Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Alexander

119 S.W. 1135, 102 Tex. 497, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 188
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1909
DocketNo. 1947.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 119 S.W. 1135 (Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Alexander) 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
Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Alexander, 119 S.W. 1135, 102 Tex. 497, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 188 (Tex. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

Certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth Supreme Judicial District as follows:

“Appellees sued to recover of appellant damages for the death of Joe B. Alexander, the husband and father of appellees, alleged to have resulted from the negligence of appellant.

“On the night of November 8, 1906, Joe Alexander was in the employ of appellant and was engaged in supplying one of its oil burning locomotives with oil at Sherman. Alexander had been for some time engaged as car inspector, but for two months just preceding the accident had been engaged in supplying engines with oil.

“The testimony of Martin, fireman, is as follows: ‘It was a rather dark night, but not rainy. It was a dry night. We stopped at said oil tank to take oil. Joe B. Alexander put oil in the tender of our engine. I had taken the cap off of the manhole before we got to the oil tank. Then Joe B. Alexander climbed up on the tender, pulled the spout down and gave oil through this manhole. Then, after he raised the spout, he placed the cap back on the manhole, and would screw it down when we got into Sherman, but this night spoken of I screwed it down because he was hurt. After he had oiled the engine he stepped down from his position on to an oil box where we kept cans of oil, and slipped and fell to the ground. He slipped and fell from the oil box. He fell about ten feet to the ground. As Mr. Alexander stepped down from the front part of the oil tank he had to step on the oil box mentioned just' now, which was greasy, causing him to slip. His feet flew out from under him, and he fell to the ground. This oil box is made sloping so as" to shed water when it rains; sloping two ways. Shortly after the accident I saw where he slipped. His shoe tacks had scratched and- left marks on the box. This box upon which a man would step in coming down off the oil tank, was on the side, near the front end of the tender. It was made sloping so as to turn water, and was greasy from being tracked over by feet with the fuel oil • on them. I saw *500 Mr. Alexander fall from the tender. He fell from the box on which we kept the oil cans. I looked at the box and all around soon after. This is a wooden box for keeping cans of oil, with the top made sloping to turn water. It was greasy with oil. I saw the box just before we reached the oil station, when I unscrewed the cap, and saw it again just after Mr. Alexander was hurt, when I screwed the cap on. Joe Alexander was not on or about said locomotive at any time that day previous to the time when he got hurt. I know that because he was at Sherman and this engine came in from the south. He threw the oil spout around himself before he started down. It was none of my duty to do this, or help do it. He stepped down on the box carelessly and his foot slipped. I shut the' oil off below, after he fell, and locked his door in the enclosure for him; that is, the door of wall around tank. At the time Alexander fell, nothing • had been said between Engineer Manning and Alexander, as we were waiting for Alexander to come down. Manning said nothing to him that night, before he fell, that I remember of. If they had any conversation before he fell I have no recollection of it. Manning did not direct him, or tell him anything about taking the oil, or how to take it, or anything that night. The engineer had no charge or direction of taking oil that night. All he had to do was to place engine at proper place. He had no charge or control of Alexander that I know of. I don’t see where the engineer would have anything to do with, or charge of, taking oil. ... I saw the place where Alexander fell from. He stepped on the slope or lid of the tool box. The print of the shoe tacks were on the top or slope. I have taken oil some, not very much experience. Alexander was standing at the proper place while taking oil. He did not fall while taking it. It was after he was through, and was coming down. He had walked on the tank from where he threw the spout up until he got to where he stepped down on the tool box. The way Mr. Alexander was doing the work, at the time he was injured, did not differ in any respect from the way he had been in the habit of doing it previous to said time. He did it in the same old way. . . . The tool boxes on defendant’s engines generally are situated one on each side of the oil tank, on top of the water tank, bolted there between the oil tank and flange of water tank, nine or ten feet from the ground. They are up against the oil tank. They fill up the space between the oil tank and the outer edge of the tender. They get up and down with oil on their feet, and then sometimes the oiler runs the tank over a little, and sometimes, on rough track, the oil may slush out through the gas or air pipes at the top of tank or about the manhole.’

“Manning, engineer, testified: My run was between Ennis and Denison that night. I remember taking oil at Sherman oh that night. I was hauling a passenger train. I took charge of that train at Ennis. I was the engineer on that train at that time, from Ennis north. When I took charge of the engine it was at the passenger depot at Ennis, hooked up ready to go. I did not take oil any time after I took charge of that engine until we arrived at the Sherman yards. That is the occasion that Alexander fell off the engine. I *501 was there, present at that time. I was the engineer in charge of the engine that night. J. B. Martin was my fireman. I saw that box after Mr. Alexander fell. I examined it after we got up here in the yards, after we got to the passenger depot. The place where he was hurt was about a mile and a half, I suppose, from the passenger depot. I am not sure, but it is something like that. I suppose it would be about fifteen or twenty minutes after he was hurt before I examined the box on which he slipped; not over that. A man in performing Alexander’s duties gets up and down off the engine this way: He first gets up between the engine and tender; and then he turns and goes up on the tender, generally on either side. Both sides are just the same. They have got a box like this on either side. This was an oil box that we kept our lubricating oil in, and on the other side, the right-hand side, there is a box that we keep our tools in, hammers, etc. He climbs up on the end of the tank and steps on the box, and from the box onto this oil tank. There are other ways for him to get up and down off of the oil tank without passing over that box. He could get up different ways, I suppose, but I would think that would be the handiest way, and that is the way that is usually used. He always used that, and all the rest. I don’t believe I have ever known of anybody else using any other way. That is the usual way. He would pass over that box both going up and coming down. This is the box in which we keep our lubricating oil. It is usual for the top of that box to have grease and dirt and oil on top of it. It gets an accumulation of dust and dirt, and we sweep it off; sometimes the wind blows it off. The box would naturally get that way from the natural uses;' the same as the top of a coach, or any other place, or any other box. It would accumulate dirt and grease from various causes. It does do it, will do it, and will always do it. I guess the box is about five feet from the hole in which the oil is run into the oil tank. It is lower than the hole, and is about two feet lower than the top of the oil tank. It was in its ordinary condition when I examined it. All the lights were burning.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W. 1135, 102 Tex. 497, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-texas-central-railroad-v-alexander-tex-1909.