Loper v. Lumbermen's Lloyds

269 S.W.2d 353, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2422
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 1953
DocketNo. 4951
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 269 S.W.2d 353 (Loper v. Lumbermen's Lloyds) 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
Loper v. Lumbermen's Lloyds, 269 S.W.2d 353, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2422 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

WALKER, Justice.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. Appellee was the insurer. Ed Loper was the workman, and this proceeding was brought by his widow and minor son. The claimants are Negroes. They are referred to hereafter as the plaintiffs, and the ap-pellee, as the defendant. The cause was tried tó a jury, and on their verdict judgment was rendered that plaintiffs take nothing. Plaintiffs have appealed from this judgment.

The Points of Error which are material assign error to arguments made to the jury by defendant’s counsel, and the following statement concerns the subject matter of these points.

! Ed Loper was an employee of the Bon Wier Lumber Company at the time when plaintiffs claim' that his injury occurred. He worked in a lumber mill adjacent to the saw. He is referred to in the proof as the “sawtailer,” and the nature of his duties is not wholly clear; but he seems to have separated the pieces of a sawed log which could riot be made into lumber from pieces which could, and to have sent the usable pieces down a conveyor to the next machine, which was called the “edger”. On the morning of February 9, 1951, while he was at work, he suddenly left his place of work with pairi in his right side, and later that day was sent to a local physician by the superintendent of the mill. He never returned to work. The physician to whom he was sent concluded that an operation was necessary and he sent Ed Loper to a hospital in Galveston. Ed Loper was admitted to this hospital on February 10 or 11, 1951. A surgical operation was performed on his abdomen and it was found that he had a ruptured duodenal ulcer which had, however, sealed spontaneously. The cause of this ulcer was not proved. Ed Loper remained in the hospital under treatment until March 24th. He then returned home and remained there for a short time. While at his home he conferred with plaintiffs’ counsel and seems to have made claim for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq. He was examined there by Dr. Seale. This physician ordered him back to the hospital in Galveston, and he re-entered that hospital on April 21st. He died on the day following. An autopsy, participated in by the physician who had performed the original operation and had treated Ed Loper, showed that Ed Loper’s [355]*355death was a consequence of processes which the rupture of the ulcer had started.

There was no dispute about these facts'. It was shown, therefore, as a matter of law, that the termination of Ed Loper’s employment on February 9th and his death about two and one-half months afterward were caused by the perforation of the ulcer; and the cause of the ulcer was not proved.

Plaintiffs’ demand is founded on the claim that Ed Loper was struck in the right side by a big piece of a sawed log immediately before he left his work on February 9th and that this blow ruptured the ulcer. Whether Ed Loper actually did sustain this blow was, in effect, submitted to the jury in Issue 1. This issue inquired whether "Ed Loper sustained an injury on or about February 9, 1951”; and the jury found that he did not. This answer determined the result of the suit and made it unnecessary for the jury to answer any other issue except the issues pertaining to Ed Loper’s wage rate.

Three of Ed Loper’s fellow workmen testified about .what happened to him on February 9th. One of these, Sandy Brooks, testified in behalf of the plaintiffs. Thus, the foundation of plaintiffs’ case may be said to have depended on the testimony of this man. The other two, Bodie Dean and R. C. Cooper, testified in behalf of the defendant.

These three witnesses, Ed Loper, and another person who died before the case was tried worked in that part of the mill where logs were cut into merchantable lumber. All of the various steps in the process- by which this was done occurred at a track on which a carriage ran. This track was 60 or 70 feet, long; the evidence is indefinite. At one end, which we will call the right end, a log was moved from a structure called the “log deck” on to the carriage and properly placed there for sawing. Bodie Dean did this; he was called the log “tripper”. At Bodie Dean’s left was -the sawyer and still farther to his left was the saw. R. C. Cooper was the sawyer. .The carriage bearing the log moved to the left past the saw and the log was cut into boards by the saw. Beyond the saw on the left, but near it, worked the “sawtailer”. The “saw-tailer”, as we have stated, was Ed Loper and he stood in a hole to do his work. At his left was the “edger”. The carriage, bearing the boards made by the saw, moved toward the left past Ed Loper, who apparently separated the useless boards from the usable boards, and continued on to the “edger”. This was the machine which sawed the rough boards into merchantable lumber. The person who operated it was called the “edger man”. Beyond the “edger” and at the left end of the track was the “trimmer”. This was the machine which cut the lumber into the length desired. It was served by two men. The person who operated it was called the “main trimmer man”; this was Sandy Brooks. The other was Brooks’ assistant and was called the “strip catcher”.

All of these workmen except R. C. Cooper were Negroes. Of these various employees, the “edger man” was dead when the cause was tried and the “strip catcher” did not see what happened.

Of the other three, who did testify, the two who testified for the defendant were at or near the right end of the, track, and on Ed Loper’s right side, while the one who testified for the plaintiffs was at the left end of the track, on Ed Lop'er’s left. The evidence concerning the distance at which defendant’s witnesses Bodie Dean and R. C. Cooper worked from one another and from Ed Loper is in conflict. According to Bodie Dean, he worked very near Mr. Cooper and about 10 .feet from Ed Loper. Mr. Cooper estimated his distance from Bodie Dean at about 10 feet and his distance from Ed Loper at about the same. Mr. Enos estimated Bodie Dean’s distance from Ed Loper at about 15 feet. At any rate, these two witnesses were only a short distance from Ed Loper and at the right of Ed Loper. Sandy Brooks estimated the distance between him and Ed Loper at about 50 feet but R. C. Cooper estimated this distance to be -60 feet. Each of the three witnesses said that he saw what happened to Ed Loper.

[356]*356Sandy Brooks testified that a big slab struck Ed Loper on the right side immediately before noon. He said: “I could see him all the time. I looked and watched for logs * * *. See what the sawyer makes * * *. Seed the log. I set my trimmers * * * that was my job * * * when it comes to me. I seed everything that was done.” Further: “See him — I reckon I seed him — just like I am looking at you.” Further: “Q. I want you to tell the jury in your own way what happened there. A. Gentlemen of the jury, now, at 11:55 — Q. You can sit down. A. I seen Ed Loper catch holt of a big slab, coming from a big green log — I remember it was a gum or oak, I know it was a big old gum or oak log. He caught that slab— went to twist it to put it on the conveyor to go on down, and’ by that time another one come, by that time. I seen that big slab— when he wheeled that over that way, it hit him right in the side. I was looking at that like I am looking at you.” Further: “When the first slab come up he caught that big slab — there was some more coming; but he failed to catch it — he held that big slab. * * * when he tried to lift it off— when he turned it loose — I knowed he' couldn’t do it — he kneeled down.” Further : “ * * * he didn’t handle the slabs no more.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lumbermen's Lloyds v. Loper
269 S.W.2d 367 (Texas Supreme Court, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 S.W.2d 353, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loper-v-lumbermens-lloyds-texapp-1953.