Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Boring

166 S.W. 76, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 640
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 4, 1914
DocketNo. 7110.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 76 (Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Boring) 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
Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Boring, 166 S.W. 76, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 640 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the appellee through the negligence of appellant’s section foreman, Riddle, while appellee, employed as a section hand, and the said Riddle were attempting to remove from appellant’s railroad track a hand car used by them in connection with their work. Appellee alleged, as grounds of negligence: (1) That, in order to remove the hand car from the track, “the plaintiff, the said section foreman, and another laborer took hold thereof with'their hands, and, as they raised or lifted said car from the rails, said section foreman pushed and shoved said ear against and upon plaintiff in such a manner as to place the great weight of the car .upon him, and at the same time then and there dropped the end of the ear which he was then lifting, thereby causing the great weight of the car to fall upon and against plaintiff, dragging and pulling him down,” from which he received and suffered a serious inguinal hernia on both sides; (2) that, if mistaken in the aforesaid alleged cause of his injuries, then he says the defendant, its agents, servants, and employés neglected, failed, and refused to furnish a sufficient force of men to do the work which plaintiff was required to do when hurt; that, in order to perform said work with safety, not less than four men should have been employed, when in fact defendant had only three men; that defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that said force of three men was wholly inadequate and insufficient to perform said work with safety, notwithstanding which defendant employed and furnished said inadequate and insufficient *78 force to do and perform said work. The defenses pleaded were a general denial, and that plaintiff’s injury resulted from his own negligence and unfitness for the work in which he was engaged, which unfitness was due to his weak, sick, and diseased condition prior to and at the time he claims to have been injured; that he was engaged in interstate commerce; and that his injury resulted from a risk incident to the business he was engaged in and was assumed by him. A trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $2,500, and, the defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, it appealed.

[1] The first assignment of error complains of the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury at defendant’s request to return a verdict in its favor. The proposition advanced under the assignment is: “Where the evidence is undisputed that the plaintiff at the time he received his injury was engaged in interstate commerce, as employs of a common carrier by railroad, that the force furnished to handle a hand car, in connection with the moving of which he was injured, was insufficient to his knowledges before the injury, that he continued in the movement notwithstanding such knowledge, and the evidence respecting the proximate cause of the injury, if not undisputed, was such that ordinary minds could only reach the conclusion that the attempt to move the car with an. insufficient force was the proximate cause of the ■injury, the defendant, having pleaded that the plaintiff was engaged in interstate commerce, and assumed the risk of injury therefrom, is entitled to a peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict in its favor.” As has been seen, the plaintiff based his right of recovery upon two separate and distinct grounds of negligence: First, the negligence of appellant’s section foreman, under whom he was working, in shoving against him the hand car they were attempting to remove from the railroad track, and then dropping the end of the car in such a manner as to place or throw the great weight of the ear upon plaintiff; second, .in negligently failing to furnish a sufficient number of jnen to handle the car with safety. There was ample evidence to establish the first ground of negligence alleged, and, this being true, the peremptory instruction requested by defendant was properly refused, even though plaintiff might have been precluded from a recovery upon the second ground of negligence alleged by-the doctrine of assumed risk.

[2] The plaintiff testified: “I received directions from the foreman, Hr. Riddle, with reference to moving that hand car off of there. I undertook to remove the hand car. The foreman, Mr. Riddle, and my father assisted me. The- foreman and I picked up one end of the car, and my father swung onto the opposite end. There is something built upon the hand car that stands up from it. They are the levers. The levers are in the center of the hand car. My father had hold of thet lever, and had his foot on the end of the car. He just took hold of the ear and swung back, with his foot on the end of the hand car pulling back, this way. I was on the northeast corner of the hand car. The road runs north and south there, and the ear was setting up and down the track. Mr. Riddle was on the northwest corner. We picked up the opposite end from my father. We lifted it and carried the end of it off the track. That end of the car should have been carried around eight or ten feet in order to remove it from the track. It should have been carried just half way around. We did not carry it halfway around. The foreman swung his part of it -and turned it loose. The hand car has got handles to pick it up by. He turned loose of the handle. When he turned loose the weight of the car went on me and hurt me in my side in the lower part of my bowels. I cap describe the way it felt. It was just a tear. It appeared to be a tear and hard pain; just like I had a knife in me. I was pitched over on the car. My father pushed the car off then. The foreman-made a statement there with reference to turning it loose. He asked me if it hurt me when he dropped the hand car on me, and I told him it did.”

G. W. Boring testified: “At the time my son got hurt he and Mr. Riddle, the foreman, were carrying the hand car around. They were on the north end of the car. Mr. Riddle had hold of the northwest corner, and my son had hold the northeast corner. Mr. Riddle was west of my son. When they started around I was a step or two from them, and I just hurried up and put my left foot on the car and took hold of the lever with my left hand to help them, and just about the time I got that done Mr. Riddle just gave it a jerk and turned loose, without saying a word; without saying he was ready or anything else. My son just kind of fell over on the car. When he turned it loose the north end of the car was kind of angling with the track, or when he made his swing to turn it loose it was kind of angling. It wasn’t around as far as he wanted it, and he-just made a little swing and turned all holds loose. They did not lift the whole car as they undertook to go around with it. They lifted one end. I had hold of the lever. I was pulling back on it to kind of take the weight off of them. They were lifting up on the front end, and I was bearing down on the other end. When he turned that loose-there the end that they had hold of just fell right down on the ground. My son just stood there with his hands on the car, and Mi-. Riddle just walked right around the ear and stopped, and I pushed it out on off, and I just turned around to the water keg to get. *79 me a drink, and as I turned around there to the keg Mr. Riddle says, ‘Did I hurt you when I dropped the car on you?’ and he [plaintiff] says, ‘Yes.’ Mr. Riddle said that right there in just an instant after it happened.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 76, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-o-g-ry-co-v-boring-texapp-1914.