Loyd v. Herrington

182 S.W.2d 1003, 143 Tex. 135, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 239
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1944
DocketNo. A-135.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 1003 (Loyd v. Herrington) 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
Loyd v. Herrington, 182 S.W.2d 1003, 143 Tex. 135, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 239 (Tex. 1944).

Opinion

MR. Judge Folley,

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

This is an action by the respondent, F. D. Herrington, against petitioner, Ernest Loyd, for damages alleged to have been sustained by the explosion of a dynamite cap' which resulted in the loss of respondent’s right eye. He had previously lost the sight of his left eye and the latter injury left him totally blind. Respondent recovered a judgment for $25,531 in the trial court. By majority opinion such judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals at Fort Worth, with Chief Justice McDonald dissenting. 178 S. W. (2d) 694.

Petitioner is a general road contractor and at the time of the injury had about fifteen separate contract jobs in the State of Texas, one of which was near Caddo in Stephens county, the' scene of the injury involved herein. The area in which this road was being constructed required blasting of rock and hard dirt with dynamite and dynamite caps. Petitioner sublet this portion of the construction work to J. L. Johnson, an independent contractor. Johnson’s foreman was R. M. Keel. R. D. Rowe was one of Johnson’s employees working under Keel, the foreman. In the course of the blasting operations upon the highway some of the dynamite caps would fail to explode. Johnson’s employees were instructed to recover such explosives and return them to the foreman.

On the date of the injury Rowe picked up one of the unexploded dynamite caps on the work and conceived the idea of playing a prank upon Keel, his foreman, who was driving one of Johnson’s trucks upon the job. Between two and three o’clock in the afternoon, while Keel was temporarily absent from the truck, Rowe attached the dynamite cap to the ignition system of the motor in such manner that it was contemplated the cap would explode when the motor was started. Howe saw Keel return to the truck and start the motor, but the explosion did not occur at that time. Keel drove away in the truck without knowledge of the presence of the cap. One cylinder of the motor missed as he drove it about the job the remainder of the afternoon. About 6 p. m. the crew quit and Keel thereupon drove *138 the truck to respondent’s garage at Caddo and requested respondent, who operated an independent business having no connection with the road work, to find the cause of the miss in the motor. Keel still knew nothing about the cap being on the motor. As respondent raised the hood -of the truck the cap exploded and the above named injury resulted.

The trial, court overruled petitioner’s motion for an instructed verdict. Numerous issues of negligence, and kindred issues of proximate cduse, as to the acts of Rowe, Keel and others on the job, were submitted to the jury, all of which are resolved in favor of respondent. The jury also found upon issues submitted that petitioner Loyd failed to take proper precautions to avoid the injuries to respondent, that he permitted large numbers of dynamite caps to remain immediately on and adjacent to the road, and failed to keep in a safe place all unexploded dynamite caps used upon the job. Such omissions were further found to constitute negligence and the proximate cause of the injuries. Petitioner filed a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, which was overruled by the court. This court granted the writ of error upon the assignment that the trial court erred in not granting petitioner’s motion for an instructed verdict.

The record shows conclusively that .Johnson was an independent contractor and that all the employees involved in this injury were exclusively within his jurisdiction. Petitioner had no direct connection with the work involved nor with such employees. Therefore, the findings of the jury and the evidence as to negligence and proximate cause become immaterial except in so far as they affect the nondelegable duty of an employer to see that work of an inherently dangerous character is performed by his independent contractor with due care for the safety of others. A clear statement of the rule of law pertinent to this matter will be found in 27 Am. Jur. 517, Sec. 39, in the following language :

“An employer is liable for injuries caused by the failure of an independent contractor to exercise due care with respect to the performance of work which is inherently or intrinsically dangerous. The theory upon which this liability is based is that a person who engages a contractor to do work of an inherently dangerous character remains subject to an absolute, nondelegable duty to see that it is performed with, that degree of care which is approximate to the circumstances, or, in other words, •that all reasonable precautions shall be taken during its per *139 formance, to the end that third persons may be effectually protected against injury.” .

A general discussion of the doctrine and authorities regarding the duty and liability of an employer for the injuries caused by independent contractor or his employees engaged in the performance of work which is inherently or intrinsically dangerous, is found in 23 A. L. R. 1085, et seq. Such doctrine has been applied in this State in several instances, among which are the following cases: Kampmann v. Rothwell, 101 Texas 535, 109 S. W. 1089, 17 L. R. A. N. S. 758; Cameron Mill & Elevator Co. v. Anderson, 78 S. W. 8, affirmed 98 Texas 156, 81 S. W. 282, 1 L. R. A. N. S. 198; Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co. v. Ballard, 53 Texas Civ. App. 110, 116 S. W. 93, writ denied; Continental Paper Bag Co. v. Bosworth, 276 S. W. 170; Evans v. Bryant, 29 S. W. (2d) 485, writ refused; Ewing v. Litzmann, 188 S. W. 742, writ refused.

In none of the cases we have found on the subject has the employer or contractee been held liable for any injuries except those which result directly from the nature of the inherently dangerous work and which might reasonably have been within the contemplation of the parties. No recovery may be allowed for an injury resulting from an act or fault purely collateral to the work and which arises entirely from the wrongful act of the independent contractor or his employees.

In Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co. v. Ballard, supra, in discussing the exception to’ the general rule that the employer is not liable for the negligence of an independent contractor or his employees, the court said:

“The exception within which the verdict of the jury has brought this case finds its best, illustration in those cases where public streets have been made dangerous by excavations or otherwise, and where in the nature of things the safety of the traveling public has been endangered, unless needed precautions have been taken to prevent it. In such a case, as has been often said, the injuries are the direct result of the very thing which the employer authorized to be done, and -he cannot, therefore, escape liability by farming out the work to an independent contractor. It is in the nature of a nondelegable duty owing to those whose life or limb is thus jeopardinzed. But where, as here, the injury is a result of an act or fault purely collateral to the work to be done, and is the result entirely of the wrongful act of the independent contractor or his. workmen, the employer should not be held liable.” (53 Texas Civ. App. 110, 116 S.W. 98.)

*140 In Evans v.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 1003, 143 Tex. 135, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loyd-v-herrington-tex-1944.