 or 800 pounds, fell into a ditch dug for the pipe; the ditch being about 4 feet deep and about 20 inches wide. The other end of the pipe rested upon a board called a “growler board” placed across the diteh. There was a force of 30 or 40 men engaged in the work under the direction and control of one Murphy, a sort of subforeman called a “stabber.” When the two lengths of pipe, which were about 40 feet long, broke off from the balance of the line of pipe and one end fell into the ditch, Murphy gave a general order to get into the ditch and throw the pipe out. Clayton jumped into the diteh, with five or sis other men, and caught hold of the pipe. When Murphy gave the order to “throw it out,” Clayton began to lift as directed. The pipe was too heavy to be lifted by the men engaged in the attempt, and in making the attempt Clayton was seriously injured by straining and exerting himself beyond his capacity. The negligence charged against appellant was that Murphy, the foreman, and vice principal, failed to use ordinary care to see that a sufficient number of men got into the ditch to lift the pipe, which it was alleged was the proximate cause of the injury. Other grounds of negligence are charged in the petition, but they were all eliminated by the charge, which presents the sole ground of negligence above stated. Appellant in its answer presented general demurrer and special exceptions, which were overruled, and pleaded general denial, contributory negligence, and assumed risk.

The evidence authorizes the following conclusions of fact: Appellee at the time of his injury was in the employ of appellant, and with a gang of 30 or 40 men was engaged in laying a pipe line. The men were under a foreman, Brandenberry, who was absent from the work at the time of the accident, and at that time they were working under the direction and orders of a boss, or, as he was called, a “stabber,” Jim Murphy, who stood in the place of the foreman and directed the work. The work consisted of taking joints of 6-inch pipe, each about 20 feet long, which had been previously placed on the ground end to end, screwing them together so as to form a continuous line, and then laying them in a ditch. While engaged in this work, and while working upon the line of joints screwed together, over a ditch, with one end of the line resting upon a board called a “growler board,” lying across the ditch, in some way the two joints, at the end fastened together, broke loose from the line and dropped into the ditch; that is, one end lay in the diteh and the other end rested upon the growler hoard. The ditfch was about 4 feet deep and about 20 inches wide. The two joints of pipe thus fastened together weighed 750 or 800 pounds. Murphy, the boss, spoke generally to the men, about 30 of whom were standing around, and told them to get in the diteh and throw the pipe out. This order was not addressed to any one in particular. Appellee at once got in the diteh at the lower end of the pipe, and several others variously estimated as six or eight in all, got in with him, ranging themselves along the pipe from the lower end next to appellee up towards the other end which rested on the growler board. They got hold of the pipe, when Murphy, who stood by the side of the ditch, gave the order to throw the pipe out as a signal for them to lift. This is the story appellee tells about how the accident occurred, and its substantial accuracy is not disputed, and we adopt it as true: “After I had gotten into the ditch, and had assumed a stooping posture with my hands under the pipe line, I retained that position until the word of command was given. This was given by Murphy, who said, ‘Throw it out.’ When we taken hold of the pipe, stooped over and taken hold of the pipe, he said, ‘Pitch it out.’ We waited for orders in this way because we waited for the men to get down in the ditch. I did not know how many men were in the diteh at the time Murphy gave the order, and at the time I lifted it up. I could not see from my position after I had taken hold of the pipe. Por me to see how many men were in the ditch that had hold of the pipe line at the time the command was given to raise, I would have had to turn loose the pipe and either look over the men, or have had to stoop or lean over one way or the other to look around. That is the only way. If 1 h;;d done that, I should not have been in position to obey the command to lift it. When we had lifted it up part of the way, it tore my side all loose. I don’t know what happened. The pipe dropped back on me. I was in a shape where I couldn’t turn loose. I had to hold it, and I was expecting the other men to hold too. It just shoved my right arm down. I was nearly half bent, I guess. It just tore my side all loose. The pipe was too heavy for one man to lift it out of the ditch and throw it on the bank. After we lifted it part of the way up, it jarred some way or other and came back on us. I either had to hold it or let it mash me. It strained me and tore the muscles loose on my side.”

The men, as stated, were working in a ditch 4 feet .deep and 20 inches wide at the bottom of which the pipe lay, and in that cramped position were unable to lift nearly as much as on the surface of the ground. It was customary, for this reason, to put 15 or 20 men, or as many as could get hold, in a ditch to lift out two joints of pipe, and the number put in to raise the two joints on this occasion was insufficient to do the work safely. After appellee and the others got started up with the pipe, he could not turn it loose, and let it fall without danger of injury to the legs or feet of himself and the other men. Stooped over as he was he *270 could not tell without raising up and looking how many men had gotten into the ditch. After they got in the ditch, they were expected to lift at the word of command of Murphy, at once, and it was necessary for them to act in unison. They had no time for deliberation after they 'got ready to lift. Ap-pellee testified: “I had trouble right at the start, when I first commenced to lift the pipe, when I first got hold of it, but what could you do? It was too heavy, certainly, and the higher I got I kept on seeing it was too heavy for me. I kept on lifting, and I knew from the start that it was more than I ought to lift.”

The evidence was conflicting as to the extent of Murphy’s powers and authority, but it fully supports the conclusion, which we find, that he had the power to employ and discharge the men and that they were entirely subject' to his orders in doing the work. He was not a fellow servant of the men, but a vice principal.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 268, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-pipe-line-co-v-clayton-texapp-1912.