Pierce-Fordyce Oil Ass'n v. Farrow

173 S.W. 1007, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1915
DocketNo. 8067.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 1007 (Pierce-Fordyce Oil Ass'n v. Farrow) 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
Pierce-Fordyce Oil Ass'n v. Farrow, 173 S.W. 1007, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 50 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

J. E. Farrow, plaintiff in the court below, sued the Pierce-Fordyce Oil Association, defendant, to recover damages on account of personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while engaged as a common laborer at defendant's refinery.

Plaintiff alleged that he was an employé of the defendant, working as a common laborer; that on July 15, 1912, plaintiff, together with other employés, was engaged in gathering up in barrels quantities of oil that had been spilled from different tanks; that the barrels were transported on a wagon to a tank, and there the oil was removed from the barrels by means of buckets; that the wagon in use was drawn by a team of gentle mules; that plaintiff's duties required him to assist in filling the buckets with oil out of the barrels and to hand the bucket to a man on the tank; that, while he was so engaged, the defendant caused other employés of the defendant to suddently emit from a whistling device, then erected by defendant, *Page 1008 and which had not theretofore been used by it, an unusual, loud, shrill, and penetrating and deafening noise; that said noise was wholly unexpected by the men at work, and no previous notice had been given to them by the defendant of its intention to make the blast of said whistle at said time; that the said whistle had not been tested out or regulated, so as to be used with reasonable safety and without danger of scaring teams that might be employed about the said plant; and that, by reason of its not having been so regulated, the same was uncontrollable and gave out an unnecessarily large, shrill, and penetrating volume of sound, which was well calculated to frighten teams that might be in or near where the said whistling took place. Plaintiff further alleged that it was negligence on the part of the defendant to cause or permit that whistle to blow at said time, and that, by reason thereof, the team attached to the said wagon, upon which plaintiff was at work, was frightened by said sudden and unusual sound of the whistle, and that it suddenly leaped forward, throwing the plaintiff from the rear of the wagon, spraining his ankle, and breaking one of the bones of his foot Plaintiff sued to recover damages in the sum of $5,000.

The defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial, and specially answered, denying that the defendant had been negligent in any manner, as charged by plaintiff, and denying that plaintiff had been damaged in any sum for which defendant was responsible, and further pleaded contributory negligence, assumed risk, and that the person responsible for the blowing of said whistle was a fellow servant.

Trial was had before a jury upon special issues submitted to it, and judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $2,000 upon the verdict of the jury, from which an appeal was perfected to this court.

Appellant in its first and second assignments of error complains that the trial court erred in refusing to give its specially requested instruction No. 1, reading as follows: "You are instructed to return a verdict herein for the defendant, Pierce-Fordyce Oil Association" — for the reason that: First, the evidence was insufficient to support any verdict that the jury might render in favor of the plaintiff; second, for the reason that the evidence was insufficient to show that the blowing of the whistle complained of by plaintiff was the proximate cause of the injury sustained by the plaintiff; third, that the evidence was insufficient to show that the defendant was guilty of any negligence in blowing the whistle and in the manner same was blown when plaintiff was hurt; fourth, because the evidence in the case wholly fails to show that the defendant had been guilty of any negligence proximately causing the Injury; fifth, for the reason that it appears from the evidence that the injury sustained by the plaintiff did not result from any failure on the part of the defendant to avert or avoid a peril that an ordinarily prudent person, situated as was the defendant, in view of the facts, would have reasonably anticipated that injury might result as a natural consequence of the blowing of the whistle at the time and under the circumstances that the same was blown. And in its third and fourth assignments of error complaint is made that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury's finding in response to special issue No. 2, wherein the jury found that said accident was proximately caused by reason of the sounding of the whistle then being installed by the defendant in its plant in North Ft. Worth on the date of said accident. And that said finding was contrary to the evidence. These four assignments we will consider together.

The evidence shows: That the whistle then being installed by the appellant was of a large pattern, calculated to give out a very considerable volume of noise, which volume of noise could not be gauged or regulated until the said whistle was tuned or tested and brought into harmony. That the volume and character of noise emanating from said whistle was of such an unusually piercing and threatening character as was reasonably calculated to frighten ordinarily gentle teams that might be in use in the near vicinity of the said whistle, and did in fact frighten the team of mules hitched to the wagon in which plaintiff was engaged in unloading the oil at the time of the accident.

Plaintiff, J. E. Farrow, testified, after giving a short history of his work and employment during several years, prior to the date of his injury, as follows:

"I found work as a day laborer at the PierceFordyce Oil Association. My employment there was varied; some of it was digging ditches. One job I had there, I remember, was digging some brick out there between some walls. I had to do a laborer's job there, and was receiving $2 a day. * * * I had been there, I think, about two months before I got hurt, and had been taken out of the gang, possibly three weeks before this accident occurred, and, after being out there quite a while, I was put on the wagon with a teamster as assistant to the teamster. * * * My work was in connection with the construction of the plant, which was still under construction. At the time I was hurt, there was a whole lot of oil that had been spilled; I don't know how. There was a levee thrown up around one of these iron tanks to prevent oil escaping, and the inside of it had been filled up with oil. We were called to take the wagon up there and get some barrels and get that oil and carry it to a certain tank. * * * Our method of transporting that oil from there to where we put it was that we took buckets and carried it up and put it in the wagon in the barrels on the wagon, and there was a number of us doing that; one or two standing on the wagon and some more dipping oil. * * * It was a flat-bottomed wagon, without siding, and we were working two mules, to the wagon. A man named Wiley was driving the wagon at that time, and had been for two or three days. It would be a guess with me as to how far this place where we were getting this waste oil out of the tank was from *Page 1009 the office where the whistle blowed. * * * It would be probably 200 feet from where the whistle was. We had carried a number of loads, possibly four or five or six, before that whistle blew. That whistle blew at 5:40 in the evening. This whistle had never been blown before that. I presume it was a new whistle that had just been installed. Never had seen it and never have seen it yet. * * * During the two months I was there they had never used any whistle, and I did not have any previous notice that there was going to be any whistle sounded.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 1007, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-fordyce-oil-assn-v-farrow-texapp-1915.