Knipe v. Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n

234 S.W.2d 274, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1711
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 3, 1950
Docket2820
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 234 S.W.2d 274 (Knipe v. Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n) 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
Knipe v. Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n, 234 S.W.2d 274, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1711 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. Max Knipe was an employee of Moutray-Moore Drilling Company. While returning from the site of a well, being drilled by said company, near Hamlin to Abilene, where he lived, with instructions from the tool pusher in charge of his crew to report to his employer’s office in Abilene that the pipe had been set in their well, and while traveling along the same route he ordinarily traveled returning home from work, *275 Knipe was injured in an automobile accident. A jury found that he sustained the injury in the course of his employment. The court sustained the insurance company’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, on the theory that there was no evidence that Knipe was in the course of his employment when injured, and rendered judgment for the insurance company. Knipe has appealed. The sole question presented is whether there is evidence to sustain the jury’s finding that Knipe was injured in the course of his employment.

In answering this question we can consider only the testimony tending to support said finding. The following is the substance of suc-h testimony.

Mr. Rathmall, the driller of the crew with which Max Knipe worked, testified there was no telephone at the rig; that before the crew had finished its eight hour tour and after the cement had been poured, H. H. Knipe, the tool pusher, told the crew to go by the employer’s office arid leave word that the pipe had been set; that the office always wanted to know how everything was progressing at the well; that if the tool pusher gave an order to report something to the office it was necessary to do so; that the crew was paid for eight hours, although they were on the job at the well only five.

Mr. DePrang testified that Max Knipe was driving the car at the time of the accident; that the tool pusher told the crew to report to the Moutray-Moore office in Abilene what was happening at the well; that it was the job of either the driller or Max Knipe, the driver of the car, to deliver messages; that, when the crew went up Pine Street .on their way home, the Moutray-Moore office was a short distance off Pine Street; that the homes of the members of the crew were closer to Grape Street than to Pine and, usually, in returning home from the well, they went up Grape Street, unless they were going by the Moutray-Moore office.

H. H. Knipe, the tool pusher, testified that he told the crew to go on in and report to Mr. Moore the time the pipe was set; that time was important in the oil business; that when he told the crew to go in there was other work to be done at the well; that he considered getting this information to Mr. Moore more important than having them do the work at the well; that Mr. Moore was always anxious to know when the pipe was set and that was the reason he sent the crew in three hours early, instead of having them work the remainder of the tour and finish their eight hour tour at the well; that they paid the crew, including Max Knipe, for eight hours, instead of the five hours they actually worked at the well, because he figured the crew would put in eight hours by the time they made this report to the Moutray-Moore office.

Max Knipe, the appellant, testified that the tool pusher instructed him to go by the Moutray-Moore office and report what time they set the pipe; that it was necessary that Mr. Moore have this information.

Mr. Moore testified that the office of his company was just around the corner off Pine Street, probably 50 feet. He further testified that if the tool pusher instructed a member of the crew to come to Abilene and notify him of some development at the well that he would expect to pay him for it; that this had been their custom in the past.

The substance of appellee’s contention is that Max Knipe, as a matter of law, was not in the course of his employment when injured because he was then traveling along a highway that he would have traveled had he been going to Abilene solely for the purpose of returning home; that he was injured before he reached the point where he would have deviated from his usual route home 'in order to deliver the message and that delivering the message was neither the sole nor principal cause of Knipe being on the highway at the place of the collision. In this connection, appel-lee cites Insurors Indemnity & Insurance Company v. Lankford, Tex.Civ.App., 150 S.W.2d 288, 290. In that case the claimant was told by the tool pusher that when he got to Monahans, where he lived and would naturally return after his tour was finished, to tell a certain person to come out and get the generator and repair it. After his tour was completed, Lankford and his crew left for Monahans. Before he got to Monahans Lankford was injured. He testified that his trip into Monahans on the day of the *276 accident was made exactly as it was on all other occasions returning home from work, except that if he had arrived in Monahans before the accident he would have turned a half block off his homeward route to an electric shop to deliver the message, instead of going directly to his home. The court held that delivery of the message was purely incidental to the trip home and did not originate in his work; that he received no pay for delivering the message; that he did not make a special trip to deliver the message but was making the usual trip home from work and that, as a matter of law, he was not within the course of his employment when injured. The court said that if he had turned aside from his usual route to deliver the message a different situation might have been presented. This case did not reach the Supreme Court.

There is a substantial difference between the facts of that and the present case. Here, Knipe was going to Abilene at the time he was injured for the purpose of delivering the message and then go to his home; he was injured during his tour of duty; he was paid for the-time used to travel from the well to the Moutray-Moore office to deliver the message; his work at the well was stopped three hours before the end of his tour of duty and he was directed to then go to Abilene and deliver the message. We think it is not controlling that it was expected that he would, after delivering the message, return to his home in the same city where he was 4o deliver the message.

Appellee also cites J. C. Penny Co. v. Oberpriller, 141 Tex. 128, 170 S.W.2d 607 and McKim v. Commercial Standard Insurance Company, Tex.Civ.App., 179 S.W.2d 357, (WR). In the Oberpriller case the claimant, who was a clerk in a store, got permission from the manager to go to a garage for his own car, get it and park it nearer the store for his own convenience. The manager gave him a package to deliver. He delivered the package, then went to the garage and got his car and, while returning from the garage to the store in his automobile, was injured. The claimant had completed the mission for his employer and was driving his car from the garage to the store, solely for his own convenience, when he was injured.

In the McKim case, Mrs. McKim was a hat maker for a hat manufacturer. During her lunch hour Mrs. McKim saw a hat she wanted and went to the manager’s office to ask if she might buy it.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W.2d 274, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knipe-v-texas-employers-ins-assn-texapp-1950.