Pecos & N. T. Ry. Co. v. Collins

173 S.W. 250, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1915
DocketNo. 708.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 250 (Pecos & N. T. Ry. Co. v. Collins) 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
Pecos & N. T. Ry. Co. v. Collins, 173 S.W. 250, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 136 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

This is an appeal from a judgment against the appellant, the Pecos Northern Texas Railway Company, for $5,000, in favor of appellee, Robert Collins. The cause of action alleged and submitted to the jury is in effect:

That appellee was in the employ of appellant, as section foreman, on the 27th day of May, 1912. That appellant shipped, on its line of road in Texas, ties which were to be used by appellee and men under his charge in repairing the road. That before shipping the ties they had been immersed in the chemical solution known and called creosote. That he did not know the full nature thereof or the process by which the ties had been treated, but appellant knew that the ties, when shipped and received, were thoroughly saturated with the solution, and that appellee and his men handled and unloaded them in the usual way, using their hands to lift and handle them as they had theretofore done. "That said ties had been recently treated when he handled same, and they were not dry but wet with said solution, which so injured plaintiff, that he did not know that it was dangerous to handle the said ties under the conditions in their then condition, but defendant did know this fact and in the exercise of ordinary care would have known the same, and negligently failed to warn the plaintiff of such danger, which was the proximate cause of said injury." (The above quotation was set up by trial amendment.) That appellee had not handled ties, so treated, on the road, and before that time he had never worked with such ties and knew nothing of the proper method of handling them. That in so handling the ties the solution came in contact with his hands and arms and poisoned them. That the ties were poisoned with the solution and was transmitted to his hands and arms. "That said ties in their then condition (that is, while plaintiff and said men were handling them) were poisonous and dangerous to the health and life of plaintiff, and as a proximate result of the unloading of said ties and handling same, as aforesaid, plaintiff was poisoned, and his hands and arms were thereby caused to swell and made feverish, and the poison through the same was introduced into the system and body of the plaintiff and made him so sick and lame that for a long time he was unable to walk; then he walked on crutches; and he is still sick from said poison, and his hands and arms are more or less swollen and feverish and at times are paralyzed. That since said poisoning the plaintiff, as aforesaid, has been constipated, has had headache all the time, has had dizzy and numb spells, and is unable to walk or take care of himself part of the time, and that said poison has injured his back and kidneys, his intestines and internal organs to such an extent that he has suffered great pain of both body and mind therefrom, and will continue to suffer and be in such condition in the future to the end of his life, and he is permanently injured. That his nervous system, by reason thereof, is broken down to such an extent that he cannot see, eat, or sleep as he could before such injury."

He alleged that he was a strong, robust man for his age previous to the injury, etc., setting out his earning capacity, and life expectancy, which is alleged were destroyed; that said poisoning was the proximate result of the negligence of appellant in that appellant knew or should have known that the poison in the ties was dangerous to health and life, and knew the ties would be handled as it was alleged they were handled; that it was the duty of appellant to furnish appliances, such as tongs or other appliances, with which to handle the ties, which duty appellant failed to perform, and which was negligence on its part and the proximate cause of the injuries and damages of appellee; that appellant negligently railed to warn appellee of the danger in handling the ties or that they were poison, as it was its duty to do, and had they so warned him he would not have handled the same, unless he had been furnished with proper appliances therefor. Appellee alleges his ignorance of the poisonous character of creosote and of the danger incident thereto; that he had never handled ties so treated; that under the circumstances appellant subjected appellee to an extraordinary and unusual danger, which was not incident to the risk assumed but was the result of the negligence of the appellant aforesaid.

The appellant answered, admitting that appellee was a section foreman, and that it was his duty to cause the unloading of the ties for the purpose of repairing the road, and that its ties were treated with a creosoted preparation, used for the purpose of preserving the wood, but denied that it knew the same was a poison or dangerous to the health or life of the employé handling them. It denies that appellee was poisoned or injured in any wise as alleged; that if he has suffered from such ailments and afflictions they did not originate from the handling of ties, but the same, if they exist, were due to the physical weakness of appellee and to inherent conditions wholly disconnected with handling creosote ties, as alleged by appellee, and for which appellant was not responsible. It is alleged that by reason of the appellee's duties, requiring him to handle creosote ties, if they were dangerous he knew thereof *Page 252 and well knew the effect on the skin and flesh and all dangers incident to handling them.

The facts in this case tend to show: That the appellee was, on the 27th day of May, 1912, and some time prior thereto, in the employ of appellant as section foreman, and as part of his duty under his employment he was required to handle and unload ties for his employer. That on the 27th day of May, 1912, appellant shipped creosoted ties to be unloaded on the section of the road under appellee's charge as foreman. The evidence tends to show that ties so unloaded "were wet, dripping, and sloppy," and that appellee, at the time, had a pair of canvas gloves on his hands, which soon became saturated with the fluid from the ties and to such an extent that appellee removed them from his hands, and that his hands and face immediately began to burn. The skin on his hands peeled off, was rough, and, as explained by some of the witnesses, sloughed off. His hands and face were swollen and continued so up to the trial. After the time mentioned, on the 27th, he was unable to do manual labor, and some few weeks later, his employer, appellant, sent him to the sanitarium at Topeka, Kan., where he was treated for a short time and returned home, but the disease remained the same with reference to his ability to work. The appellant, however, again employed him in November following the injury in May, as foreman, in which capacity he was continued until March, 1913, when, owing to his physical condition, he was relieved and another man put in his place, since which time he has had no employment and has been unable to labor. The allegations in his petition describing his physical condition at the time of the trial are amply sustained by the evidence; in fact, it is practically uncontroverted. The evidence also tends strongly to show up to the time of unloading the ties on the 27th of May, 1912, his physical condition was good, and that up to that time nothing was observed wrong with reference to his hands or face, but since which time they have been swollen, red, or peeling off. His general physical condition has been on the decline, and one doctor stated since he first examined him appellee had declined nearly 75 per cent. The evidence tends to show that appellee never before handled creosote ties when they were "wet, dripping and sloppy." He had handled creosote ties for several years previous to these, but did not know that creosote was poisonous or dangerous, and had never seen or heard of it blistering the hands or face before this occasion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 250, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecos-n-t-ry-co-v-collins-texapp-1915.