Lancaster v. Hunter

217 S.W. 765, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1919
DocketNo. 9145.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 765 (Lancaster v. Hunter) 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
Lancaster v. Hunter, 217 S.W. 765, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1290 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

Appellee, J. W. Hunter, instituted this suit on April 12, 1918, against J. L. Lancaster and Pearl Wight, receivers of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, seeking to recover damages in the sum of $2,995 on account of personal injuries received by said Hunter as a result of being injured in a box car near Camp Bowie, Ft. Worth, Tex., on October 3, 1917.

On June 8, 1918, the Southern Surety Company intervened in said suit, alleging that it was a duty constituted corporation with charter powers and with a' permit from the state of Texas to insure the liability of employers of labor under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of the state of Texas, and was so constituted and authorized on the date of Hunter’s injuries and prior thereto; that at the date of Hunter’s injuries he was an employé of a partnership composed of Butcher and Sweeney; that the partnership named, by reason of their line of business and number of men employed by them, was *766 within the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Law and authorized and permitted by its terms to become a subscriber within the meaning of the act by taking out a compensation policy with some insurance company authorized and permitted to write such insurance; that interveners, prior to the date of the injuries, had executed and delivered to said Butcher & Sweeney a policy in manner and form as provided by the act referred to, whereby it insured said Ann against the liability, and agreed to pay the compensation provided for by such Workmen’s Compensation Act; that, while said compensation policy was in full force and effect, the plaintiff, while so acting as an employé of Butcher & Sweeney and was acting within the scope of his employment, was injured through the gross negligence of said receivers, their agents and servants. The inter-veners then set forth the circumstances of plaintiff’s injuries and of the negligent acts of the receivers, their servants and employés relied upon, and further alleged that the interveners were compelled to and had paid to the said plaintiff, Hunter, for the compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, the sum of .$600, and would most likely in the future be compelled to pay to said Hunter other and further sums of money in addition to certain hospital and physician’s bills mentioned. Intervener further alleged that, under and by virtue of the Workmen’s Compensation Law referred to, it'was sub-rogated to the rights and causes of action of the said Hunter against the receivers to an amount necessary to reimburse it on account of all payments made to Hunter and for all payments which might lawfully thereafter be made, because of which it was charged that the intervener was entitled to intervene and sue in the cause against the defendant on its own accounts as well as for the said plaintiff, J. W. Hunter.

It was further alleged by the intervener that by reason of the serious and permanent injuries received by plaintiff, as alleged through the negligence of the defendants, said plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $2,995, and the intervener prayed for judgment in its own behalf as well as in the behalf of said Hunter.

'The defendant receivers answered by a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence on the part of Hunter, and further that Hunter at the time of the accident was working for Butcher & Sweeney, contractors, who carried compensation insurance in the Southern Surety Company of Denison, Tex., and that Hunter had elected to collect his compensation from said surety company, and that therefore he had no cause of action against the defendants. A few days later, the defendant receivers Aled what is termed a “supplemental petition,” in which it was alleged, in substance, that a settlement had been made with the Southern Surety Company whereby the said surety company had agreed to accept the sum of $500 from the receivers “in settlement of any liability on the part of said defendants arising out of the injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff and for which this suit was brought.”

Thereafter, on July 23d, ihtervener was dismissed from the action on its own motion. The case was thereupon submitted to the jury as between the receivers and the plaintiff upon special issues, which having been answered favorably to plaintiff, a judgment was entered in his favor for the sum of $2,-995, from which judgment the receivers have appealed.

The receivers have presented by appropriate assignments two contentions: First, that the evidence on the issue of the receiver’s negligence, as alleged, is wholly insufficient to support the verdict; and, secohd that it having been shown that the plaintiff, Hunter, had accepted compensation from the Southern Surety Company, under the compensation act referred to in the pleadings, he (Hunter), under the terms of said act, was not empowered to sue.

[1, 2] The evidence is to the effect that the plaintiff, Hunter, on the date of his injuries was at work in a box car taking down brick which had 'been loaded thereon, placing the same in a wheelbarrow which was to he operated by another employs in wheeling the brick out of the car down upon the ground, and that while so engaged a box car, on the track upon which the car loaded with brick was standing, was propelled or moved with force against the car loaded with brick, and thereby the brick in the loaded car was thrown down and upon plaintiff, injuring him to an extent and in particulars not necessary to recite. No witness, however testified what it was that started or propelled the moving car against the car in which plaintiff was at work. The plaintiff was inside of the car and knew nothing of the impending collision until it occurred. All othér witnesses testified to the same effect except one, a Mr. Weekly, who testified that some one called out, “There,” and that just the minute the word had been spoken he dropped his wheelbarow in the door of the car, grabbed the facing of the car door in one hand, and peeped his head around the car door and saw the other car — “big red car, a box” — in the act of hitting the car within which the plaintiff and others were working. No witness testified whether the track upon which the collision occurred extended east, west, north, or south, and no witness testified that they saw or heard a switch • engine operating near by. No witness testified to the brands upon the cars, as to whether they were cars of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company or of some other *767 railroad; the effect of the testimony in point •being merely that the collision occurred on the switch or side track from which the government unloaded wood at Camp Bowie.

If it could he said that we judicially know that the Texas & Pacific Railway Company had side and spur tracks from which wood and other material intended for Camp Bowie was unloaded, we would be required to also Judicially know that another railway crossed the Texas & Pacific Railway at approximately right angles and extending near the location of the military camp mentioned.

Appellee urges that the deficiencies in the above indicated are supplied by the admissions made in behalf of the' receivers, and by the fact that one Dr. J. M. Givens testified to the effect that he was a local surgeon for the Texas & Pacific Railway Company and “at the instance of the railway company,” accompanied by Mr. Hunter’s physician, made a physicial examination of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 765, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-v-hunter-texapp-1919.