Houston Belt & T. Ry. Co. v. Christian

209 S.W. 816, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1408
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 14, 1918
DocketNo. 7620.
StatusPublished

This text of 209 S.W. 816 (Houston Belt & T. Ry. Co. v. Christian) 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
Houston Belt & T. Ry. Co. v. Christian, 209 S.W. 816, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1408 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

[1] This appeal proceeds from a judgment for $8,000 damages for personal injuries in favor of Christian against the railway company, entered upon a verdict returned in response to special issues. Since the facts showed the work in which the accident occurred to have been in furtherance of interstate commerce, thus bringing the action within the purview of the federal Liability Act (Act April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 05 [U. S. Comp. St. §§ 8657-8065]), and consequently making the common-law doctrine of assumed risk applicable, the court, pursuant to appropriate pleadings by appellant interposing it, accordingly gave a charge upon that defense, around which most of the questions presented to this court revolve.

It is first said there should have been an instructed verdict for it, as appellant requested below, upon its claim that as a matter of law, under the undisputed evidence, Christian assumed the risk of every danger and hazard that could have been a proximate cause of his injuries. This contention necessarily brings in review the entire case as made, but could not prevail if any one of the four separate and distinct grounds of negligence alleged was not only in the first instance properly established, but thereafter maintained as against the defense of assumed risk.

Christian was employed as engineer on appellant's wrecker, a machine used in clearing away wrecks upon its railway lines, and at the time of his injury was acting under the direction of Morgan, the company’s superintendent, who had charge of the work, in the effort to lift up and place back upon its own trucks on the track a heavily loaded box car, which had previously been derailed. The machinery of the wrecker, which was placed upon and so fitted to an ordinary flat car by means of a large iron pin projecting down from it into a heavy metal casting so imbedded in the floor of the car as to permit rotation of the entire appliance upon this' pin as an axis, consisted of a boiler, boom, and cab, with cables running from; the ca.b over the top of the boom, and thence down to the box car to be lifted. This rotary arrangement allowed the wrecking machinery to describe an entire circle, hence to become directly crosswise, or at right angles with the length of the flat car upon which it rested, and when that was done, its cab extended out beyond the side of the flat car furtherest from the load for several feet. Such was practically its position when the accident here involved was brought about.

In attempting to raise and so shift ono end of the heavily loaded box car, it being full of cotton seed, as to make it fit down properly onto its trucks, the cable upon which its weight was suspended suddenly broke, letting the long boom drop forward down across the box car upon that side, and the cab of the wrecker in which Christian was stationed fall backward to the ground upon the opposite or outer side of the flat car with such force as to throw him out and injure him, the flat car itself being tilted in the same direction up off of one rail to the extent of an angle anywhere from 12 to 45 degrees wide.

Superintendent Morgan’s own statement of the relative duties of both Christian and himself, and of how the accident happened, is shown in these excerpts from his testimony:

“After we came to the point where I decided-we would be in the clear to handle the box car, I had the switch engine cut loose and taken away from the wrecker, and swung the wrecker around; the truck would not quite go under the car, the center plate, the two center plates —the male and female casting — would not pass, by about, I guess, a couple of inches, and I examined it and told Christian tó raise her up a little, and he said, ‘Do you reckon I can do it ?’ and I says, ‘Let’s raise it higher; we have got to have it higher to place it in the truck;’ and when he raised it higher and just about the time the car was up and just as I was going to holler, ‘Whoa,’ why, the lines broke in the boom, snapped. That let the boom fall right across the car of cotton seed, and let the machine, of course, tilt back. The boom was supposed to counter balance the boiler, which is in the back end of the machine, and when the boom fell on the car there was no weight there for it to counter balance with, and, of course, it naturally turned that part back. * * * Mr. Christian was engaged in handling the movement of that wrecker from the time we stopped there; he is the man who swung the wrecker around after the switch engine had been cut off; he is the man who handled tho levers in swinging it around. It took about five seconds to a half a minute to swing that machine around, and tho accident occurred after that just as quick as we could lift up; just as quick as he could get his levers and lift up. I told him to lift it up, and he said did I think she would stand it, and I said it had stood it for about 200 lifts like that, and he made the lift when I told him so.”

*818 Christian's version did not materially differ, he saying upon the same matter, and with reference to Morgan’s authority over him:

“At the time I was injured I was working under Mr. Morgan. Mr. Morgan was supposed to he the general boss out there at the time we were picking up this wreck. Mr. Morgan was giving all the orders during the work. He had the right to give orders, and I was required to take Ms orders. I either had to take his orders or quit. * * * He kept telling me she would stand a little more. We was trying to got this car up off the block. When he told me it would stand a little more, I give her a little more steam, to raise that up a little bit, and get it up off of those blocks; and after we got the car up off the ties, Mr. Morgan says, ‘Swing south just the least little bit,’ and' just as I went to give her a little steam to swing that car, she went off — just turned over like a shot out of a gun just as soon as I began to give her a little steam, and it was all done just like batting your eye. She threw me out of the side door of the machine, and I landed on the side of the ear.”

Now, as applied to this situation, the several respects in which negligence was charged against appellant were in substance and effect essentially these: (1) In using weak and defective cables on the machines; (2) in permitting the work to be done with the metal casting in the floor of the flat car badly broken or cracked; (3) in failing to use “outriggers” as a protection against the very heavy load, it being averred that if these had been properly employed the accident would have been prevented; and (4) in allowing the overloading of the wrecker and cables in the condition they were in at the time.

In response to special issues separately embodying them, the jury found the railway company guilty of negligence in each of the particulars so specified, that each one of such negligent acts had been a proximate cause of Christian’s injuries, and expressly acquitted him of having assumed the risk of any one of the conditions named, except as to the overloading of the wrecker and cables, concerning which alone that particular question was not submitted to them.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 816, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-belt-t-ry-co-v-christian-texapp-1918.