Hale v. TEXAS EMPLOYERS'INS. ASS'N.

239 S.W.2d 608, 150 Tex. 215, 1951 Tex. LEXIS 448
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1951
DocketA-2971
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 239 S.W.2d 608 (Hale v. TEXAS EMPLOYERS'INS. ASS'N.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. TEXAS EMPLOYERS'INS. ASS'N., 239 S.W.2d 608, 150 Tex. 215, 1951 Tex. LEXIS 448 (Tex. 1951).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smedley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petitioner, employee, sues respondent, insurer, for compensation under the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Law on account of injuries suffered in New Mexico, claiming the right to recover by reason of the extraterritorial provisions of the statute, Section 19 of Article 8306 of the Revised Civil Statutes, *218 with its amendments, as appearing in Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes.

In addition to issues usually submitted in Workmen’s Compensation cases the trial court submitted to the jury this issue:

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that at the time the plaintiff, Hale, sustained an injury, if he did, on July 10, 1949 near Eunice, New Mexico he was then occupying the status of a Texas Employee for the Warren and Bradshaw Drilling Company under his contract of hire, if any, of April, 1949? Answer, He was or He was not.”

The jury answered “He was.” Judgment was rendered in favor of petitioner against respondent for compensation at the rate of $25.00 per week for a period of 401 weeks, in a lump sum of $8,412.93.

As is apparent from the special issue above quoted and the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, both the district court and the Court of Civil Appeals considered the question whether petitioner occupied “the status of a Texas employee” to be the controlling question in the case. The Court of Civil Appeals considered only that question and, holding that according to the undisputed evidence petitioner did not occupy the status of a Texas employee, reversed the trial court’s judgment and rendered judgment for respondent. 237 S. W. 2d 769.

We set out the substance of the evidence as to the employee status of petitioner, most of it being taken from his testimony.

Warren and Bradshaw Drilling Company, the employer, is engaged in drilling oil wells in several states, including Texas. Petitioner is an oil field worker described as a “roughneck”. He is a resident of Texas and, with his family, lived for about three years in Lubbock, and later in Spur, and during the year immediately preceding his employment by the Warren and Bradshaw Drilling Company he worked at several places in the oil fields of West Texas, except that for approximately three months he worked near Eunice, New Mexico. At the time when he was working on the well near Levelland hereinafter referred to petitioner was living with his wife and three young children in Levelland, his oldest child being in school there. When this suit was filed and at the time of the trial petitioner was a resident of Spur, Texas.

On April 1, 1949, petitioner was employed at Levelland, *219 Texas, to work for the Warren and Bradshaw Drilling Company-on a well then being drilled or to be drilled 12 or 14 miles from Levelland. He was employed by John Acton, who was a driller for that company, to work as a “roughneck” on Acton’s crew, which consisted of the driller and three other men who were employed and directed by the driller. The driller took his orders from the “tool pusher”.

Petitioner was employed to work by the day, eight hours a day for seven days in the week, to be paid $1.50 an hour. He asked Acton whether the job would be temporary or permanent, and Acton answered that as far as he knew it would be permanent if petitioner made “the right type hand”. There is no evidence of an agreement of employment for any definite time. The employer’s division drilling superintendent and its “tool pusher” testified that “roughnecks” were paid only when they worked, that they worked for whatever days the driller wanted them to work, that the “roughnecks’ ” job lasted from the time they were hired until they were “laid off”, and that no worker was paid for standing by when he was not working. Hubbard, the “tool pusher”, further testified, however, that whenever a crew of a driller and “roughnecks” was “bumper off a job” or “laid off” a job for any reason, and "he knew that another well was going to be drilled within a few days or a few weeks, he would tell them about the well and “try to keep them to work on that well”, and that this was done because they wanted to keep experienced hands.

Petitioner worked on the well near Levelland from April 1 until April 22, 1949, when he and the other “roughneck” members of Acton’s crew were “bumped” and their places were taken by drillers who had seniority and came from another well. Petitioner testified that the “tool pusher” came to the well and told them that they were “bumped”, saying that he was sorry, but he had to keep his hands and drillers and “that none of us were fired, we were laid off temporarily”. After the “roughnecks” were “bumped” Acton, the driller, continued to work on the well, not as a driller, however, but as a “roughneck”.

Petitioner testified that at the time when he was “bumped” he talked to the “tool pusher”, in the presence of the driller Acton, and told him he had a child in school and wanted to stay if he thought they would start a well soon in another location nearby, but that if there was doubt in his mind he would like to make a change as he did not have much money, and that the *220 “tool pusher” told him he was “pretty sure” that they would “start back up” in the neighborhood in two or three weeks, that he could go to work on his same job and they would be glad for him to stay with them. Testifying further, petitioner stated positively that at the time he was “bumped” he was told in a conversation with Acton and Hubbard, the “tool pusher”, that they would have a rig start up soon and that he was going to work for them and to hold himself in readiness to go back to work. Hubbard, the “tool pusher,’ testified that at the time the “roughnecks” were “bumped” he had in mind the location of a Beasley well No. 2 that they thought would “start up” in about a week in that neighborhood, and that he told . Acton, the driller, that if the members of his crew would “hang around” they could go to work on that rig. The Beasley well was not begun until about three months later, which apparently was after petitioner was injured while working on a well near Eunice, New Mexico.

After staying at Levelland two or three weeks, petitioner told Acton that, because he had no money, he wished to go to Synder and pick up a few temporary jobs “until the rig gets ready on another location” and that he would return whenever Acton called him. To this Acton agreed, and petitioner went to Synder, where he worked for three different employers for several days each, a total of 16 or 17 days. While petitioner was working at Snyder Acton came to Snyder and told petitioner he wanted him to go to work with him on a wild cat well to be drilled at Guthrie, Texas, and petitioner agreed to go there. A few days later Acton returned and told petitioner he had been transferred to Eunice, New Mexico, and asked petitioner to go with him, telling him that the transfer was temporary, that it would be a short job of six or seven weeks, and that on its completion they would return to the neighborhood of Levelland and Whiteface and work on a well to be drilled there. Acton told petitioner he was to go back to work as a “roughneck” and for the same pay and for the same hours as before.

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W.2d 608, 150 Tex. 215, 1951 Tex. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-texas-employersins-assn-tex-1951.