Missouri, K. & T. Ry Co. of Texas v. Denahy
This text of 165 S.W. 529 (Missouri, K. & T. Ry Co. of Texas v. Denahy) 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.
Opinion
Appellee being in appellant’s service, and while repairing a box car with the use of chisel and hammer in cutting bolts, and being assisted by another employs, had one eye injured by a small piece of metal flying off of the chisel and hammer when the chisel was struck by the hammer, striking him in the eye. He sues to recover damages of appellant, alleging negligence on defendant’s part in this, to wit: “(1) In failing to exercise ordinary care to adopt and cause to be used a reasonably safe manner and method of doing the work upon which plaintiff was engaged. (2) In failing to exercise ordinary care to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to do this work. (3) In failing to provide and cause to be used suitable, proper, and reasonably safe tools and appliances for the work upon which plaintiff was engaged, and especially for the purpose of cutting off said bolts. (4) In furnishing and permitting to be used in such work a hammer and chisel which were defective and dangerous, not properly tempered, and which were battered, chipped, shivered, clivered, cracked, and in condition to throw off particles of metal with great force when struck against hard, substances in the manner of their ordinary intended use, and in the manner in which they were being used. That said acts of negligence, and each of them, were the direct and proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, and such defects and dangers therefrom were well known to defendant, or would have been known to it by the use of ordinary care and were unknown to plaintiff, or if known to him the defendant was not relieved from liability thereby because a person of ordinary prudence, situated as plaintiff was, would have continued in the service of the defendant with such knowledge.” Defendant answered by general denial and specially that the car upon which plaintiff was working had been indiscriminately used in hauling interstate traffic; that the last trafile hauled by said car before the injury, and the first hauled after its repair, was interstate traffic, etc.; that plaintiff’s cause of action, if any he has, is one controlled by the act of Congress known as the “Employers’ Liability Act” ; that plaintiff was an experienced car repairer and knew the kind and character of tools which were being used, etc., knew all the dangers incident thereto, and assumed all the risks arising therefrom; that the cutting of bolts with hammer and chisel in the manner used by plaintiff was one adopted by railroads generally and is a proper method, and the injury sustained by plaintiff was one brought about by his own negligence. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and appellant prosecutes this appeal.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.
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165 S.W. 529, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-k-t-ry-co-of-texas-v-denahy-texapp-1914.