Horton v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co.

288 P. 1065, 34 N.M. 594
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1929
DocketNo. 3317.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 288 P. 1065 (Horton v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co., 288 P. 1065, 34 N.M. 594 (N.M. 1929).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

CATRON, J.

This is a suit by Thomas B. Horton against the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company for damages resulting from alleged negligence of the defendant. Trial was to a jury, who found the issues in favor of the plaintiff and assessed his damages at $6,875. Defendant filed a motion for a new trial which was overruled, and thereupon judgment was entered against the defendant for said amount, together with the costs of the suit.

The complaint alleges that during the month of February, 1925, plaintiff was a car repairer in the employ of the defendant railway company at Albuquerque; that the company furnished him such tools as were required in that occupation; that about the' 18th of February, 1925, while so employed, he was sent by the company to inspect and repair some freight cars then in use, and was furnished for use in such work one certain hammer which was out of repair and defective, in that the handle thereof was broken inside the head or eye of the hammer in such manner as not to be apparent or visible to any person using the same, rendering it an unsafe implement to supply to a workman for use; that the defendant, through its proper agents and servants in charge of furnishings and supplying said tools, had been notified and advised and was well aware of the dangerous and defective condition of the said hammer, and had been requested to and had promised to repair the same, but had failed and neglected to do so, and, so knowing the hammer to he broken and defective, had furnished and supplied the same to the plaintiff for use in and about the aforesaid work; that the plaintiff, not knowing the hammer to be so defective, attempted to use the same in and about his work, and while so using the same the head thereof flew from the handle, and a portion of the hammer, because of such defective condition, or a piece of metal so caused to be detached by the defective action of the hammer, struck the plaintiff about the head, and face, and eye, and so badly injured the plaintiff as to cause and produce the total loss of the sight of his eye.

Defendant denies all of the material allegations of the complaint, and as an alternative answer pleads negligence on the part of plaintiff that either contributed to the injury or was the sole cause of the accident resulting in said injury. .As a further alternative defense, defendant pleads assumption of risk by the plaintiff, on the theory that the defect in the hammer, if any there was, was latent, and that a hammer is a simple tool, and the risks in using same are the ordinary risks of an employee and assumed by him.

Plaintiff’s reply denied all new matter contained in the answer.

In order to prove that the injury sustained by plaintiff resulted in the loss of sight in his left eye, plaintiff called two eye specialists, Dr. H. L. Brehmer and Dr. E. C. Matthews, and after qualifying them as expert witnesses, propounded a hypothetical question to each. Although the questions are quite different in their phraseology, they are in effect substantially the same, so we will only consider the one propounded to Dr. E. C. Matthews, which is:

“Assuming, Doctor, that a day or two at the outside before he came to you he had been working with a machinist’s hammer weighing in the neighborhood of two pounds like the one which I show you and that striking a blow looking down underneath a freight car and striking the blow towards him, a hard lick, the head of that hammer came off and struck him a blow across the left eye after striking the metal part of this freight car on its journey, and carried with it some material, or that at the same time some material got into his eye, and that the blow with the head of this hammer of the kind I have described struck him on that eye; that his vision before that time had been normal and that there was no trouble with his eyes or either of .them except some operation for pterygium which had taken place some eight years earlier and from which he had suffered no evil effects; that immediately after this injury to his eye he was practically vision-less except that he could see a number of dancing visions, when he would look at a person he would see a number there, and that there was an injury and wound upon the eye of the kind that you discovered and saw; that since that time this eye had little or no vision and the vision is fading more and more until now he has practically none at all in the left eye, and that the right eye has no sign or evidence of cataract in it but is apparently normal for a man of his years. From that recital and the evidence Of the cataract as you now find it, Doctor, would you have an opinion, from the facts as I have recited them to you, what has caused and produced the condition of that left eye as you now find it?”

To the foregoing question defendant made the following objection:

“We object to that hypothetical question as without a basis of proof as to the hypothesis stated, and principally upon the ground that the allegation of the complaint is that a foreign substance from the head of the hammer or the body which the hammer struck was the cause of this injury. We are not prepared to meet the attempted proof here of a different kind of injury entirely, and it is immaterial so far as the allegations of this complaint is concerned as to the striking with the hammer; they have predicated their case upon an injury caused by a substance in the eye and not to a blow on the outside, and it is improper and immaterial as to the blow of the head of the hammer itself under the pleadings of this case.”

The court overruled the objection, and defendant excepted and here assigns the ruling of the court as reversible error.

In answer to the questions both doctors gave it as their opinion that the traumatic cataract which they found in the left eye of plaintiff is the result of the injury described in the hypothetical question, and that the loss of sight in the eye is due to said cataract. They further testified that a traumatic cataract is caused either by a blow or concussion which does not rupture the eye, or a penetrating wound or cut which involves the lens of the eye.

Based upon the hypothetical questions, we therefore have testimony, given over the objection and exception of defendant, from which the jury could conclude that the traumatic cataract and resulting loss of sight was caused, either by the blow from the hammer head, or by a cut from a foreign substance, and indeed part of the jury may have reached one conclusion and the remainder the other.

Appellant and appellee are in sharp conflict concerning the allegations of the complaint, whether or not they are broad enough to support the hypothetical questions and answers thereto. Appellant contends that plaintiff charged the loss of sight as due to a cut by a foreign substance detached from the hammer head or from some part of the car which the flying hammer head struck. Appellee contends that he has alleged the injury in the alternative, either a blow from the flying hammer head itself, or a cut from a foreign body detached by the flying hammer head of the defective hammer.

The meaning of the language used by plaintiff in his complaint cannot be said to be exactly clear and concise. It can be construed to support either appellant’s or appellee’s contention.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Brown v. Hatley
450 P.2d 624 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1969)
Transwestern Pipe Line Company v. Yandell
367 P.2d 938 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1961)
Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District v. Crabtree
365 P.2d 442 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1961)
Ferran v. Jacquez
362 P.2d 519 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1961)
Sanders v. Carmichael Enterprises, Inc.
260 P.2d 916 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1953)
Hendricks v. Hendricks
226 P.2d 464 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1950)
Haden v. Eaves
226 P.2d 457 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1950)
Edwards v. Erwin
197 P.2d 435 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1948)
McDaniel v. Vaughn
80 P.2d 417 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1938)
Maestas v. Alameda Cattle Co.
14 P.2d 733 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1932)
Summerford v. Board of Com'rs.
298 P. 410 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1931)
Thomas v. Johns
294 P. 327 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 P. 1065, 34 N.M. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-atchison-t-s-f-ry-co-nm-1929.