Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Berling

37 S.W. 1083, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 544, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 386
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 1083 (Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Berling) 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 & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Berling, 37 S.W. 1083, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 544, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 386 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a verdict and judgment rendered for appellee against appellant, for $2500 damages for injuries to his person, received by appellee, as averred by him, through the negligence of the appellant’s servants. The petition averred that the plaintiff was in the employment of the appellant, and that, while so employed, he was ordered by the foreman, a servant of appellant, and under whose orders plaintiff was working, to cut a trench from a large telegraph pole standing on the appellant’s right of way; and that, while engaged in cutting said trench, in obedience to the order of said foreman, the said foreman, with the assistance of other employes of appellant, attempted to move another telegraph pole connected with the one about which plaintiff was working by a wire; and when said foreman and his assistants lifted said pole from its position in the ground, for the purpose of setting it farther from the appellant’s railway track, it toppled over and fell, and by reason thereof the pole about which plaintiff was working and all the intervening poles in the telegraph line between plaintiff and the said foreman and his assistant”-, toppled and fell toward and near to the surface of the earth, and tin the pole about which plaintiff was digging fell upon him, and infliete upon him serious and lasting injuries, in several parts of his body, an to several of his organs, describing with particularity his various injuries, and averring that he was in consequence of said injuries permanently disabled for manual labor; that plaintiff was not warned of the danger to him from the attempt by the foreman to move from its place said telegraph pole; that plaintiff was ignorant of the intention of said foreman to move said pole; that the pole which the foreman attempted to move was several hundred yards distant from the pole about which plaintiff was working; that the morning was dark and foggy, and that, by reason thereof, the plaintiff and said foreman and his assistants were invisible to each other at the time of the attempt to move the pole as aforesaid; that plaintiff was ignorant of the business of moving telegraph poles, and did not know of the dangers incident.thereto; that he was working for appellant at the time, under the orders of said foreman, and that said foreman was appellant’s vice-principal. To the petition, the appellant answered by general demurrer and general denial, and pleaded specially that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; that plaintiff was thoroughly informed of the danger, if any, of the work he was doing; that he was experienced in such work; that he knew the poles were going to be moved at the time, and that he assumed the risk of the work he was doing.

Our conclusions of fact are: “That at the time of the accident, *546 appellee was digging a trench from a certain telegraph pole in the appellant’s right of way to a point where it was proposed by appellant to move and reset the pole; that appellee was in the trench shovelling out the earth with his back to the pole, when the pole fell and struck him, and held him fast in the trench until he was released by his co-laborers; that appellee was badly hurt by the blow from the falling pole and was unable, without help, to walk; and that he was, during the day, sent by his foreman to the Houston Infirmary, where he remained and was treated by the surgeons in charge for about forty days, when he refused. to further follow the instructions of his physicians, and left the institution; that the day previous to his injury, the appellee had, with other section hands, under the direction and superintendence of the section foreman, dug trenches from several telegraph poles connected by wire with the one about which he was digging When he was injured; that the appellant, for the purpose of making room for a switch, which was to be constructed over a certain portion of the right of way, ordered the section foreman to remove certain telegraph poles, and reset them in the ground at designated spots. The poles wore to be taken up and reset without removing the telegraph wires; and this was to be done under instructions given the foreman by an employe of the appellant, known as Western Union lineman. These instructions required that a trench be dug from each pole, except the two standing midway the line of poles to be removed. These trenches were to be as deep as the poles were sunken in the ground, and of sufficient width to admit the passage of the poles through them to the places into which the poles were to be reset. There was only one pole left intact, instead of two, as the lineman directed; Six or seven of the trenches were completed on the evening before the appellee was injured. On the morning of the day of the accident, when the hand car on which the foreman and the appellee and the other section hands were going to their work reached the unfinished trenches, the appellee, with two others of the section gang, under the direct order of the foreman, according to the appellee’s evidence, but only with the fore, man’s permission and approval, according to the evidence for appellant-left the hand car, for the purpose of completing these trenches, while the foreman and lineman and the rest of the section gang proceeded to the most distant of the poles from which the trenches had been dug the evening before, for the purpose of removing and resetting these poles. The modus operandi in removing the poles was to drive spikes in each pole near the ground, and with levers, placed under these spikes, to prize the pole up, and, keeping it in a perpendicular position, to shove it through the trench to the spot at which it was to be reset. In attempting to remove the first pole, it toppled over and dragged after it all the other poles which were to be removed; and the pole around ' which appellee was working fell upon him and hurt him as above stated. The foreman at the time did not notify appellee, by signal or otherwise, that he was removing the pole. The presence of a fog obstructed the view between the foreman and appellee, and neither could be *547 seen by the other at the time of the accident. The appellee, at the time of the injury to him, was between 58 and 60 years of age, was a German, and, by trade, a gardener, but for two or three years he had been employed as a railroad hand at §45 per month. The foreman, under whom appellee was working when injured, was vice-principal of appellant. He was guilty of negligence in not following the instructions of the lineman to leave two poles without trenches, and in permitting appellee to remain in the trench in which he was hurt while the poles were being removed. Whether or not, appellee was ordered by the foreman, on the morning of the accident, to dig or finish the trench in which he was at work when injured, or whether the appellee chose to do that work in preference to going with the foreman further down the line, and whether appellee learned from the remarks made as he left the hand car by the foreman to his section hands, or whether appellee otherwise knew, or should have known, that the work of moving and resetting the poles would begin when the foreman got to those poles about which the trenches were finished, and whether or not appellee knew, or could have known by the exercise of ordinary prudence, that it would be hazardous to remain in the trench with- his back to the pole, while other poles were being removed,—were all issues as to which the evi- ■ dence was conflicting, but there was evidence for the plaintiff to sustain a finding for him upon each of the issues.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 1083, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 544, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-texas-central-railway-co-v-berling-texapp-1896.