Mercier v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad

293 S.W.2d 80, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 1956
DocketNo. 6026
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 293 S.W.2d 80 (Mercier v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad) 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
Mercier v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad, 293 S.W.2d 80, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1743 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Justice.

The appellant, Antoine Mercier, who will also be referred to as plaintiff, brought suit against appellee, Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company, to recover damages for personal injuries which he alleges he sustained November 2, 1953, as a proximate result of negligence on the part of the defendant. The suit was brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, as amended in 1939, 45 U.S.C.A. §§ 51-60, the plaintiff representing that he was injured while in the course of his employment as one of the defendant’s employees. Plaintiff claims to have suffered abdominal injuries as a result of doing work assigned him when, following an appendectomy, he returned to work as a section hand. He alleged in his petition, in substance, that, through one of its section foremen, the defendant was negligent (1) in assigning him the particular duties it did, (2) in ordering him back to work after he had made known to the foreman that he (the plaintiff) was having trouble with his side, and (3) in failing to assign him light work to do. The defendant answered by general denial, a general plea of contributory negligence (pleaded in diminution of damages, if any), a plea of contributory negligence as the sole proximate cause of plaintiff’s alleged injuries, a plea of unavoidable accident, and by a special denial of its ability in the circumstances to foresee injury to the plaintiff. Trial was to a jury, but at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant made written motion that a verdict be directed in its favor and the motion was granted. Judgment in favor of the defendant was rendered on the directed verdict, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The right of the plaintiff to sue under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act is not contested on appeal. As a consequence, there are, in reality, but two questions before us for decision: (1) Was there any evidence of probative value raising a fact issue for the jury regarding negligence on the part of the defendant? (2) If so, was there any evidence of probative value to show that such negligence, if any, was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s alleged injuries? Appellant’s contention that the plaintiff was himself guilty of negligence which was the sole proximate cause of his injuries, if any, is so related to the second of the questions we have stated that it will either be disposed of or rendered of no importance, in so far as causation is concerned, by our answer to that question.

An appendectomy was performed in Houston on the plaintiff October 2, 1953, by a doctor supplied by the Hospital Association of the Southern Pacific Lines in Texas and Louisiana, an association which appears to have been composed of the railroad company’s employees. Plaintiff, a section hand who worked out of Beaumont, reported back for work, and was put back to work, November 2, 1953. At the time of reporting for duty in the morning of that day he delivered to the regular foreman of his section gang, a Mr. Ladner, a letter addressed to the latter under date of October 12, 1953, by the chief surgeon of the Hospital Association. This letter advised Mr. Ladner that plaintiff had been in the General Hospital in Houston “for treatment” but would be ready for duty November 2, 1953. While the letter did not disclose that plaintiff had been operated upon or the nature of the treatment he had received, we must proceed upon the theory that Mr. Ladner had notice of the appendectomy, because the plaintiff testified that he had himself told Mr. Ladner of it some two weeks before returning to work. Plaintiff had been out of the hospital for three weeks or more at the time he reported back for duty.

Plaintiff was an experienced section hand and was familiar with the nature of the work he would be expected to do upon his return to duty. He had been regularly employed by the defendant as a member of [83]*83Mr. Ladner’s section gang for a period of a year and a half or two years next preceding the date on which his appendix disabled him, and had participated in all of the various kinds of work required of section hands. He testified that at the time of resuming work on November 2nd he was as well aware of his physical condition and strength as anyone else was and believed himself fully capable of performing all of the ordinary tasks of his job.

During the morning of November 2nd, plaintiff and the other members of the crew were assigned the task of dislodging and placing on top of the ground imbedded cross-ties from which the rails had already been removed. In the afternoon they were assigned the task of loading the same cross-ties onto trucks. The cross-ties were estimated to have weighed an average of one hundred pounds each, but an occasional one would weigh as much as 125 or 150 pounds. The crewmen appear to have worked singly in loosening the ties and raising them to the crest of the roadbed, but two and often three of them joined in loading each tie onto the trucks. The cross-ties were loosened from the ground and raised by means of hand picks. We gather that one prong of a pick was inserted either under or in the end of a tie and that the end of the tie was then prized loose and lifted up. The dislodgment and initial raising of the ties, as well as the subsequent loading of them, was, according to plaintiff’s testimony, heavy work which particularly called into play the abdominal muscles and subjected the abdominal wall to stress. Tongs were available with which to loosen the ties from the ground and raise them but plaintiff said he did not use the tongs because at the commencement of work the foreman had instructed him to use a pick. All members of the crew were doing the same kind of work, in the same manner, and the plaintiff had done similar work many times before. Plaintiff testified that the cross-ties were sunk deeper into the ground and were more firmly imbedded than most that he had previously removed but that after seeing them and being assigned the task of helping remove them from the ground and load them he had no doubt of his ability to do the work and did not foresee or anticipate injury to himself from doing it.

He claims, however, that the work and his own exertions in performing it did in fact cause him injury. He claims, and he offered medical testimony in support of his contention, that the abdominal muscles parted along the line of the operative incision and thereafter failed to reunite and that he is permanently incapacitated as a result. He does not contend that this was caused by any unusual occurrence or incident but only that it was brought about by his own exertions and by the ordinary stresses and strains to which, his body was subjected in performing the tasks assigned him to do.

Plaintiff, as we understand his testimony, does not claim to have been actually injured until shortly after noon while loading a cross-tie. He does claim, however, to have noticed or to have experienced during the morning some unusual sensation in his side, the exact nature of which is not made clear by the record, and to have reported this to his foreman. His testimony regarding what passed between him and the foreman at that time was as follows:

Direct-Examination
“Q. Did you have occasion there to see or talk to Mr. Ladner any more that morning? A. Well, about eleven o’clock, eleven thirty, Mr. Ladner happened to be standing by me, and I told him, I says ‘My side looks like it’s giving out on me; this work is a little too heavy for me, I think.’

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Bluebook (online)
293 S.W.2d 80, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercier-v-texas-new-orleans-railroad-texapp-1956.