Hodges v. Swastika Oil Co.

185 S.W. 369, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 446
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1916
DocketNo. 7136.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 369 (Hodges v. Swastika Oil Co.) 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
Hodges v. Swastika Oil Co., 185 S.W. 369, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 446 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

Will Hodges, while in the employment of the Swastika Oil Company, a private corporation, fell from the triple board of an oil well derrick upon which he was at work, and thereby received injuries which resulted in his death, and I. A. Hodges, S. E. Hodges, and Dewey Hodges, the father, mother, and minor brother, respectively, of the deceased, brought this suit to recover of the oil company damages accruing to them by reason of his death. Recovery is predicated upon the alleged negligence of the oil company, as the proximate cause of the death of said Will Hodges, in the following particulars: (1) Faulty or defective construction of the finger-board upon which the deceased was required to stand while at work, in that the same was slanting, being about 6 inches lower at the end extending into the derrick than the end attached to the derrick girder, which caused the deceased to slip and fall. (2) In requiring the deceased to work in the .derrick when the weather was unusually bad and rainy. (3) In failing to furnish the deceased with a safety belt, which they alleged would have prevented deceased from falling in case of his foot slipping while working upon the triple board.

The defendant answered by general denial and special pleas of assumed risk and contributory negligence on the part of the deceased. The case was tried before a jury, who, in obedience to a peremptory charge of the court, returned a verdict for defendant, and a judgment was thereupon accordingly enter *371 ed in defendant’s favor, and the plaintiffs liave appealed.

By appropriate assignments of error appellants assail the action of the court in peremptorily instructing a verdict for the defendant. The testimony in the record justifies the following fact findings:

The defendant was a corporation engaged in the production of oil in what is known as the Markham oil field, and, at the time of the death of Will Hodges, was engaged in drilling an oil well in said field. For this purpose it had constructed a derrick 84 feet high, having a 20-foot base, and being 4 by 6 feet at the top. The deceased was known as the “derrick man” and his work, as such, was performed upon the triple board, some 50-odd feet above the ground. The triple board consisted of two pieces of 2 by 12 lumber, extending across the derrick and resting on girders on both sides. These were for the derrick man to work 'upon when the drill pipe was being lowered into or withdrawn from the well. The drill pipe consisted of joints of pipe each about 20 feet in length, screwed together, and upon being withdrawn were uncoupled so that three joints of the 20-foot pipe would remain in one section. There was also what is known as a “finger board” made of 2 by 6 timber with a notch in the end to lay pipe in preparatory to attaching them to the elevator to lower the pipe in the well. The finger board is fastened to a girder at the same level as the triple board, and one end extends to the middle of the derrick, and the witness Marks says that:

“In a properly constructed derrick the finger board is about 3 feet, 8 inches from the derrick wall — about a step from the derrick wall to the finger board.”

He further says that:

“When the derrick man is engaged at work in the derrick, coupling his pipe with the elevator, he works with one foot on the finger board and one foot upon the derrick.”

Ordinarily the finger board should be on a level with the triple board or the end of the inside of the derrick should incline slightly upward, but it appears that the finger board on the derrick in question inclined downward, so that the end was some 3 or 4 inches lower than the girder to which it was fastened.

The witness Tate testified that:

“In regard to placing the finger board for safety, as to whether it is placed level or lower or raised at the notched end and where a man stands, I will state that the end extending out into the derrick should be a little bit higher than the end that is nailed to the girts of the derrick. * * * We have the projection inside of the derrick upward a little for several reasons, it is an advantage to the derrick man because in case of wet weather it will be less danger of a man’s foot slipping off the end, although his foot could slip if it is turned up a little. The effect of his foot slipping off the end, if there is nothing there to catch in the center of the derrick, would be that he would fall.”

It was shown that other corporations engaged in drilling oil wells’in the Markham field used safety belts for the protection off their derrick men while engag-ed in the performance of their duties. The witness Marks described safety bets and their uses as follows:

“A safety belt is made out of 3-inch heavy, harness leather, with two straps fastened across each shoulder, across the back and front, making a cage that you can’t fall out of, whether-you fall head forward or feet, you can’t get out of it. A heavy ring is attached to the back, and we use a rope, ordinarily a three-fourths inch rope tied onto the girt or brace of the derrick. Equipped that way, if the derrick man. should slip and fall, the effect would be that he would be caught on the rope; in other words, he would be caught, and would not fall.”

The witness Tate testified:

“The purpose of using the safety belt is in case-a man falls or slips it will catch him and hold him; it prevents him from falling to the floor and sustaining injury. I know that safety belts could have been obtained and procured by the Swastika Oil Company on or before the 2d day of March, 1915” (the date Will Hodges was-killed).

George Hathaway testified:

“I have used safety 'belt in the derrick work.. The safety belt keeps a man from falling.”

W. A. Hodges, brother of the deceased, testified:

“I did request the defendant Swastika Oil Company to procure for Will Hodges a safety belt. I made the request of the foreman, R. L. Hamil, and he told me that his brother, Kirk Hamil, did not approve of life belts, and that he did not think he would buy it because the expense was running so high he would ‘kick’ on it as he had on many other things. The Swastika Oil Company has procured safety belts, but they never did procure one for Will.”

The only person shown to have been present at the time Will Hodges fell was Ellis Hamil, and we give his.testimony in full:

“I was present in the Markham oil field on. the 2d day of March, 1915, working in the derrick where the deceased, Will Hodges, was at work. At that time I was working right at the ropes, right in the center of the derrick, on the platform, I cannot tell the jury how Will-Ilodges lost his life, any more than that he fell. I was at the ropes at the time he fell — I had just closed the sides. At the time Will Hodges-fell he was working in the derrick on the triple board, and fell from that point. I did not see him fall, but I heard him halloo, and looked up, and I left the floor because I could not see what it was that was falling. I saw something falling and I got out of the way, and later I found that this object that was falling was Will-Hodges.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 369, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodges-v-swastika-oil-co-texapp-1916.